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Legendary Actress Joan Fontaine Dies at 96
The Hollywood Reporter ^ | 12/15/2013 | Mike Barnes

Posted on 12/15/2013 5:16:52 PM PST by Borges

The star of the Hitchcock classics "Suspicion" and "Rebecca" famously won an Oscar in 1942 over her bitter rival -- her older sister Olivia de Havilland.

Joan Fontaine, the polished actress who achieved stardom in the early 1940s with memorable performances in the Alfred Hitchcock films Suspicion — for which she earned the best actress Oscar over her bitter rival, sister Olivia de Havilland — and Rebecca, has died. She was 96.

THR awards analyst Scott Feinberg spoke with the actress' assistant, Susan Pfeiffer, who confirmed the death of natural causes Sunday at Fontaine's home in Carmel, Calif. Fontaine earned a third best actress Oscar nomination for her role in The Constant Nymph (1943), She also was notable as Charlotte Bronte's eponymous heroine in Jane Eyre (1944) opposite Orson Welles; in the romantic thriller September Affair (1950) with Joseph Cotton; in Ivanhoe (1952) with Robert Taylor; and in Island in the Sun (1957), where she plays a high-society woman in love with an up-and-coming politician (Harry Belafonte).

It was Hitchcock, with his penchant for “cool blondes,” who brought Fontaine to the forefront when he cast her as the second Mrs. de Winter in Rebecca (1940), the director’s American debut. Her performance as the new wife of Laurence Olivier in a household haunted by the death of his first wife earned her an Academy Award nomination for best actress. A year later, Hitchcock placed her opposite Cary Grant in Suspicion, and she won the Oscar for her turn as Lina McLaidlaw Aysgarth, a shy English woman who begins to suspect her charming new husband of trying to kill her. She thus became the only actor to win an Oscar in a Hitchcock film. Among those Fontaine beat out at the 1942 Academy Awards was her older sister de Havilland, up for Hold Back the Dawn (1941). Biographer Charles Higham wrote that as Fontaine came forward to accept her trophy, she rejected de Havilland’s attempt to congratulate her and that de Havilland was offended. The sisters, who never really got along since childhood, finally stopped speaking to each other in the mid-’70s. De Havilland, a two-time Oscar winner, is 97 and living in Paris.

Joan de Beauvoir de Havilland was born in Tokyo on Oct. 22, 1917, to British parents. Her father was a patent attorney who had a thriving practice in Japan. Due to the ill health of her and Olivia, their mother, Lilian, moved them to California and pushed them into acting. While de Havilland pursued acting, Fontaine returned to Tokyo and attended the American School. Ultimately, their parents divorced and Fontaine returned to the U.S. at age 17 to live in San Jose, Calif. As de Havilland was already having some success as an actress, Fontaine joined a local theater group and moved to L.A. She received a screen test at MGM and was given a bit part in No More Ladies (1935), credited as Joan Burfield. After changing her last name to Fontaine (from her stepfather, George Fontaine) to avoid confusion with her sister, she signed with RKO and garnered small parts in several movies, including The Women and Gunga Din, both released in 1939. Capitalizing on her emotional turns in Rebecca and Suspicion, Fontaine appeared in several romantic films in the ’40s, including Constant Nymph (where she falls for composer Charles Boyer), Frenchman’s Creek (1944), The Affairs of Susan (1945), From This Day Forward (1945) and Ivy (1947). Fontaine moved into more mature roles in the movies and starred on Broadway opposite Anthony Perkins in Tea and Sympathy in 1954. Her last movie appearance was in The Witches (1966). Fontaine made regular TV appearances in the late ’50s and early ’60s and served as a panelist on the game show To Tell the Truth from 1962-65. In 1986, she co-starred in the TV movie Dark Mansions and the miniseries Crossings, and her last credited performance came in the 1994 telefilm Good King Wenceslas. Fontaine was nominated for an Emmy Award in 1980 for her guest-starring stint in the soap opera Ryan’s Hope and served as jury president at the 1982 Berlin International Film Festival. In 1978, she published her autobiography, No Bed of Roses, which detailed her feud with de Havilland. Off the screen, Fontaine was a licensed pilot, an accomplished interior decorator and a Cordon Bleu-level chef who was married and divorced four times. In the ‘40s, she and William Dozier, the second of her four husbands, formed Rampart Productions, which oversaw her 1948 film Letter From an Unknown Woman, Billy Wilder’s The Emperor Waltz (1948) starring Bing Crosby and Kiss the Blood Off My Hands (1948) with Burt Lancaster. In 1939, Fontaine married British actor Brian Aherne, and they divorced in 1945. She was married to Batman TV show producer Dozier from 1946-51, to producer Collier Young from 1952-61 and to journalist Alfred Wright Jr. from 1964-69.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: hollywood; joanfontaine; obituary; oliviadehavilland
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To: Borges

I know it’s amazing. God bless them. The British WWII fighter bomber De Haviland Mosquito is named after her. I was watching Santa Fe Trail on TCM a few days ago and was amazed to see she is still alive today. Wow. A lot of years.


21 posted on 12/15/2013 5:41:41 PM PST by Wiggins
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To: trisham

No, her sister Olivia de Havilland was Melanie.


22 posted on 12/15/2013 5:43:15 PM PST by crusty old prospector
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To: billorites

Don’t forget Eleanor Parker leaving us 6 days ago at 91. Hollywood must be running low on beautiful, skilled, nonagenarian actresses, although Joan’s surviving older sister certainly qualifies.


23 posted on 12/15/2013 5:43:51 PM PST by JohnBovenmyer (Obama been Liberal. Hope Change!)
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To: billorites
Mandela, Peter O'Toole, now Joan Fontaine. They always die in threes, don't they?

Also (as mentioned by someone else above), Tom Laughlin, best known for the role of "Billy Jack", died this weekend.

24 posted on 12/15/2013 5:45:54 PM PST by GreenHornet
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To: Borges; Impy; Perdogg; NFHale; Clemenza; GOPsterinMA; BillyBoy

Another giant of the cinema gone. RIP.

I presume she never reconciled with her sister.


25 posted on 12/15/2013 5:48:27 PM PST by fieldmarshaldj (Resist We Much)
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To: Borges

26 posted on 12/15/2013 5:48:30 PM PST by JoeProBono (SOME IMAGES MAY BE DISTURBING VIEWER DISCRETION IS ADVISED;-{)
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To: Borges

My late mother-in-law said she went to school with Joan Fontaine and her sister Olivia de Havilland at Los Gatos High School in California.

I didn’t realize the two women were sisters until my mother-in-law mentioned it years ago.

I have the Hitchcock movie “Suspicion” on DVD. I’ll watch it again tonight as a tribute to Joan.


27 posted on 12/15/2013 5:51:50 PM PST by 04-Bravo
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To: fieldmarshaldj

Damn...

Threes... always in threes...

O’Toole, Laughlin, and Fontaine.


28 posted on 12/15/2013 5:52:14 PM PST by NFHale (The Second Amendment - By Any Means Necessary.)
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To: crusty old prospector

Yes. Sorry.


29 posted on 12/15/2013 5:53:45 PM PST by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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To: Borges

Looks like Olivia won.


30 posted on 12/15/2013 5:56:31 PM PST by exit82 ("The Taliban is on the inside of the building" E. Nordstrom 10-10-12)
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To: Borges

Everybody is dying today. Must be the cold and snow in the air.


31 posted on 12/15/2013 5:59:20 PM PST by SamAdams76
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To: JoeProBono

Oh, I love that movie.


32 posted on 12/15/2013 6:04:27 PM PST by CatherineofAragon ((Support Christian white males----the architects of the jewel known as Western Civilization.))
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To: fieldmarshaldj; Impy; Perdogg; NFHale; GSP.FAN; BillyBoy

That’s 3 actors just today.

Peter O.
Joan F.
Tom M.

2013 has been a bad year; a lot of people have died.

My uncle is having his annual Christmas Party next Saturday and I said to him the other day: “There’s a lot of people that won’t be there.”

For obvious reasons, I’m not going.


33 posted on 12/15/2013 6:04:55 PM PST by GOPsterinMA (You're a very weird person, Yossarian.)
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To: SamAdams76

“Everybody is dying today. Must be the cold and snow in the air.”
_______________________________________________
More likely from an Obamination.


34 posted on 12/15/2013 6:05:30 PM PST by AlexW
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To: beaversmom

Ping


35 posted on 12/15/2013 6:08:27 PM PST by laplata (Liberals don't get it .... their minds are diseased.)
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To: dfwgator

Many of them are obscure names. However, RIP.


36 posted on 12/15/2013 6:15:05 PM PST by napscoordinator ( Santorum-Bachmann 2016 for the future of the country!)
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To: JoeProBono

this is my favorite Hitchcock movie... i also loved the spoof done by Carol Burnett :)


37 posted on 12/15/2013 6:15:26 PM PST by latina4dubya (when i have money i buy books... if i have anything left, i buy 6-inch heels and a bottle of wine...)
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To: Wiggins

“The British WWII fighter bomber De Haviland Mosquito is named after her.”

Which was made by the de Havilland Aircraft Company


38 posted on 12/15/2013 6:18:10 PM PST by AppyPappy (Obama: What did I not know and when did I not know it?)
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To: JoeProBono

Great film. Need to watch it again.


39 posted on 12/15/2013 6:18:25 PM PST by sheana
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To: Borges

Nobody is going to believe this but I was watching the “TCM Remembers” short about Eleanor Parker thinking it was about Joan Fontaine and now Joan Fontaine is gone too.

Gives me the willies and I promise not to think about anybody else dying for a while.

That’s three by the way.


40 posted on 12/15/2013 6:19:44 PM PST by headstamp 2 (What would Scooby do?)
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