MFAH Film Series – Olivia de Havilland Centennial Tribute: Hold Back the Dawn
Add to calendar Back to calendarMFAH Film Series – Olivia de Havilland Centennial Tribute: Hold Back the Dawn
- When
- July 14, 2016
- Where
-
Museum of Fine Arts Houston – Brown Auditorium
1001 Bissonnet Street
Houston,TX 77006 - Cost
- $2 - $1001
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston presents an Olivia de Havilland Centennial Tribute. This summer, the Museum proudly honors legendary actress Olivia de Havilland on the occasion of her 100th birthday on July 1.
The actress personally selected 12 films, including two for which she won Academy Awards and another three that earned her nominations. The tribute features 35mm studio prints, along with digital restorations.
Special thanks to de Havilland and her daughter, Gisele Chulack, who is an Honorary Trustee of the Museum, for their active participation in the planning of this tribute.
About Olivia de Havilland
The daughter of a British businessman and a choir teacher, de Havilland arrived in California at the age of 3. She made her screen debut in A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1935) and was signed to a seven-year contract with Warner Brothers.
She played romantic heroines paired with many top male stars, but her breakout performance came as Melanie in Gone with the Wind (1939), when Warner Brothers loaned her to David O. Selznick for the role in the MGM film.
After rebelling for better roles at Warner Brothers, de Havilland was suspended and was not released from her contract at the end of her seven-year term. She sued the studio and won in a landmark case that set the limit for a studio-player contract to expire at the end of seven years (including suspensions).
She won Oscars for To Each His Own (1946) and The Heiress (1949) and received accolades for her roles in Hold Back the Dawn (1941) and The Snake Pit (1948), becoming one of Hollywood’s leading dramatic actresses.
In the 1950s she moved to France, where she still resides, continuing to take movie roles that appealed to her. Her comedic adventures in Every Frenchman Has One (a liver, not a mistress) recollect her adaptation to life in Paris. Earlier this year, de Havilland accepted, in good humor, the “Oldie of the Year” honor from the satirical British magazine The Oldie.
Hold Back the Dawn
Directed by Mitchell Leisen
1941
USA
B/W
116 minutes
35mm
Introduced by Regina Scruggs from the Houston Film Critics Society.
De Havilland was Oscar-nominated for her role as Emmy Brown, a naive teacher wooed by Georges (Charles Boyer), a suave European stuck in Mexico.
He runs into an old friend (Paulette Goddard) who tells him that she gained her U.S. citizenship by marrying an American and later dumping him. Georges meets and romances Emmy, convincing her to marry him.
Later learning of the scheme, she has a near-fatal car accident. Georges rushes to her hospital bedside and confesses that he loves her, giving her the will to live.