Joan Fontaine (born October 22 1917) is an Academy Award-winning Japanese-born British actress, who became an American citizen in April 1943.
She is the younger sister of actress Olivia de Havilland, from whom she has been estranged for many years; both attended Los Gatos High School and the Notre Dame Convent Roman Catholic girls school in Belmont, California.
At the age of two, Joan's parents divorced. Joan was a sickly child and had developed anemia following a combined attack of the measles and a streptococcic infection. Upon the advice of a physician, Joan's mother moved her and her sister to the United States where they settled in the town of Saratoga, California.
Joan's health improved dramatically and she was soon taking diction lessons along with her sister. She was also an extremely bright child and scored 160 on an intelligence test when she was three. When she was fifteen, Joan returned to Japan and lived with her father for two years.
Joan made her stage debut in the West Coast production of Call It A Day in 1935 and was soon signed to an RKO contract.
She continued appearing in small parts in about a dozen films but failed to make a strong impression and her contract was not renewed when it expired in 1939, the same year she married her first husband, the late British actor Brian Aherne. That marriage was not a success.
Her luck changed one night at a dinner party when she found herself seated next to producer David O. Selznick. She and Selznick began discussing the Daphne Du Maurier novel Rebecca, and Selznick asked her to audition for the part of the unnamed heroine. She endured a grueling six-month series of film tests, along with hundreds of other actresses, before securing the part.
The film marked the American debut of British director Alfred Hitchcock. In 1940, the film was released to glowing reviews and Joan was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress.
She didn't win that year (Ginger Rogers took home the award for Kitty Foyle) but Fontaine did win the following year for Best Actress in Suspicion, which was also directed by Hitchcock.
Both sisters were nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress in 1942. Fontaine won for her role in Alfred Hitchcock's Suspicion (1941). Biographer Charles Higham has described the events of the awards ceremony, stating that Joan "felt guilty about winning; given her lack of obsessive career drive..."
Several years later, when de Havilland won the Oscar, she famously brushed by Fontaine, waiting with her hand extended, because Olivia had allegedly taken offense at a comment Joan made about Olivia's then-husband. Higham records that the sisters always had an uneasy relationship, even since early childhood, when Olivia would rip up the clothes Joan had to wear as hand-me-downs, forcing Joan to sew them back together.
Both sisters have refused to comment on their feud, but Higham has stated that the above described event in 1942 was the final straw for what would become a lifelong feud, but this is debatable.
The sisters finally ceased to speak at all in 1975, because, according to Fontaine, de Havilland had not invited her to a memorial service for their late mother, Lilian de Havilland, who had recently died from cancer, although Olivia claims she told Joan and Joan brushed her off saying she was too busy to attend. The truth is hard to get when one is faced with two different versions of the same event.
During the 1960s, she continued her stage appearances in several productions, among them Private Lives, Cactus Flower and an Austrian production of The Lion in Winter. Her last theatrical film was The Witches (1966), which she also co-produced. She made sporadic television appearances throughout the 1970s and 1980s and was nominated for an Emmy for the soap opera, Ryan's Hope in 1980.
She resides in Carmel, California in relative seclusion.
She published her autobiography, No Bed of Roses, in 1979.
She has one daughter, Deborah Leslie Dozier (born in 1948), from her union with Dozier, and another daughter, Melinda, a Peruvian adoptee, who ran away from home. Fontaine is reported to be estranged from her daughters as well, possibly because she discovered that they were secretly maintaining a relationship with their aunt Olivia.
Joan Fontaine has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1645 Vine Street.
Current Biography 1944. H.W. Wilson Company, 1945.
1917 births | Living people | Film actors | American actors | Naturalized citizens of the United States | Best Actress Oscar | Best Actress Academy Award nominees | Hollywood Walk of Fame
Joan Fontaine | Joan Fontaine | Joan Fontaine | Joan Fontaine | Džoana Fonteina | Joan Fontaine | Joan Fontaine | Joan Fontaine
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