Laurence Olivier saw
Vivien Leigh in
The Mask of Virtue in 1936, and a friendship developed after he congratulated her on her performance. While playing lovers in the film
Fire Over England (1937), Olivier and Leigh developed a strong attraction, and after filming was completed, they began an affair.
Leigh played
Ophelia to Olivier's
Hamlet in an
Old Vic Theatre production, and Olivier later recalled an incident during which her mood rapidly changed as she was quietly preparing to go onstage. Without apparent provocation, she began screaming at him, before suddenly becoming silent and staring into space. She was able to perform without mishap, and by the following day, she had returned to normal with no recollection of the event. It was the first time Olivier witnessed such behaviour from her.
Olivier travelled to Hollywood to begin filming
Wuthering Heights as
Heathcliff. Leigh followed soon after, partly to be with him, but also to pursue her dream of playing
Scarlett O'Hara in
Gone with the Wind (1939). Olivier found the filming of
Wuthering Heights to be difficult but it proved to be a turning point for him, both in his success in the United States, which had eluded him until then, but also in his attitude to film, which he had regarded as an inferior medium to theatre. The film's producer,
Samuel Goldwyn was highly dissatisfied with Olivier's overstated performance after several weeks of filming and threatened to dismiss him. Olivier had grown to regard the film's female lead,
Merle Oberon, as an amateur; however, when he stated his opinion to Goldwyn, he was reminded that Oberon was the star of the film and already a well-known name in American cinema. Olivier was told that he was dispensable and that he was required to be more tolerant of Oberon. Olivier recalled that he took Goldwyn's words to heart, but after some consideration realized that he was correct; he began to moderate his performance to fit the more intimate film medium and began to appreciate the possibilities it offered.
The film was a hit and Olivier was praised for his performance, and was nominated for an
Academy Award for Best Actor. Leigh won the
Academy Award for Best Actress for
Gone with the Wind, and the couple suddenly found themselves to be major celebrities throughout the world. They wanted to marry, but both Leigh's husband and Olivier's wife at the time, Jill Esmond, at first, refused to divorce them. Finally divorced, they were married on
31 August 1940.
Olivier's American film career flourished with highly regarded performances in
Rebecca (1940) and
Pride and Prejudice (1941).
Olivier and Leigh starred in a theater production of
Romeo and Juliet in
New York City. It was an extravagant production, but a commercial failure.
Brooks Atkinson for
The New York Times wrote, "Although Miss Leigh and Mr Olivier are handsome young people they hardly act their parts at all." The couple had invested almost their entire savings into the project, and its failure was a financial disaster for them.
They filmed
That Hamilton Woman (1941) with Olivier as
Horatio Nelson and Leigh as
Emma Hamilton. With Britain engaged in World War II, the Oliviers returned to England, and in 1944 Leigh was diagnosed as having
tuberculosis in her left
lung, but after spending several weeks in hospital, she appeared to be cured. In spring she was filming
Caesar and Cleopatra (1945) when she discovered she was pregnant, but suffered a miscarriage. She fell into a deep depression which reached its nadir when she turned on Olivier, verbally and physically attacking him until she fell to the floor sobbing. This was the first of many major breakdowns related to manic-depression, or bipolar mood disorder. Olivier came to recognise the symptoms of an impending episode – several days of hyperactivity followed by a period of
depression and an explosive breakdown, after which Leigh would have no memory of the event, but would be acutely embarrassed and remorseful.
In 1947 Olivier was knighted as a
Knight Bachelor and by 1948 he was on the Board of Directors for the
Old Vic Theatre, and he and Leigh embarked on a tour of
Australia and
New Zealand to raise funds for the theatre. During their six-month tour, Olivier performed
Richard III and also performed with Leigh in
The School for Scandal and
The Skin of Our Teeth. The tour was an outstanding success, and although Leigh was plagued with
insomnia and allowed her understudy to replace her for a week while she was ill, she generally withstood the demands placed upon her, with Olivier noting her ability to "charm the press". Members of the company later recalled several quarrels between the couple, with the most dramatic of these occurring in
Christchurch when Leigh refused to go on stage. Olivier slapped her face, and Leigh slapped him in return and swore at him before she made her way to the stage. By the end of the tour, both were exhausted and ill, and Olivier told a journalist, "You may not know it, but you are talking to a couple of walking corpses." Later he would comment that he "lost Vivien" in Australia.
The success of the tour encouraged the Oliviers to make their first
West End appearance together, performing the same works with one addition,
Antigone, included at Leigh's insistence because she wished to play a role in a tragedy.
Leigh next sought the role of
Blanche DuBois in the
West End stage production of
Tennessee Williams's
A Streetcar Named Desire, and was cast after Williams and the play's producer
Irene Mayer Selznick saw her in the
The School for Scandal and
Antigone, and Olivier was contracted to direct.
In 1951, Leigh and Olivier performed two plays about
Cleopatra,
William Shakespeare's
Antony and Cleopatra and
George Bernard Shaw's
Caesar and Cleopatra, alternating the play each night and winning good reviews. They took the productions to New York, where they performed a season at the
Ziegfeld Theatre into 1952. The reviews there were also mostly positive, but the critic
Kenneth Tynan angered them when he suggested that Leigh's was a mediocre talent which forced Olivier to compromise his own. Tynan's diatribe almost precipitated another collapse; Leigh, terrified of failure and intent on achieving greatness, dwelt on his comments, while ignoring the positive reviews of other critics.
In January 1953 Leigh travelled to
Ceylon to film
Elephant Walk with
Peter Finch. Shortly after filming commenced, she suffered a breakdown, and
Paramount Studios replaced her with
Elizabeth Taylor. Olivier returned her to their home in England, where between periods of incoherence, Leigh told him that she was in love with Finch, and had been having an affair with him. She gradually recovered over
a period of several months. As a result of this episode, many of the Oliviers' friends learnt of her problems.
David Niven said she had been "quite, quite mad", and in his diary
Noël Coward expressed surprise that "things had been bad and getting worse since 1948 or thereabouts."
Leigh recovered sufficiently to play
The Sleeping Prince with Olivier in 1953, and in 1955 they performed a season at
Stratford-upon-Avon in Shakespeare's
Twelfth Night,
Macbeth and
Titus Andronicus. They played to capacity houses and attracted generally good reviews, Leigh's health seemingly stable.
Noël Coward was enjoying success with the play
South Sea Bubble, with Leigh in the lead role, but she became pregnant and withdrew from the production. Several weeks later, she miscarried and entered a period of depression that lasted for months. She joined Olivier for a European tour with
Titus Andronicus, but the tour was marred by Leigh's frequent outbursts against Olivier and other members of the company. After their return to London, her former husband Leigh Holman, who continued to exert a strong influence over her, stayed with the Oliviers and helped calm her.
In 1958, considering her marriage to be over, Leigh began a relationship with the actor
Jack Merivale, who knew of Leigh's medical condition and assured Olivier he would care for her. She achieved a success in 1959 with the Noël Coward comedy
Look After Lulu, with
The Times critic describing her as "beautiful, delectably cool and matter of fact, she is mistress of every situation."
In December 1960 she and Olivier divorced, and Olivier married the actress
Joan Plowright, with whom he later had three children~. In his autobiography he discussed the years of problems they had experienced because of Leigh's illness, writing, "Throughout her possession by that uncannily evil monster, manic depression, with its deadly ever-tightening spirals, she retained her own individual canniness – an ability to disguise her true mental condition from almost all except me, for whom she could hardly be expected to take the trouble."