The Columbus Dispatch

De Havilland battled studio, sister

- Hillel Italie

PARIS — Olivia de Havilland, the actress beloved to millions as the sainted Melanie Wilkes of “Gone With the Wind” but also a two-time Oscar winner and an off-screen fighter who unchained Hollywood’s contract system, died Sunday at her home in Paris. She was 104.

Havilland, the sister of fellow Oscar winner Joan Fontaine, died peacefully of natural causes, said New York-based publicist Lisa Goldberg.

De Havilland was among the last of the top screen performers from the studio era, and the last surviving lead from “Gone With the Wind,” an irony, she once noted, since the fragile, self-sacrificin­g Wilkes was the only major character to die in the film. The 1939 epic, based on Margaret Mitchell’s best-selling Civil War novel and winner of 10 Academy Awards, is often ranked as Hollywood’s box office champion (adjusting for inflation), although it is now widely condemned for its glorified portrait of slavery and antebellum life.

The pinnacle of producer David O. Selznick’s career, the movie had a troubled off-screen story.

Three directors worked on the film, stars Vivien Leigh and Clark Gable were far more connected on screen than off and the fourth featured performer, Leslie Howard, was openly indifferen­t to the role of Ashley Wilkes, Melanie’s husband. But de Havilland remembered the movie as “one of the happiest experience­s I’ve ever had in my life. It was doing something I wanted to do, playing a character I loved and liked.”

During a career that spanned six decades, de Havilland also took on roles ranging from an unwed mother to a psychiatri­c inmate in “The Snake Pit,” a personal favorite. The dark-haired De Havilland projected both a gentle, glowing warmth and a sense of resilience and mischief that made her uncommonly appealing.”

She was Errol Flynn’s co-star in a series of dramas, Westerns and period pieces, most memorably as Maid Marian in “The Adventures of Robin Hood.” But De Havilland also was a prototype for an actress too beautiful for her own good, typecast in sweet and romantic roles while desiring greater challenges.

Her frustratio­n finally led her to sue

Warner Bros in 1943, when the studio tried to keep her under contract after it had expired, claiming she owed six more months because she had been suspended for refusing roles. Her friend Bette Davis was among those who had failed to get out of her contract under similar conditions in the 1930s, but de Havilland prevailed, with the California Court of Appeals ruling that no studio could extend an agreement without the performer’s consent.

The decision is still unofficial­ly called the “De Havilland law.”

De Havilland went on to earn her own Academy Award in 1946 for her performanc­e in “To Each His Own,” a melodrama about out-of-wedlock birth. A second Oscar came three years later for “The Heiress,” in which she portrayed a plain young homebody opposite Montgomery Clift and Sir Ralph Richardson in an adaptation of Henry James’ “Washington Square.”

In 2008, de Havilland received a National Medal of Arts and was awarded France’s Legion of Honor two years later.

She was also famous, not always for the better, as the sister of Fontaine, with whom she had a troubled relationsh­ip. In a 2016 interview, de Havilland referred to her late sister as a “dragon lady” and said her memories of Fontaine, who died in 2013, were “multi-faceted, varying from endearing to alienating.”

“Dragon Lady, as I eventually decided to call her, was a brilliant, multi-talented person, but with an astigmatis­m in her perception of people and events, which often caused her to react in an unfair and even injurious way.”

In 1941, De Havilland and Fontaine competed against one another for best actress honors. Fontaine was nominated for the Hitchcock thriller “Suspicion” while de Havilland was cited for “Hold Back the Dawn,” a drama starring de Havilland as a school teacher wooed by the unscrupulo­us Charles Boyer.

De Havilland reportedly refused to congratula­te Fontaine for winning the Oscar.

De Havilland once observed that Melanie Wilkes’ happiness was sustained by a loving, secure family, a blessing that eluded the actress even in childhood.

She was born in Tokyo on July 1, 1916, the daughter of a British patent attorney. Her parents separated when she was 3, and her mother brought her and her younger sister Joan to Saratoga, California. De Havilland’s own two marriages, to Marcus Goodrich and Pierre Galante, ended in divorce.

De Havilland had lived in Paris since the early 1950s, said Goldberg, the publicist who announced her death.

De Havilland’s acting ambitions dated back to stage performing at Mills College in Oakland, California. While preparing for a school production of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” she went to Hollywood to see Max Reinhardt’s rehearsals of the same comedy. She was asked to read for Hermia’s understudy, stayed with the production through her summer vacation and was given the role in the fall.

Warner Bros. wanted stage actors for their lavish 1935 production and chose de Havilland to co-star with Mickey Rooney, who played Puck.

“I wanted to be a stage actress,” she recalled. “Life sort of made the decision for me.”

She signed a five-year contract with the studio and went on to make “Captain Blood,” “Dodge City” and other films with Flynn, a hopeless womanizer even by Hollywood standards.

“Oh, Errol had such magnetism!” said de Havilland, whose bond with the dashing actor remained, she would insist, platonic. As she once explained, “We were lovers together so often on the screen that people could not accept that nothing had happened between us.”

She did date Howard Hughes and James Stewart and had an intense affair in the early ’40s with director John Huston. Their relationsh­ip led to conflict with Davis, her co-star for the Hustondire­cted “In This Our Life”; Davis would complain that de Havilland, a supporting actress in the film, was getting more flattering time on camera.

Although she once filmed as many as three pictures a year, De Havilland’s career slowed in middle age. She made several movies for television, including “Roots” and “Charles and Diana.” She also co-starred with Davis in the macabre camp classic “Hush ... Hush, Sweet Charlotte” and was menaced by a young James Caan in the 1964 chiller “Lady in a Cage.”

She is survived by her daughter, Gisele Galante Chulack, her son-in-law Andrew Chulack and her niece Deborah Dozier Potter.

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