A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1935) | Marked for stardom from the very beginning, de Havilland made her screen debut in this glittery production of Shakespeare’s romantic fantasy, appearing alongside several stars and stars-to-be, including Dick Powell, James Cagney and a teenage Mickey Rooney as Puck. De Havilland would give more naturalistic performances in the future, but as Hermia, her emphatic passions fit into a film that gives Shakespeare a robust reading — to put it mildly. Credit: Getty Images
Captain Blood (1935) | The first in a string of films with Errol Flynn, “Captain Blood” established a winning formula: Flynn as the rakish, irreverent, truehearted hero of the common man, de Havilland as the well-mannered aristocrat worn down by his charms. Set in 17th-century England, the film stars Flynn as a doctor sold into slavery for rebelling against the king and de Havilland as the wealthy colonist who decides to buy him, more out of coquettish intrigue than a need for labour. Credit: IMDb
The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938) | Produced in beautiful three-strip Technicolor, “The Adventures of Robin Hood” again casts Flynn and de Havilland as natural adversaries who grow into romantic allies, and the Robin Hood myth accommodates their dynamic better than anything else they did together. Flynn is Sherwood Forest’s merry troublemaker, a noble Saxon who wages guerrilla war against the diabolical Prince John and the Normans, with de Havilland’s Lady Marian as a persuadable royal. Credit: IMDb
Gone With the Wind (1939) | As the famed “search for Scarlett” ballooned to 1,400 actresses, de Havilland set her sights on playing Melanie Hamilton, Scarlett’s sister-in-law and eventual best friend, working hard behind the scenes to get Warner Bros to release her from her contract to do it. Over the four-hour-plus running time, Melanie gets a full arc, marrying her cousin Ashley Wilkes, the man Scarlett secretly loves, surviving dramatic childbirth without medical assistance, reuniting with her husband after the Civil War and dying from another pregnancy near the end. Credit: IMDb
Hold Back the Dawn (1941) | A winning prototype for the Gerard Depardieu/Andie MacDowell rom-com “Green Card” nearly half a century later, “Hold Back the Dawn” stars de Havilland as a schoolteacher who’s conned into a marriage of convenience by a Romanian gigolo (Charles Boyer) waylaid in Mexico. His plan is to gain U.S. residency and dump her for a glamorous dancer (Paulette Goddard), but their sham marriage evolves into something approaching a legitimate one. Credit: IMDb
To Each His Own (1946) De Havilland won the first of two Oscars in this beautiful exemplar of a “women’s weepie,” which finds her suffering with heartbreaking nobility until the last, bittersweet scene. She stars as a small-town girl who falls for a pilot (John Lund) during World War I, stays with him long enough to get pregnant before losing him in combat, and, through a complicated series of circumstances, has to give the baby up for adoption. Credit: IMDb
The Dark Mirror (1946) The same year she acted opposite John Lund in a dual role, de Havilland got the opportunity to play one herself, starring as identical twin sisters, Terry and Ruth, who fall under suspicion when their neighbour is murdered. Despite necklaces and pendants to help tell one from the other, investigators puzzle over which sister is normal and which one is psychotic, especially when the two engage in mind games and manipulation. It is a parlour game disguised as a serious psychological thriller. Credit: IMDb
The Snake Pit (1948) | Long before Sam Fuller’s 1963 classic “Shock Corridor,” “The Snake Pit” shined a light on state mental institutions and their reliance on remedies like hypnotherapy and electric shock treatments. The devotion to realism carries over to de Havilland’s performance as a schizophrenic housewife who hears voices and experiences massive disorientation, which the film communicates via de Havilland’s inner monologue. Credit: IMDb
Hush … Hush, Sweet Charlotte (1964) | Two years after setting Bette Davis and Joan Crawford against each other in the deranged psychological thriller “What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?,” the genre maestro Robert Aldrich brought Davis back to pair up with another screen legend, de Havilland, in a similarly fever-pitched drama. Davis is the more dominant presence as a wilted Southern belle who was exonerated for the murder of her married lover (Bruce Dern) nearly 40 years earlier, but most assume she was guilty. Credit: IMDb
Published 27 July 2020, 10:22 IST