By Guest Blogger Spencer Blohm
The Oscar winning
actress Vivien Leigh, famous for her roles as Scarlett O’Hara in Gone with
the Wind and Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Named Desire, would have
turned 100 on Nov. 5. Despite her convincing and famous performances as a
Southern Belle, Vivien was actually born in British India and spent a majority
of her life living in London. Let’s take a look back at the life and legacy of
one of England’s finest actresses.
Vivian Mary Hartley was born on November 5, 1913 in
Darjeeling, British India to an English member of the Indian Cavalry and an
Irish and Parsee-Indian mother. At the age of six, she was sent to attend the
Convent of the Sacred Heart in Roehampton where she formed a friendship with
another future actress, Maureen O’Sullivan. She then spent a few years
attending various schools across Europe as she travelled with her father. Upon
her return to England, she began her schooling at the Royal Academy of Dramatic
Art. During this time she met and married Herbert Leigh Holman in 1931 and in
1933 gave birth to her daughter, Suzanne.
Shortly thereafter she began her acting career and
changed her name to Vivien Leigh. To her dismay she wasn’t deemed talented
enough by her agent to do film, so she began her career on the stage. Shortly
after her acting debut she starred in the 1937 play Fire Over England with
Laurence Olivier. Their chemistry on stage translated off, and the two began an
affair. They soon fell in love and moved in together despite the fact that neither
one of their spouses would grant them a divorce.
In 1938, the search for a Scarlett O’Hara had swept up
Hollywood, and most of its actresses, in a tizzy of excitement. Vivien
approached her agent and asked for his permission to play Scarlett, to which he
replied that she was far too British to ever pass off being a Southern belle.
However, she packed her bags for Hollywood to both visit Olivier and also
attempt to get the part. Her audition and screen test were a hit and she won
the role of a lifetime. However, her frequent clashes with both director Victor
Fleming and her costar Leslie Howard took its toll on her, as signs of her
notorious manic behavior first began to appear.
She was able to finally marry Olivier in August of 1940
after both of their spouses agreed to divorce. That same year, she was a
certified Hollywood star after the release of her critically and commercially
successful film, Waterloo Bridge. Vivien and Olivier then starred in the
thinly veiled pro-British propaganda film The Hamilton Woman (photo above), which was
meant to stir pro-British sentiment among Americans. The film was favored by
Winston Churchill, who became close personal friends with the couple. For her
part in the war efforts, Vivien toured North Africa during 1943, performing for
the allied troops before falling ill with tuberculosis.
Following a miscarriage in 1945 while filming Caesar
and Cleopatra, Vivien’s bipolar disorder revealed itself to her husband,
who was often the victim of her violent verbal and physical attacks. Following
this, the couple began a theatrical tour in Australia and New Zealand where
tensions among the couple rose as they were driven to the point of exhaustion
by their schedule. However, upon her return to England, Vivien was cast in the
West End production of A Streetcar Named Desire as Blanche DuBois (photo below). Soon
after the play had finished its run, she was cast in the film adaptation in the
same role. She earned rave reviews for her acting and secured her second
Academy Award as well as a BAFTA.
In 1953, she took a role
in the film Elephant Walk with Peter Finch. The two began an affair, and
shortly after filming began Vivien suffered a mental breakdown and had to
withdraw from the film. Her recovery took several months, during which she began working on
the stage again with Laurence. However, in 1956 she suffered a second
miscarriage which plunged her into a depression which lasted for months. It was
during this period that her marriage to Olivier fell apart and by 1960 the
couple had divorced. In his memoirs, Olivier discussed the toll that Vivien’s
bipolar disorder took on their marriage and how it ultimately lead to its
demise.
By this point she had
started a relationship with actor Jack Merivale (photo below). Their relationship proved to
be a calming one for Vivien, who was still enjoying success on the
international theater circuit. In 1963, she won a Tony Award for her role in
the musical Tovarich. She continued to balance her stage roles with film
roles during the mid 60’s before she suffered from another bout of tuberculosis
in 1967. She was found dead in her home by Merivale on July 7, 1967 after her
lungs had collapsed.
Vivien was cremated and
her ashes were scattered on the lake at her house near Blackboys, East Sussex.
Her legacy lives on through the impressive body of work she produced and her
incredible beauty. Although she was the perfect image of an English lady, she
will always be remembered for her most successful screen roles as strong
Southern belles.
About the Author: Spencer Blohm is a freelance entertainment, fashion, culture, and lifestyle author for SatelliteStarInternet.com. Despite his fascination with Old Hollywood even he was surprised that the ultimate Southern belle, Ms. Leigh, was in fact a Brit! He lives and works in Chicago where he is still mad at Scarlett for not getting of the stairs and chasing Rhett.
Thank you for that informative and enjoyable post!
ReplyDeleteGreat post. I have always enjoyed her work onscreen. Her struggles with mental illness were so sad and often debilitating. In spite of that she has produced and incredible body of work.
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