de Havilland, Olivia
American actress
in full Olivia Mary de Havilland
born July 1, 1916, Tokyo, Japan
American motion-picture actress remembered for the lovely and gentle ingenues of her early career as well as for the later, more substantial roles she fought to secure.


The daughter of a British patent attorney, de Havilland and her younger sister, Joan Fontaine, moved to California in 1919 with their mother, an actress. While attending school, de Havilland was chosen from the cast of a local California production of
A Midsummer Night's Dream to play Hermia in a 1935 Warner Brothers film version of that play. As the sweet-tempered beauty to Errol Flynn (Flynn, Errol)'s gallant swain, she appeared in many costume adventure movies of the 1930s and '40s, including
Captain Blood (1935),
The Charge of the Light Brigade (1936),
The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938), and
They Died with Their Boots On (1941). She also played romantic leading roles in
Strawberry Blonde (1941),
Hold Back the Dawn (1941), and
The Male Animal (1942) and portrayed Melanie Wilkes in
Gone with the Wind (1939).

In 1945 de Havilland won a precedent-setting case against Warner Brothers, which released her from a six-month penalty obligation appended by the studio to her seven-year contract. Free to take more challenging roles, she gave Academy Award-winning performances in
To Each His Own (1946) and
The Heiress (1949). She also gave a superb performance in
The Snake Pit (1948). De Havilland moved to France in 1955 and worked infrequently in films after that, most memorably in
The Light in the Piazza (1962),
Lady in a Cage (1964), and
Hush . . . Hush, Sweet Charlotte (1964). She also appeared in a number of television plays.