I confess it: as a Brit would
say, I have been one very lucky
bloke. It has never ceased to
amaze me that a fellow with no
connections whatsoever to show
business and who grew up in a
small farm community in the
Northwest (population: 2500),
could end up on a national television
network with the dream job
of talking about classic movies as
I get to do on TCM. Something
else which constantly reminds me
of how lucky I am is the 40-year
friendship I've had with TCM's
Star of the month for this July,
Olivia de Havilland.
I first met
Olivia in 1976 when I did an
interview with her for a magazine
article I'd been assigned. At
that point she'd long since been
semi-retired from acting in films
and was happily living in Paris as
the wife of Pierre Galante (the
editor of the renowned publication
Paris Match), living life as
Madame Galante, and being the
mother of a son, Benjamin, and
daughter, Gisele. Our interview was scheduled for an hour in the
commissary of the Universal studios--it
lasted four hours, accompanied by a
great many champagne bubbles. It
turned out to be the beginning of a
beautiful friendship, Louie.
During
that initial visit we spent a great deal of
time talking about her Hollywood years
and her strong, thoughtful memories of
the great films she'd made--Gone With
the Wind (1939), The Heiress (1949), the
underrated In This Our Life (1942) and
the nine films she made with Errol Flynn,
including The Adventures of Robin Hood
(1938) which forever after defined Olivia
and Errol Flynn as one of the great
screen teams. She also talked about
the clinkers, which she'd been forced
to do under the old studio contract
system, recounting them with great
flashes of humor. The first film she'd
made had been Warner Bros'. lofty
and distinguished A Midsummer Night's
Dream (1935) and, she said, "When they
asked me to sign a long-term contract I
thought 'Shakespeare--what better way
could one have an acting career than by
doing Shakespeare?'" Soon came a rude
awakening. Next, they assigned her to
do a weak little comedy about baseball
with Joe E. Brown, followed soon after
by Wings of the Navy, which she considers
the absolute nadir of her career. It
was as far afield from Shakespeare as
one could get, and she said to herself,
"Whoa, Olivia. This doesn't bode well
for you at Warner Bros." From then
on she began campaigning for better
roles, and they did eventually come her
way, along with two Academy Awards®
and the reputation of being one of
the screen's finest actresses.
We'll be
sharing many of Olivia's stories with
you on Friday nights this month as we
also celebrate a great landmark birthday for her--her 100th. It is her
birthday but we're the ones who get the
presents. Every Friday we'll be toasting
Olivia, showing 39 de Havilland films
in all, including all the biggies such as
To Each His Own (1946, Oscar® #1), The
Snake Pit, (1948, Oscar® nomination
#3), The Heiress (Oscar® #2) and several
which are lesser known, such as when
she played France's Queen Mother in
the era of the Three Musketeers in the
rarely shown The 5th Musketeer (1979)
with Rex Harrison, Jose Ferrer and
Cornel Wilde. And just for the fun of
it, you can see 1939's Wings of the Navy
and decide if you agree with Olivia's
assessment of it.
Through the years,
in addition to all the many assets that
are such an integral part of her, she's
also proven to be someone who always
makes good on promises. The night
she celebrated her 80th birthday in
Paris in 1996, Olivia told me she'd just
made a vow to live to be 100. And she's
done it. During a more recent phone
chat, she said, "I've changed my goal.
I've decided I want to live to be at least
110." That's the best birthday present
this amazing woman from Hollywood's
golden era could give us. I have no
doubt she'll make it. Bravo, Olivia!
by Robert Osborne
Robert Osborne on Olivia De Havilland
by Robert Osborne | June 23, 2016
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