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2-miriam-hopkins-1933-everettBorn October 18, 1902 to wealthy parents in Savannah, Georgia, Miriam Hopkins attended the finest schools before becoming a chorus girl at the age of 20. On Broadway first in musicals, then dramatic roles, she had her first starring role on screen in 1930โ€™s Fast and Loose featuring Carole Lombard and Frank Morgan but attracted much more attention in Ernst Lubitschโ€™s 1931 musical, The Smiling Lieutenant co-starring Maurice Chevalier and Claudette Colbert.

Hopkinsโ€™ startling portrayal of the prostitute Ivy opposite Fredric March in Rouben Mamoulianโ€™s 1931 film of Robert Louis Stevensonโ€™s Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde was cut considerably by the censors, but she still managed to earn her share of kudos. Her performance in the Lubitschโ€™s 1932 film Trouble in Paradise opposite Herbert Marshall established her as a major star. She had another major success opposite both Fredric March and Gary Cooper in Lubitschโ€™s 1933 film, Design for Living.

Her portrayal of the title character in Mamoulianโ€™s 1935 film Becky Sharp based on Thackarayโ€™s Vanity Fair was the first film produced in full three-strip Technicolor. It brought her what would be her only Oscar nomination.

Hopkins starred along with Merle Oberon and Joel McCrea in William Wylerโ€™s 1936 film version of Lillian Hellmanโ€™s controversial play, The Childrenโ€™s Hour retitled These Three in which the playโ€™s lesbian theme was changed to an illicit heterosexual one. She would play the aunt of the character she played in the film in its remake, also directed by Wyler, a quarter of a century later.

Married four times, Hopkinsโ€™ third husband was director Anatole Litvak whom Hopkins suspected of having an affair with Bette Davis during the filming of 1938โ€™s The Sisters. This undermined the actressโ€™s animosity toward Davis who would play her cousin in Edmund Gouldingโ€™s 1939 film of Zoe Atkinsโ€™ Pulitzer Prize winning play, The Old Maid in which the two characters had an uneasy relationship over several decades. She and Litvak would divorce before the end of the year. She and Davis would co-star again as friends turned to bitter enemies in Vincent Shermanโ€™s 1943 film, Old Acquantaince which marked the end of Hopkinsโ€™ star career.

Off the screen until William Wyler cast her as Olivia de Havillandโ€™s aunt in 1949โ€™s The Heiress, Hopkins would make only a handful of films thereafter, most notably as Gene Tierneyโ€™s mother in Mitchell Leisenโ€™s 1951 comedy, The Mating Season; Laurence Olivierโ€™s wife in Wylerโ€™s 1952 film of Theodore Dreiserโ€™s Carrie starring Jennifer Jones and as Shirley MacLaineโ€™s aunt in Wylerโ€™s 1961 remake of These Three filmed under the original title of The Childrenโ€™s Hour.

Active on stage and TV in her later years, Hopkins returned to the big screen for one last time as the star of 1970โ€™s Savage Intruder, a Sunset Boulevard rip-off.

Miriam Hopkins died of a heart attack nine days before her 70th birthday on October 9, 1972.

ESSENTIAL FILMS

DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE (1931), directed by Rouben Mamoulian

Mamoulianโ€™s film of Robert Louis Stevensonโ€™s enduring masterwork is the best of numerous versions of the novel. Fredric Marchโ€™s on screen transformation from Dr. Jekyll to Mr. Hyde would be enough to ensure the filmโ€™s reputation but it is much more than that. A worldwide sensation, U.S. audiences were robbed of most of Hopkinsโ€™ portrayal of the prostitute Ivy including the classic seduction scene in which she slowly rolls her stockings down. Her on-screen time is said to have been reduced to five minutes in the version American audiences of the day were permitted to see, yet even that five minutes was enough to convince filmgoers she had something special. Fortunately for posterity we have her entire performance on DVD.

TROUBLE IN PARADISE (1932), directed by Ernst Lubitsch

This sly, sophisticated comedy was one of three films Hopkins made for Lubitsch within a span of three years. She was the princess given lessons in seduction by her husbandโ€™s (Maurice Chevalier) mistress (Claudette Colbert) in the earlier The Smiling Lieutenant and she was part of the manage-a-trois that included Fredric March and Gary Cooper in the later Design for Living. This, however, is the one that most people are familiar with. Hopkins is the jealous girlfriend of con artist Herbert Marshall out to steal the fortune of Kay Francis. The witty script keeps you guessing to the end which one he will end up with.

THE OLD MAID (1939), directed by Edmund Goulding

Itโ€™s no secret that Hopkins and Bette Davis couldnโ€™t stand one another, but they made two films together in a five year span in which both were used to good advantage. Davis has the title role in this luminous adaptation of Zoe Atkinsโ€™ Pulitzer Prize-winning play as the woman whose daughter born out of wedlock is raised by her cousin as her own. Hopkins plays the cousin who must also make sacrifices. A sensational Jane Byran plays the grown daughter.

Davis and Hopkinsโ€™ follow-up film, Old Acquaintance has Davis playing a critically acclaimed author who fumes over former friend/pulp writer Hopkinsโ€™ success. The two are at their delicious bitchiest. Hopkinsโ€™ last starring role was later reprised by Candice Bergen while Jacqueline Bisset filled in for Davis in George Cukorโ€™s 1983 remake, Rich and Famous, his swan song.

THE HEIRESS (1949), directed by William Wyler

Hopkins returned after a six year absence from the screen to portray Olivia de Havillandโ€™s talkative aunt in this film version of the play based on Henry Jamesโ€™ Washington Square.

Hopkins holds her own in the film for which de Havilland won her second Oscar as the shy, plain daughter of a bully; Ralph Richardson his first nomination as her tyrannical father and Montgomery Clift an important role on his way to major stardom as de Havillandโ€™s conniving suitor.

THE CHILDRENโ€™S HOUR (1961), directed by William Wyler

Hopkins had the rare, but not unprecedented, task of playing a minor role in the remake of one of her best remembered films, 1936โ€™s These Three in which a brat, Oscar nominated Bonita Granville, spreads a malicious lie about private school teacher Hopkins involved in late night improprieties with the schoolโ€™s doctor (Joel McCrea) who is engaged to her business partner and fellow teacher (Merle Oberon). The lie is then spread by the grandmother of the brat (Alma Kruger) while Hopkinsโ€™ aunt (Catherine Doucet) frets. In the original play and this then daring remake, the lie is about a clandestine lesbian relationship between the two women played by Audrey Hepburn in Oberonโ€™s role and Shirley MacLaine in Hopkinsโ€™. James Garner has McCreaโ€™s role; Fay Bainter in an Oscar nominated performance has Krugerโ€™s and Hopkins has Doucetโ€™s in her last major film.

MIRIAM HOPKINS AND OSCAR

  • Nominated Best Actress – Becky Sharp (1935)

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