Vivien Leigh

 

Photo of Vivien Leigh + Claude Rains Robert Taylor + C. Aubrey Smith + Vivien Leigh Photo of Vivien Leigh

Biography

Vivien Leigh

Vivien Leigh

I would rather have lived a short life with Larry
than face a long one without him

Remarkable:

When Vivien died, West End theaters in London dimmed their house lights in memory of one of Britain’s greatest actresses.

Born:

November 5 , 1913

Born as:

Vivian Mary Hartley

Died:

July 7, 1967

Vivien Leigh was born in Darjeeling, India. From the ages of six to 15 she was educated in English convent schools, where she showed aptitude for the performing arts. Inspired by the example of her schoolmate Maureen O'Sullivan, she embarked upon an acting career, enrolling at London's Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in 1932.

Vivien's stage debut was in The Green Sash, but it was her performance as Henriette Duquesnoy in The Mask of Virtue (1935) that earned her critical acclaim. She married barrister Herbert Leigh Holman, whose name she used to create her stage name.

In 1937, she met and made her first screen appearance opposite the rising star, Laurence Olivier, in Fire Over England. In 1938 Olivier and Leigh traveled to Hollywood, he to star in Wuthering Heights (1939), she to audition for the highly coveted role of Scarlett O'Hara in Gone with the Wind (1939). The role won Leigh her first Oscar, after which she kept her screen appearances to a minimum, preferring to devote her time to Olivier, who would become her second husband in 1940.

Pregnant during production of Caesar and Cleopatra in 1944 (released 1946), Leigh suffered an on-set accident that resulted in a miscarriage. In 1944, the actress was diagnosed as having a tuberculosis patch on her left lung.

In the fifties Leigh made a two-fold success as Tennessee Williams's Blanche Du Bois, first under Olivier's direction on the London stage. And later in the film version of A Streetcar Named Desire (1951) directed by Eliah Kazan, and with Marlon Brando in which her performance gained her another Oscar.

She continued to act on stage with Olivier at the Old Vic in London.

By the early 1960s Vivien had suffered two miscarriages, and the severity of the tuberculosis was incapacitating. She starred in a 1963 Broadway musical adaptation of <em>Tovarich</em>, a production for which Leigh won a Tony Award. She was preparing to star in the London production of A Delicate Balance when she was found dead from tuberculosis in her London apartment in 1967.

Academy awards:

Selected Movies:

Gone with the Wind (1939)
A Streetcar Named Desire (1951)
Waterloo Bridge (1940)
Ship of Fools (1965)
That Hamilton Woman (1941)

 

Photo of Vivien Leigh + Leslie Howard

Trivia

When Vivien died, West End theaters in London dimmed their house lights in memory of one of Britain’s greatest actresses. Source / More (Book)

Leigh was the first non-American to win a Best Actress Oscar (for Gone with the Wind (1939)).

Vivien was pictured on one of four 25¢ US commemorative postage stamps issued 23 March 1990 honoring classic films released in 1939. The stamp features Clark Gable and Leigh as Rhett Butler and Scarlett O’Hara from Gone with the Wind (1939). Source / More (Book)

The producer of the 1935 play The Mask of Virtue Sidney Carroll suggested to her that she change the a in her first name to an e from Vivian to Vivien. Caroll: “It’ll confuse people. They won’t know if you’re a man or a woman”. Source / More (Book)

While filming Gone with the wind (1939) director Cukor was fired. Vivien Leigh: I’d keep the book beside me and look up each scene as we filmed it to remind me where I was supposed to be, and how I should be feeling, until Selznick [the producer] shouted at me to throw the damned thing away. On Sundays, when we didn’t shoot, I’d steal over to George Cukor’s and discuss with him the bits we’d be working on the next week. It was probably terribly irregular, but I couldn’t have finished it without him.” Source / More (Book)

Vivien answering questions from reporters and want them to stop calling her Lady Olivier: “Her Ladyship is fucking bored with such formality”. Source / More (Book)

Bibliography