Laurence Olivier


Actor, Director
Laurence Olivier

About

Also Known As
Laurence Kerr Olivier, Sir Laurence Olivier (Lord Olivier)
Birth Place
Surrey, England, GB
Born
May 22, 1907
Died
July 11, 1989
Cause of Death
Natural Causes

Biography

He was by wide consensus the greatest actor of the 20th century. In an age when the "legitimate" theater held firm to primacy over motion pictures, and classical theater over modern, Laurence Olivier crossed seamlessly between both, even bridging the gap between popular culture and the Shakespearean and classic drama canon of which he was master. His legacy as the definitive Heathcliff a...

Photos & Videos

Hamlet (1948) - Movie Posters
Dancing Lady - Behind-the-Scenes Photos
Rebecca - Movie Poster

Family & Companions

Jill Esmond
Wife
Actor. Married in 1930; divorced in 1940.
Vivien Leigh
Wife
Actor. Married on August 30, 1940; divorced in 1960.
Dorothy Tutin
Companion
Actor. Had relationship when they appeared together in the film "The Beggar's Opera" (1953).
Claire Bloom
Companion
Actor. Played Lady Anne to his "Richard III" (1955); Bloom recounts their affair in her memoirs.

Bibliography

"Laurence Olivier"
Donald Spoto, Cooper Square Press (2001)
"The Real Life of Laurence Olivier"
Roger Lewis, Applause Books (1996)
"Enchantment: The Life of Laurence Olivier
Donald Spoto, HarperCollins (1992)
"Laurence Olivier: A Biography"
Anthony Holden (1988)

Notes

"Sometimes the gods come down and blow in your ear--and you can do no wrong. Other times, you have to provide a performance. You just can't wait around for them to blow." --Laurence Olivier quoted in The Hollywood Reporter, March 15, 1991.

"Acting is a masochistic form of exhibitionism. It is not quite the occupation of an adult." --Laurence Olivier.

Biography

He was by wide consensus the greatest actor of the 20th century. In an age when the "legitimate" theater held firm to primacy over motion pictures, and classical theater over modern, Laurence Olivier crossed seamlessly between both, even bridging the gap between popular culture and the Shakespearean and classic drama canon of which he was master. His legacy as the definitive Heathcliff and Hamlet, his acclaim even a generation later as the vengeful cuckold in "Sleuth" (1972) and a ruthless Nazi doctor in "Marathon Man" (1976), would see him earn 14 Oscar nominations, three statues, five Emmys out of nine nominations, two British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) awards out of 10 nominations - only a few indicators of his titanic impact on his craft and indeed on Western culture.

He was born Laurence Kerr Olivier on May 22, 1907 in Dorking, Surrey, England, the third child of Agnes and Rev. Gerard Olivier - she a warm and doting woman, he an austere and stolid High Anglican minister. Gerard soon moved the family to the bleaker urban scape of London to minister its Dickensian slums, though his considerable inheritance afforded "Larry" a series of parochial schools, including All Saints Church's "choir school," which began refining his penchant for the arts, and saw him play Brutus in "Julius Caesar" at age 10. He would be devastated two years later when his mother died of a brain tumor. In 1922, the school company staged its version of "The Taming of the Shrew" at a Stratford-on-Avon Shakespeare birthday festival, with Olivier drawing mainstream raves for his shrewish Katharina (in true Shakespearean drag). He next attended St. Edward's in Oxford, continued to display thespian talent and, upon graduation, his father advised he pursue a theatrical career.

At 17, he won a scholarship to the Central School of Speech and Drama, but soon began a two-year stint with the Birmingham Repertory Company. There, he met fellow thespians Peggy Ashcroft, Ralph Richardson and Jill Esmond, with whom he became enamored. They would all graduate to London's West End theater district. Soon Olivier became a hot commodity, as evidenced by his lead in a garish, overambitious stage production of the French Foreign Legion adventure "Beau Geste." In 1929, he crossed the Atlantic to make his Broadway debut in "Murder on the Second Floor," reuniting with Esmond, who, upon his arrival, immediately agreed to his marriage proposal. They would marry in 1930. Also that year, Olivier scored a role in a new play, "Private Lives," by playwright Noel Coward, who, by various accounts, either successfully or unsuccessfully proffered a sexual dalliance with Olivier, at any rate inaugurating a lifelong friendship. Esmond joined the play's cast for an early 1931 Broadway run, which caught the attention of American film studios.

They lured the couple to Los Angeles, but Olivier's three initial movies for RKO - he liked only "Westward Passage" (1932) - did little to set the box office afire. The couple returned to the U.K., where they made their only movie together, "No Funny Business" (1933). MGM would lure him back to Los Angeles, with a one-off project opposite Greta Garbo, but the studio's grand dame intimidated and took an instant dislike to the newcomer so MGM fired him. Humiliated, Olivier returned to London and the stage with a string of hits, becoming a producer for the first time with the play "Golden Arrow," co-starring his young Irish discovery Greer Garson, and in a 1935 staging of "Romeo and Juliet" with Gielgud that would run an unheard-of six months. Olivier and Gielgud would take on the unique task of alternating on the Romeo and Mercutio parts. Olivier wowed critics, eschewing the formal, lyrical approach to the Bard by playing Romeo with naturalistic, hormonal verve, which may have spilled over to a physical relationship with his Juliet, Peggy Ashcroft. But at this same time, he became a singular attraction to a young actress who had made it to the West End herself under the name Vivien Leigh.

Leigh, already married and a mother, famously pronounced she would one day marry Olivier, and Olivier himself later claimed that after seeing her breakthrough play "Mask of Virtue," he experienced "an attraction of the most perturbing nature I have ever encountered." They starred together in film producer Alexander Korda's "Fire Over England" (1936), with Olivier playing an agent of Queen Elizabeth on a mission to Spain and Leigh portraying one of the queen's ladies-in-waiting and his lover, which, as their fervent on-screen embraces betrayed, they had become in real life. Leigh aspired to Olivier's mastery of classic theater. As the relationship intensified, she eventually picked up his famous fluency in unfettered blue language. Olivier's persistent religious guilt complicated things, as did Esmond's recent pregnancy, soon to bear a son, Tarquin - though she remained publicly amicable with both of them. In 1937, Olivier joined the venerable Old Vic theater as a featured star, beginning the year in its production of "Hamlet," even as he managed to arrange the first tandem projects for himself and his lover: a staging of "Hamlet at Denmark's Elsinore Castle in the summer, and a film, "Twenty-One Days" (1940), with the two playing lovers on the lam after he accidentally kills her estranged husband. Neither liked the latter, shelving it for three years, but at the end of the production, as news spread of Hollywood's adaptation of the blockbuster novel Gone With the Wind, she famously prophesied she would play its protagonist, Scarlett O'Hara. Leigh and Olivier soon fessed up to and separated from their respective partners and, after his rare comedic turn with Merle Oberon and Ralph Richardson in "The Divorce of Lady X" (1938), he and Leigh headed to Hollywood - she to fulfill her prophecy and he to finally break through the film barrier as a romantic heartthrob.

It would be Emily Bronte's "Wuthering Heights" (1939), adapted for film by indie producer Samuel Goldwyn and director William Wyler, that made Olivier a household name across the Atlantic. He played Heathcliff, one-time stable boy spurned for his low breeding by his first love, Cathy (Merle Oberon), who returns years later as a successful, brooding man with his heart hard and set on revenge against his lost love and anyone who had mistreated him in the past. He would credit director William Wyler with teaching him the toned-down nuances of screen versus stage acting, turning in his first Oscar-nominated performance. At the same time, Leigh won Best Actress as Scarlett O'Hara for her work in "Gone with the Wind." In 1940, their respective spouses agreed to divorce and to the delight of fans, Leigh and Olivier wed. Olivier would rack up two more hits: "Pride and Prejudice," reuniting him with protégée Greer Garson in the film adaptation of Jane Austen's witty Victorian parlor romance; and Alfred Hitchcock's "Rebecca," which had him as a sullen aristocrat with a new wife (Joan Fontaine) driven to dredge up the mysterious fate of his first spouse while confined to his gothic mansion. Olivier's disquieted, simmering performance drew yet another Oscar nomination.

Olivier and Leigh returned to Britain to do another tandem picture for Korda, "That Hamilton Woman" (1941), which cast her as an unhappily married socialite and him as the British naval hero Horatio Nelson, which chronicled their illicit romance which became the great scandal of its time. Commissioned by the British government, he next mounted his most ambitious production, a Technicolor version of Shakespeare's "Henry V" (1944). He produced, directed and starred in the critically acclaimed film, and his delivery of the famed St. Crispin's Day speech became a rallying cry for the country's ongoing war effort. The film's 1946 U.S. release would earn him Oscar nominations for Best Actor and Best Picture, and though he won neither, his top-to-bottom helming of the project would earn him an honorary Academy Award in 1947. Also that year, King George VI knighted Olivier, making the couple "Sir Laurence and Lady Olivier."

Despite the fairy tale mystique surrounding the legendary couple, all was not well in their household. Leigh increasingly suffered violent tantrums that she would not remember afterward, and to make matters worse, during production of "Caesar and Cleopatra" (1945) she suffered a miscarriage. Tuberculosis compounded her physical and mental health issues; she grew distant and jealous of Olivier's successes and paranoid about his affairs, both imagined and real, at one point telling him matter-of-factly she was no longer in love with him. Seeking respite, Olivier strayed with any number of rumored partners even as he enabled her own long-term affair with actor Peter Finch, whom he hired for the Old Vic company after its 1948 tour of Australia. That year, he made history with his big-budget Shakespearean film adaptation of "Hamlet" (1948), in which he became the first director to direct himself to a Best Actor Oscar.

The Oliviers continued their stage collaborations; notably he directed her in the 1949 West End production of Tennessee Williams' "A Streetcar Named Desire." He settled into a kind of caregiver role for his manic-depressive, bipolar wife, arranging a project of his own, the Wyler-helmed illicit-love tragedy "Carrie" (1952), to travel with her while she made "Streetcar" (1952) in Hollywood. Her co-star Marlon Brando later wrote he eschewed a tryst with Leigh out of respect for Olivier, but oddly, David Niven claimed in his autobiography that he witnessed Brando kissing Olivier at the couple's mansion. (Though long a subject of rumor and controversy, Olivier's third wife, Joan Plowright, would acknowledge his libertinism and bisexuality in a 2006 radio interview). Leigh was back with Finch in Ceylon in 1953 for the film "Elephant Walk" (1952) when she suffered a full-blown break, causing her to be hospitalized and be given a lifelong regimen of electroshock therapy, which would render her even more alien to Olivier.

He earned another Oscar nomination for his villainous "Richard III" (1955), and followed it up with a Marilyn Monroe mismatched-pair fantasy, "The Prince and the Showgirl" (1957), which he also directed. Meanwhile, he had commissioned West End enfant terrible John Osborne to write him a drama that could contemporize his own image. Osborne produced "The Entertainer," which had Olivier as an unpleasant, archaic song-and-dance man still working Britain's crumbling dance-halls, metaphorical of an Imperial society in decay. He began a relationship with his onstage daughter, Joan Plowright. She would star with him in the 1960 film adaptation, which would earn Olivier yet another Best Actor Oscar nomination. He and Leigh would divorce that year, leading to Olivier and Plowright marrying in 1961. With the dissolution of the Old Vic company in 1962, he would soon oversee another regeneration called the National Theatre Company, with Olivier serving as its first director. Under his tenure, it would nurture a new generation of talent, including Michael Gambon, Derek Jacobi, Alan Bates and Anthony Hopkins. The National's production of "Othello" would become the 1965 film, for which Olivier and his three co-stars would all win Oscar nominations.

Olivier continued to be selective with film in the 1960s. His leading roles became less frequent but affecting, as with "Term of Trial" (1962), in which he gave a heartbreaking performance as a high school teacher whose life is turned upside down when a spurned student accuses him of seducing her; and his understatedly cool detective in "Bunny Lake is Missing" (1965). Olivier had also begun taking film-stealing supporting roles, in which he often played villains. He played Johnny Burgoyne, the dashing nemesis of the colonials Kirk Douglas and Burt Lancaster in George Bernard Shaw's Revolutionary War drama "The Devil's Disciple," (1959), thwarted Douglas again as the scheming, draconian general Crassus in Stanley Kubrick's epic "Spartacus" (1960), an Islamic would-be messiah in "Khartoum" (1966), a Soviet premier in "Shoes of the Fisherman" (1968), and, later, as the nefarious Dr. Moriarty in the revisionist Sherlock Holmes adventure "The Seven-Per-Cent Solution" (1976).

The late 1960s would begin a series of health crises for Olivier, starting with treatment of prostate cancer, but he would nevertheless be prolific in bringing the stage to mass media in the 1970s. He oversaw the translation of the National's productions of Chekhov's "Three Sisters" (co-starring Plowright) into a theatrical film and Eugene O'Neill's "Long Day's Journey Into Night" (1973) into a TV-movie for broadcast on ITV in the U.K. and ABC in the U.S, earning him an Emmy. However, he relinquished helm of the theater soon thereafter amid some contention with its board, just a few years before the company moved into the new Olivier Theater. In 1974, he barely survived the onset of the muscle disease dermatopolymyositis, but returned the next year with the TV-movie "Love Among the Ruins" (ABC, 1975), playing a barrister charged with defending a woman he fell in love with years ago, both now in their twilight years. Both he and Katherine Hepburn won Best Actor Emmys for a "special" broadcast. He would also bring Tennessee Williams' "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" and William Inge's "Come Back, Little Sheba" to NBC in 1976 and 1977, respectively.

His selective, age-adjusted cinematic outings brought continued accolades, notably three more Oscar nominations for his manipulative cuckolded husband in the cat-and-mouse thriller "Sleuth;" ice-blooded Nazi dentist, famously torturing Dustin Hoffman via check-up in "Marathon Man" (1976), and as a dry, unflappable Nazi hunter in "The Boys from Brazil" (1978). He received a second honorary Oscar the following year for his body of work. He also stood out as an old pickpocket shepherding the two smitten adolescents in Venice in "A Little Romance" (1979) and as the vampire hunter Van Helsing in the 1979 remake of "Dracula." His work as Neil Diamond's orthodox Jewish father in the remake of "The Jazz Singer" (1980), however, was viewed as overwrought and mawkish. He won another BAFTA Best Actor nomination for "A Voyage Round My Father" (1983) opposite Alan Bates, and won yet another Emmy that year for his turn as "King Lear" (ABC). Worried about his estate, he peppered his later years' work with glorified cameos - some in projects he knew to be awful, as with "Inchon" (1981) and "Clash of the Titans" (1981), but others in higher-quality fare like "The Bounty" (1985). In 1984, the top awards for British theatrical awards were renamed the Laurence Olivier Awards. His infirmities became evident during the March 1985 Academy Awards telecast, when he capped the evening presenting the Best Picture Oscar, but inadvertently sidestepped the tradition of running down the nominees first and simply stated the winner, "Amadeus." He appeared in the "Entertainer"-reminiscent Granada TV series "Lost Empires" (PBS, 1987) about the decline of U.K. vaudeville, for which he earned his last Emmy nomination, then made a final cameo as an old soldier in Derek Jarman's stylistic "War Requiem" (1989). He died on July 11, 1989, at his home in Steyning, West Sussex. His burial at Westminster would rival British state funerals, televised nationally throughout the U.K.

By Matthew Grimm

Filmography

 

Director (Feature Film)

The Prince and the Showgirl (1957)
Director
Richard III (1955)
Director
Hamlet (1948)
Director
Henry V (1944)
Director
The Chronicle History of King Henry the Fift with his Battell at Agincourt in France (1944)
Director

Cast (Feature Film)

Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow (2004)
War Requiem (1989)
Old Soldier
Wild Geese II (1985)
The Jigsaw Man (1984)
The Bounty (1984)
Inchon (1982)
General Douglas Macarthur
Clash of the Titans (1981)
Zeus
The Jazz Singer (1980)
Dracula (1979)
Van Helsing
A Little Romance (1979)
The Betsy (1978)
The Boys From Brazil (1978)
Ezra Lieberman
A Bridge Too Far (1977)
Come Back, Little Sheba (1977)
Doc Delaney
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1976)
Big Daddy
Marathon Man (1976)
The Seven-Per-Cent Solution (1976)
Gentleman Tramp (1975)
Love Among the Ruins (1975)
The Merchant of Venice (1973)
Sleuth (1972)
Andrew Wyke
Lady Caroline Lamb (1972)
Duke Of Wellington
Nicholas and Alexandra (1971)
Count [Sergius] Witte By courtesy of the National Theatre of G. B.
David Copperfield (1970)
Mr Creakle
Oh! What a Lovely War (1969)
Field Marshal Sir John French
Battle of Britain (1969)
Air Chief Marshal Sir Hugh Dowding
The Shoes of the Fisherman (1968)
Piotr Lylich Kamenev
Romeo and Juliet (1968)
Narrator
Khartoum (1966)
The Mahdi
Bunny Lake Is Missing (1965)
Newhouse
Othello (1965)
Othello
Term of Trial (1962)
Graham Weir
Spartacus (1960)
[Marcus Licinius] Crassus
The Entertainer (1960)
Archie Rice
The Devil's Disciple (1959)
Gen. John "Gentlemanly Johnny" Burgoyne
The Prince and the Showgirl (1957)
The Regent, [also known as Grand Duke Charles, Regent of the Balkan State of Carpathia]
Richard III (1955)
Richard III
The Beggar's Opera (1953)
Captain Macheath
Carrie (1952)
George Hurstwood
The Magic Box (1951)
Startled Policeman
Hamlet (1948)
Hamlet
Henry V (1944)
Henry V
The Chronicle History of King Henry the Fift with his Battell at Agincourt in France (1944)
Demi-Paradise (1943)
Ivan Dimitrevitch Kouzetsoff
That Hamilton Woman (1941)
Horatio Nelson
49th Parallel (1941)
Pride and Prejudice (1940)
Mr. Darcy
Rebecca (1940)
Maxim de Winter
21 Days Together (1940)
Larry [Durrant]
Conquest Of The Air (1940)
Vincent Lunardi
Wuthering Heights (1939)
Heathcliff
Clouds over Europe (1939)
Tony McVane
The Divorce of Lady X (1938)
[Everard] Logan
As You Like It (1937)
Orlando
Fire over England (1937)
Michael [Ingolby]
I Stand Condemned (1936)
Captain Ignatoff
Perfect Understanding (1933)
Nick Randall
Westward Passage (1932)
Nick [Allen]
Friends and Lovers (1931)
Lieutenant Ned Nichols
The Yellow Ticket (1931)
Julian Rolfe

Writer (Feature Film)

Richard III (1955)
Adaptation
Richard III (1955)
Screenplay
Hamlet (1948)
Screenwriter
Henry V (1944)
Screenplay
Henry V (1944)
Adaptation

Producer (Feature Film)

Come Back, Little Sheba (1977)
Segment Producer
Come Back, Little Sheba (1977)
Artistic Producer
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1976)
Producer
The Prince and the Showgirl (1957)
Producer
Richard III (1955)
Producer
The Beggar's Opera (1953)
Producer
Hamlet (1948)
Producer
Henry V (1944)
Producer

Cast (Special)

One Man in His Time: A Tribute to Laurence Olivier (1990)
The Ebony Tower (1987)
Laurence Olivier -- A Life (1986)
Directed By William Wyler (1986)
Himself
King Lear (1984)
King Lear
Mr. Halperin and Mr. Johnson (1983)
Long Day's Journey Into Night (1973)
James Tyrone
The Power and the Glory (1961)
Priest
The Moon and Sixpence (1959)

Misc. Crew (Special)

Directed By William Wyler (1986)
Other

Cast (Short)

Cavalcade of the Academy Awards (1940)
Himself

Cast (TV Mini-Series)

Peter the Great (1986)
The Last Days of Pompeii (1984)
Jesus of Nazareth (Do Not Use) (1977)

Life Events

1926

With Birmingham Repertory Company

1929

Film acting debut in "Murder for Sale"

1929

Broadway acting debut

1944

Appointed co-director of Old Vic Theatre

1944

Film directing debut with "Henry V"

1983

Honored at Film Society at Lincoln Center

Photo Collections

Hamlet (1948) - Movie Posters
Hamlet (1948) - Movie Posters
Dancing Lady - Behind-the-Scenes Photos
Here are a few photos taken behind-the-scenes during production of MGM's Dancing Lady (1933), starring Joan Crawford, Clark Gable, and Fred Astaire.
Rebecca - Movie Poster
Here is an original-release movie poster from Alfred Hitchcock's Rebecca (1940), starring Joan Fontaine and Laurence Olivier.
Pride and Prejudice - Behind-the-Scenes Photos
Here are a few photos of Laurence Olivier, taken behind-the-scenes during production of MGM' Pride and Prejudice (1940).
Pride and Prejudice - Publicity Stills
Here are a few photos taken to help publicize MGM's Pride and Prejudice (1940), starring Greer Garson and Laurence Olivier. Publicity stills were specially-posed photos, usually taken off the set, for purposes of publicity or reference for promotional artwork.
Pride and Prejudice - Scene Stills
Here are several scene stills from MGM's Pride and Prejudice (1940), starring Greer Garson and Laurence Olivier.
Wuthering Heights - Movie Poster
Here is the American one-sheet movie poster for Samuel Goldwyn's production of Wuthering Heights (1939), starring Merle Oberon and Laurence Olivier. One-sheets measured 27x41 inches, and were the poster style most commonly used in theaters.
Sleuth (1972) - Movie Poster
Here is the original One-sheet movie poster for Sleuth (1972), starring Laurence Olivier and Michael Caine. One-sheets measured 27x41 inches, and were the poster style most commonly used in theaters.
Richard III (1955) - Movie Poster
Here is the British one-sheet movie poster for Richard III (1955), directed by and starring Laurence Olivier. One-sheets measured 27x41 inches, and were the poster style most commonly used in theaters.
Pride and Prejudice - Movie Poster
Here is an American re-issue one-sheet movie poster for MGM's Pride and Prejudice (1940), starring Greer Garson and Laurence Olivier. One-sheets measured 27x41 inches, and were the poster style most commonly used in theaters.
Queen Christina - Casting Memo from Garbo
In this studio memo, Greta Garbo exercises her rights of casting approval on MGM's Queen Christina (1933).
The Boys from Brazil - Movie Poster
Here is the American one-sheet movie poster for The Boys from Brazil (1978), starring Laurence Olivier, Gregory Peck, and James Mason. One-sheets measured 27x41 inches, and were the poster style most commonly used in theaters.

Videos

Movie Clip

Wuthering Heights (1939) -- (Movie Clip) I'm Neither Thief Nor Stranger Returned from America, making an obscured reference to their childhood romance, Heathcliff (Laurence Olivier) tells Cathy (Merle Oberon), her husband Edgar (David Niven) and his sister Isabella (Geraldine Fitzgerald) he's home to stay, in Wuthering Heights, 1939, the Samuel Goldwyn production directed by William Wyler, from the Emily Bronte novel.
That Hamilton Woman (1941) -- (Movie Clip) My Dear Captain Lady Hamilton (Vivien Leigh) thriving as the wife of Sir William (Alan Mowbray), the British ambassador to Naples, grapples with a social problem and meets young Captain Nelson (Laurence Olivier) for the first time, in Alexander Korda's That Hamilton Woman, 1941.
That Hamilton Woman (1941) -- (Movie Clip) By The Queen's Own Hand At odds with history but smartly dressed by designer Rene Hubert, Lady Hamilton (Vivien Leigh) visits her old friend now Admiral Nelson (Laurence Olivier) aboard the Vanguard, shocked at his condition but bearing good news of her influence with the queen of Naples, in Alexander Korda's That Hamilton Woman, 1941.
That Hamilton Woman (1941) -- (Movie Clip) My Only Idea Of Happiness Still giddy over her social achievements (and reflecting on her disreputable former fiancè) Emma (now-Lady) Hamilton (Vivien Leigh) is awakened in her Naples bedroom, with her excited mother (Sara Allgood) and her fussy ambassador husband (Alan Mowbray) as the leading man (Laurence Olivier, Leigh’s husband, as Captain Nelson) is introduced, in Alexander Korda’s That Hamilton Woman, 1941.
That Hamilton Woman (1941) -- (Movie Clip) What Mood Is This? Now-admiral Nelson (Laurence Olivier), bored with his hero’s welcome in Naples is now evading celebrations, indulging his interest in the title character (Vivien Leigh, Mrs. Olivier, as Emma, Lady Hamilton, wife of the British ambassador), in a tavern when his junior officers (Ronald Sinclair as Josiah) appear, Alexander Korda directing from the original screenplay by Walter Reisch and R.C. Sherriff, in That Hamilton Woman, 1941.
Battle Of Britain, The (1969) -- (Movie Clip) To Stem The German Invasion Director Guy Hamilton getting his money’s worth in his introduction of Laurence Olivier (himself a navy pilot in WWII) as the popular Air Chief Marshal Hugh Dowding, who himself served as a consultant on the film, reading from a real letter advocating an unpopular position, confronting Harry Andrews, early in Battle Of Britain, 1969.
Henry V (1944) -- (Movie Clip) Unto Southampton! Leslie Banks, as "Chorus" conveys us to Southampton, where the king (director and star Laurence Olivier) launches his fleet, then the death of Falstaff (George Robey), faithful to the original Shakespeare, from Henry V, 1944.
Henry V (1944) -- (Movie Clip) Upon The King Director and title character Laurence Olivier elects to offer this segment of the famous speech as interior monologue, on the eve of Agincourt, from act four, scene one of the Shakespeare, interrupted by Erpingham (Morland Graham), from the partly government-financed 1944 production of Henry V.
49th Parallel (1941) -- (Movie Clip) Trapper Johnny French Canadian trapper Johnny (Laurence Olivier) and his trading post officer (Finlay Currie) are surprised by fugitives from the Nazi U-Boat (led by Eric Portman as "Hirth") in Michael Powell's multi-starred propaganda vehicle 49th Parallel, 1941.
49th Parallel (1941) -- (Movie Clip) Opening, This Film Is Dedicated To Canada Prologue and opening credits to the second collaboration between director Michael Powell and writer Emeric Pressburger, 49th Parallel, 1941, featuring Leslie Howard, Laurence Olivier and Raymond Massey.
Entertainer, The (1960) -- (Movie Clip) Up The Flag, Mick! Within an early flashback Joan Plowright as art teacher Jean recalls seeing off her brother (Albert Finney as Mick), with her fiancè Graham (Daniel Massey), his unit having been called up from London for the Suez Crisis, in director Tony Richardson’s The Entertainer, 1960, starring Laurence Olivier.
Entertainer, The (1960) -- (Movie Clip) Nuns, Clergymen And Dogs! Sister Jean (Joan Plowright) and stepmother Phoebe (Brenda De Banzie) worrying over paratrooper brother Mick, grandfather Billy (Roger Livesey) harrumphing, when actor father Archie (Laurence Olivier) arrives, early in Tony Richardson's The Entertainer, 1960.

Trailer

Marathon Man (1976) -- Original Trailer Original theatrical trailer for the hit thriller from producers Robert Evans and Sidney Beckerman, starring Dustin Hoffman with Laurence Olivier, William Devane and Roy Scheider, from William Goldman’s book and screenplay, Marathon Man, 1976.
Devil's Disciple, The (1959) -- (Original Trailer) Co-stars and producers Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas top-billed, but sharing credit with their hired colleague Laurence Olivier, playing the British General Burgoyne, in the England-made and UA distributed The Devil’s Disciple, 1959, from the George Bernard Shaw play.
Nicholas and Alexandra - (Original Trailer) Nicholas and Alexandra (1971), the story of Russia's last czar, Nicolas II, and his ill-fated family.
Khartoum - (Original Trailer) Charlton Heston stars as the British general Gordon sent to stop The Mahdi (Laurence Olivier) from taking Khartoum (1966).
Bunny Lake Is Missing - (Original Trailer) A distraught mother searches for her semmingly non-existant daughter, bringing her sanity into question in Otto Preminger's Bunny Lake Is Missing (1965).
Prince and the Showgirl, The - (Original Trailer) An American showgirl (Marilyn Monroe) creates an international incident when she falls for a European prince (Laurence Olivier) in The Prince and the Showgirl (1957).
Seven-Per-Cent Solution, The - (Original Trailer) Sherlock Holmes encounters Sigmund Freud and the two become involved in a case in the imaginative pastiche The Seven-Per-Cent Solution (1976).
Romeo and Juliet (1968) - (Wide release Trailer) Olivia Hussey and Leonard Whiting are Shakespeare's ill-starred teens in Franco Zeffirelli's movie of Romeo and Juliet (1968).
Boys From Brazil, The - (Original Trailer) A Nazi hunter (Laurence Olivier) tracks a mad scientist (Gregory Peck) out to bring back Hitler.
Henry V (1944) - (Re-issue Trailer) Shakespeare's tale of the warrior king (Laurence Olivier) who learns the meaning of heroism during a daring invasion of France.
Little Romance, A - (Original Trailer) Teenagers elope with the help of an aging pickpocket in A Little Romance (1979), starring Diane Lane and Laurence Olivier.
Othello (1965) - (Original Trailer) Laurence Olivier stars as Shakespeare's Othello (1965) with Maggie Smith as Desdemona and Frank Finlay as Iago.

Promo

Family

Agnes Crookenden Olivier
Mother
Gerard Olivier
Father
Clergyman, schoolmaster.
Simon Tarquin Olivier
Son
Director. Mother, Jill Esmond.
Richard Kerr Olivier
Son
Producer. Mother, Joan Plowright.
Tamsin Olivier
Daughter
Restaurateur, former actor. Mother, Joan Plowright; owns The Engineer, a restaurant.
Julie-Kate Olivier
Daughter
Actor. Mother, Joan Plowright.

Companions

Jill Esmond
Wife
Actor. Married in 1930; divorced in 1940.
Vivien Leigh
Wife
Actor. Married on August 30, 1940; divorced in 1960.
Dorothy Tutin
Companion
Actor. Had relationship when they appeared together in the film "The Beggar's Opera" (1953).
Claire Bloom
Companion
Actor. Played Lady Anne to his "Richard III" (1955); Bloom recounts their affair in her memoirs.
Joan Plowright
Wife
Actor. Married from March 17, 1961 until Olivier's death.
Sarah Miles
Companion
Actor. Miles wrote about their relationship in her memoirs.

Bibliography

"Laurence Olivier"
Donald Spoto, Cooper Square Press (2001)
"The Real Life of Laurence Olivier"
Roger Lewis, Applause Books (1996)
"Enchantment: The Life of Laurence Olivier
Donald Spoto, HarperCollins (1992)
"Laurence Olivier: A Biography"
Anthony Holden (1988)
"On Acting"
Laurence Olivier, Simon & Schuster (1986)
"Confessions of an Actor"
Laurence Olivier, Simon & Schuster (1982)
"Sir Larry: The Life of Laurence Olivier"
Thomas Kiernan, New York Times Books (1981)
"Laurence Olivier"
John Cottrell, Prentice-Hall (1975)
"Olivier"
Logan Gourlay (editor), Weidenfeld & Nicolson (1973)
"Laurence Olivier"
William Aubrey Darlington, Morgan-Grampian Books
"Darlings of the Gods: One Year in the Lives of Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh"
Garry O'Connor
"Laurence Olivier"
Melvyn Bragg, St. Martin's Press

Notes

"Sometimes the gods come down and blow in your ear--and you can do no wrong. Other times, you have to provide a performance. You just can't wait around for them to blow." --Laurence Olivier quoted in The Hollywood Reporter, March 15, 1991.

"Acting is a masochistic form of exhibitionism. It is not quite the occupation of an adult." --Laurence Olivier.

He joined the Fleet Air Arm of Royal Navy in 1941.

Olivier was knighted in 1947.

He was made baron in 1970.

Received the Order of Merit from Queen Elizabeth II; the first actor to be so honored.