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Oscar-winning actress Joan Fontaine dies aged 96 | Oscar-winning actress Joan Fontaine dies aged 96 |
(about 5 hours later) | |
Oscar-winning actress Joan Fontaine - the star of several psychological thrillers produced by Alfred Hitchcock - has died in California aged 96. | Oscar-winning actress Joan Fontaine - the star of several psychological thrillers produced by Alfred Hitchcock - has died in California aged 96. |
Fontaine - the sister of fellow Oscar-winner Olivia de Havilland - died in her sleep on Sunday in her home in Carmel, her friend Noel Beutel said. | |
Born in Japan to British parents, she and her older sister moved to the US as children. | |
She won an Oscar as a vulnerable wife in the movie Suspicion in 1942. | She won an Oscar as a vulnerable wife in the movie Suspicion in 1942. |
Hitchcock also cast Fontaine in the lead role in his first Hollywood work, Rebecca. | |
Her other films included The Constant Nymph, Jane Eyre and Letter from an Unknown Woman. | Her other films included The Constant Nymph, Jane Eyre and Letter from an Unknown Woman. |
Fontaine won her Oscar over her sister, who was in the running for her role in Hold Back The Dawn. | |
The pair's constant and lifelong rivalry was legendary in Hollywood. | |
De Havilland is still alive at the age of 97 and lives in Paris. | |
Fontaine gained another two Academy Award nominations, including for her lead role in Rebecca in which she played opposite Laurence Olivier. | |
The actress later said it was a "bittersweet moment" beating De Havilland to the best actress prize. "I was appalled that I won over my sister," she added. | |
But De Havilland - who played a significant role in Gone With The Wind - won two statuettes later in the 1940s for To Each His Own and The Heiress. | |
When she won the Oscar for To Each His Own in 1947, it is said she snubbed her sister's congratulatory gesture. | |
The sisters' difficult relationship continued for decades. | |
Speaking to the Hollywood Reporter in 1978, Fontaine said: "I married first, won the Oscar before Olivia did, and if I die first, she'll undoubtedly be livid because I beat her to it." | |
In her autobiography, the actress said: "I adore, respect and like my sister. But we don't seek out each other's company. We're such complete opposites." | |
The pair remain the only siblings to have both won Academy Awards for acting. | |
Fontaine - born Joan de Beauvoir de Havilland in Tokyo - had four marriages which ended in divorce. She held dual British-US citizenship. | |
She starred opposite many of the Hollywood greats, including as Joan Crawford's rival in her first major role in 1935's No More Ladies. | |
Fontaine also lined up with Katharine Hepburn, Fred Astaire and Cary Grant - her co-star in Suspicion. | |
The star was determined to play more wilful roles later in her career, gaining recognition for Tender is the Night in 1962. | |
Her final major screen appearance came four years later in The Witches, while her final screen credit was for the TV movie Good King Wenceslas in 1994. |