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A lovely, petite, fragile stage-trained player whose delicate beauty first graced the screen in 1935, Leigh was born to a British military family stationed in India. Despite her heritage, she remains best-known for her two most successful screen roles as American Southern belles.

After a childhood traveling Europe, an apprenticeship at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and a brief marriage, Leigh began her career in 1935 with several small stage and screen roles....


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Filmography

Ship of Fools - ( Mark Treadwell / 1965 / Released / )
The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone - ( Karen Stone / 1961 / Released / )
The Deep Blue Sea - ( Hester / 1955 / Released / )
Elephant Walk - ( Ruth Wiley in Ceylon Long-Shots / 1954 / Released / )
A Streetcar Named Desire - ( Blanche DuBois / 1951 / Released / )
Gone With the Wind - ( Scarlett O'Hara / 1939 / Released / UIP The Film Consortium )

TV Credits

Full Biography (Back to top)


A lovely, petite, fragile stage-trained player whose delicate beauty first graced the screen in 1935, Leigh was born to a British military family stationed in India. Despite her heritage, she remains best-known for her two most successful screen roles as American Southern belles.

After a childhood traveling Europe, an apprenticeship at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and a brief marriage, Leigh began her career in 1935 with several small stage and screen roles. After making a hit onstage in "The Masque of Virtue" (1935), she was signed by Alexander Korda and appeared as a pretty ingenue in such films as "Fire Over England" (1937), opposite Laurence Olivier, and "Storm in a Teacup" (also 1937), with Rex Harrison. Korda loaned her to MGM for "A Yank at Oxford" (1938), which did more for Robert Taylor than Leigh. That same year, she displayed her screen charisma and charm as a Cockney petty thief who is befriended by street performer Charles Laughton and romanced by songwriter Rex Harrison in the frothy "Sidewalks of London/Saint Martin's Lane". While making her mark in features, Leigh continued to polish her talents onstage, notably as Ophelia to Olivier's "Hamlet" in 1937.

By this time, Leigh and Olivier were romantically involved. When he went to the US in late 1938 to make "Wuthering Heights", Leigh followed and won the much-coveted role of Scarlett O'Hara in "Gone With the Wind" (1939). Her Scarlett was a headstrong, willful and colorful portrayal. Despite much flack about a relatively unknown Brit taking the role of the quintessential Southern belle, Leigh was triumphant, won an Oscar and became a bigger star than Olivier (whom she married in 1940).

Leigh failed to immediately follow up on her tremendous promise. She starred onstage with Olivier in "Romeo and Juliet" (1940) and made two films. In the fine remake of "Waterloo Bridge" (1940), Leigh's beauty heightened her portrayal of a ballerina in love with an upper-class soldier (Robert Taylor). Through a series of plot machinations, she is reduced to prostitution and has a bittersweet reunion with Taylor, whom she thought was killed during the war. The role was the first of many in which her character suffered mental collapse--ironically mirroring her own bouts with mental illness. She again was a woman of questionable virtue in the biopic of an historical tart in "That Hamilton Woman" (1941, opposite Olivier). Her subsequent career was slowed to fits and starts by the tuberculosis which eventually killed her, and by her own emotional instability.

For the rest of her career, Leigh alternated between the stage and screen, giving electrifying, emotional performances in both mediums. She appeared in six films after her initial bout with Hollywood, first in the British productions "Caesar and Cleopatra" (1946), opposite Claude Rains, and as "Anna Karenina" (1948). Her next huge hit was recreating her stage role as the fragile, emotionally unstable Blanche Du Bois in Elia Kazan's film of Tennessee Williams' "A Streetcar Named Desire" (1951). Her performance as the outsider is enhanced by playing off her Method-trained co-stars, notably Marlon Brando's stunning Stanley, Kim Hunter's torn Stella and Karl Malden's gentle Mitch. Leigh earned a second Best Actress Oscar playing this damaged woman trailing the tattered threads of her sanity behind her, a role some felt was eerily close to Leigh's own personality at times. Her last films consisted of stellar performances as emotionally unstable women in less than stellar films: "The Deep Blue Sea" (1955), as a frustrated, suicidal wife; "The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone" (1961), based on a Tennessee Williams' story, as an elegant, middle-aged actress who is ample bait for Warren Beatty's gigolo; and Stanley Kramer's all-star "Ship of Fools" (1966), as an embittered, flirtatious divorcee.

Leigh was, perhaps, happier onstage. She and Olivier toured with the Old Vic company in the late 1940s and early 50s, in such plays as "The School for Scandal", "Anthony and Cleopatra", "Caesar and Cleopatra", "Richard III" and "Antigone." She was directed by Olivier in "The Skin of Our Teeth" (1945) and "The Sleeping Prince" (1954) and scored successes with "Duel of Angels" (1958) and "Look After Lulu" (1959), directed by Noel Coward. In 1963, she made her American musical stage debut in "Tovarich", winning a Tony Award. But health problems began to interfere with her ability to sustain a long run and she frequently missed performances. Her last stage appearance was in "Ivanov" in 1966.

Leigh's private life was as stormy as any of her roles. After twenty tempestuous years, she and Olivier divorced in 1960, and her mental illness often transformed her intelligent and sweet nature, making professional and personal relationships problematic at times. By the time she died, a ravaged 53 years old, Vivien Leigh had become one of the broken butterflies she had so often played on stage and screen.


Profession(s):
Actor
Sometimes Credited As:
Vivian Mary Hartley
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Family
daughter:Suzanne Farrington (born on October 12, 1933; married insurance broker Robin Farrington in 1957; first child, a son Neville, was born December 1958; had two other sons, Jonathan and Rupert)
father:Ernest Richard Hartley (married Leigh's mother in 1911)
husband:Herbert Leigh Holman (married in 1932; divorced in 1940)
husband:Laurence Olivier (born in Surrey, England on May 22, 1907; married on August 30, 1940; divorced in 1960; died on July 11, 1989)
mother:Gertrude Robinson Yackje (of Irish descent; married Leigh's father in 1911)
Companion(s)
Jack Merivale , Companion , ```..together from 1960 until Leigh's death
Peter Finch , Companion , ```..had affair during 1948 tour of Australia and New Zealand


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Education
Convent of the Sacred Heart Roehampton, England
Royal Academy of Dramatic Art London, England
Awards (Back to top)

Tony Outstanding Actress (Musical) "Tovarich" 1963
British Film Academy Award Best British Actress "A Streetcar Named Desire" 1952
New York Film Critics Circle Award Best Actress "A Streetcar Named Desire" 1951
Oscar Best Actress "A Streetcar Named Desire" 1951
Venice Film Festival Best Actress Award "A Streetcar Named Desire" 1951
National Board of Review Award Best Acting "Gone With thw Wind" and "Our Town" 1939
New York Film Critics Circle Award Best Actress "Gone With the Wind" 1939
Oscar Best Actress "Gone With the Wind" 1939

Milestones (Back to top)

1966 Last stage appearance, "Ivanov"
1965 Last film, "Ship of Fools"
1963 Made stage musical debut on Broadway in "Tovarich"
1957 Last stage appearance in London opposite Olivier in Shakespeare's "Titus Andronicus" (after touring Europe)
1951 Recreated Blanche onscreen in Elia Kazan's screen version of "A Streetcar Named Desire"
1951 Played Cleopatra in repertory stagings of Shakespeare's "Anthony and Cleopatra" and Shaw's "Caesar and Cleopatra"
1949 Played Blanche Dubois in London staging of "A Streetcar Named Desire"
1948 Toured Australia and New Zealand with Olivier in "Richard III", "The School for Scandal" and "The Skin of OUr Teeth"
1945 First began suffering from tuberculosis
1940 US stage debut (with Olivier) in "Romeo and Juliet", directed by Olivier
1939 US screen debut, in "Gone with the Wind"
1937 Played Ophelia to Olivier's "Hamlet" on stage
1937 First screen appearance opposite Olivier, "Fire Over England"
1935 Professional stage debut in "The Green Sash" (as Vivian Leigh)
1935 Signed to five-year contract with Alexander Korda
1935 Met Laurence Olivier
1934 Screen debut in "Things Are Looking Up"
1926 Traveled with parents for several years throughout Europe
1920 Moved to England



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