Joan Fontaine

She began her film career in 1935, signing a contract with RKO Pictures. Fontaine received her first major role in ''The Man Who Found Himself'' (1937) and in ''Gunga Din'' (1939). Her career prospects improved greatly after her starring role in Alfred Hitchcock's ''Rebecca'' (1940), for which she received her first of three nominations for the Academy Award for Best Actress. The following year, she won that award for her role in Hitchcock's ''Suspicion'' (1941). A third nomination came with ''The Constant Nymph'' (1943). She appeared mostly in drama films through the 1940s, including ''Letter from an Unknown Woman'' (1948), which is now considered a classic. In the next decade, after her role in ''Ivanhoe'' (1952), her film career began to decline and she moved into stage, radio and television roles. She appeared in fewer films in the 1960s, which included ''Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea'' (1961), and her final film role in ''The Witches'' (1966), also known as ''The Devil's Own''.
She released an autobiography, ''No Bed of Roses'', in 1978, and continued to act until 1994. Having won an Academy Award for her role in ''Suspicion'', Fontaine is the only actress to have won an Academy Award for acting in a Hitchcock film. She and her sister remain the only siblings to have won lead-acting Academy Awards.
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2Published 1996Other Authors: “...Fontaine, Joan, 1917-2013...”
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9Published 1998Other Authors: “...Fontaine, Joan, 1917-2013...”
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13Published 2012Other Authors: “...Fontaine, Joan, 1917-2013...”
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18by Gilbert, Herschel BurkeOther Authors: “...Fontaine, Joan, 1917-2013...”
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19Published 2013Other Authors: “...Fontaine, Joan, 1917-2013...”
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