Actress Jean Simmons dies

LOS ANGELES — Jean Simmons, a radiant British actress who as a teenager appeared opposite Sir Laurence Olivier in “Hamlet” and emerged a star whose career flourished in the 1950s and 1960s in such films as “Guys and Dolls, “Elmer Gantry” and “Spartacus,” has died. She was 80.

Simmons, who won an Emmy Award for her role in the 1980s miniseries “The Thorn Birds,” died this evening at her home in Santa Monica, said Judy Page, her agent. She had lung cancer.

“Jean Simmons’ jaw-dropping beauty often obscured a formidable acting talent,” Alan Rode, a writer and film historian, told the Los Angeles Times in an e-mail.

Plucked from a dance class by a talent scout at the age of 14, she had already made several movies before gaining attention for her portrayal of the young Estella in Sir David Lean’s film adaptation of the Charles Dickens novel “Great Expectations.”

Considered one of the greatest British movies ever made, it had lasting effect on the actress, who was 17 the year it was released. Until then, moviemaking had mainly been “fun and games,” she later said, but she realized it could be a career.

“That’s when I thought, ‘Oh, yes, I think this is it,’” Simmons told the San Diego Union-Tribune in 1990.

After Olivier cast her as Ophelia in his 1948 film “Hamlet,” she received the first of two Academy Award nominations. More than 20 years later, she was nominated for her searing portrayal of an alcoholic wife in “The Happy Ending.”

Olivier urged the young actress to perfect her craft by acting on stage, but she chose a more romantic path — and followed her future husband, dashing British screen idol Stewart Granger, to Hollywood.

Howard Hughes bought her film contract from a British company but nearly strangled her fledgling American career. After she became entangled in a contractual lawsuit with Hughes, then head of RKO Studios, he prevented her from appearing in many meaningful roles until the suit was settled.

“An outstanding exception of her time at RKO was ‘Angel Face’ (1952), a wonderfully dark film noir that had Simmons playing a femme fatale with murderous intentions opposite Robert Mitchum,” Rode wrote.

Over a career that spanned more than 60 years, she appeared in about 55 feature films and nearly as many television productions. In the 1950s and 1960s, she made more than 30 movies and displayed her versatility by appearing in costume epics, romances, musicals and dramas.

She co-starred with such notable actors as Sir Richard Burton in “The Robe,” Gregory Peck in the western “The Big Country,” Marlon Brando in “Desiree,” and Brando and Frank Sinatra in “Guys and Dolls.”

While playing the title character in “Desiree,” the mistress of Brando’s Napoleon, she was so in awe of the actor that “I was sort of forgetting what I was supposed to do,” she said in 1990 in the Union-Tribune.

When Brando and Simmons next starred in “Guys and Dolls” in 1955, they were initially supposed to lip-sync their songs.

During rehearsal, “Samuel Goldwyn came on the set one day and he heard us and said, ‘I think it’s better you do your own singing…. Maybe you don’t sound so good, but at least it’s you,’” she recalled in the Union-Tribune interview.

Among her films, she favored 1953’s “The Actress,” which she said she “just loved” for “the “sheer heaven” of working with Spencer Tracy, who became a good friend, she said in the 1990 interview.

She also enjoyed “The Grass Is Greener,” which co-starred Cary Grant, “because it was comedy and I usually play these uptight puddings,” she said in 1988 in the Toronto Star.

In 1960, she and Granger divorced after a decade of marriage. The same year, she married Richard Brooks, who had just directed her as the saintly evangelist in “Elmer Gantry.”

Brooks directed her in the 1969 film “The Happy Ending,” which he also wrote. He later said that he created the character of the alcoholic wife as a way to tell his real-life wife that she also had a drinking problem.

Of their breakup after about 18 years of marriage, Simmons later said, “It was simply that the mixture of an alcoholic and a workaholic just wasn’t working.”

In 1986, she underwent treatment for alcoholism at the Betty Ford Center in Rancho Mirage. “All I can say is thank God for Mrs. Ford,” Simmons said in the People interview.

After marrying for the second time, she took a few years off. She had two daughters, one with Granger named Tracy, for her “Actress” co-star, and the other with Brooks, named Kate, for Katharine Hepburn.

Simmons returned to the big screen in 1963 in “All the Way Home,” giving an “award-caliber performance” as a recently widowed mother, according to “Leonard Maltin’s Movie Guide.”

In the 1980s, she appeared in the ABC historical drama “North and South” and its sequel; in a well-reviewed Disney Channel version of “Great Expectations” as the miserable recluse Miss Havisham; and as the mother, Fiona “Fee” Cleary, in the ABC miniseries “The Thorn Birds.”

“I didn’t have a dominant personality. It helped me slip into character parts very easily,” she told the Toronto Star in 1988. “I simply had to play the mother in ‘The Thorn Birds.’ I understood her pain. I badgered the producer until he gave in. He said it wasn’t a star part. That’s why I wanted it!”

Jean Merilyn Simmons was born Jan. 31, 1929, in London to Charles and Winifred Ada Simmons. Her father competed as a British gymnast in the 1912 Olympics and later coached the sport. He died when she was 16.

Her mother once described Cricklewood, the north London area where Simmons grew up, as “a place where they make lovely parts for automobiles.”

At 15, Simmons appeared in five British films, including a role as a precocious teenager in “Give Us the Moon.” She also appeared in such major British productions as “Black Narcissus” (1947) and “The Blue Lagoon” (1949).

In 1956, she became a U.S. citizen and while married to Granger lived on an Arizona ranch.

For years, she lived in a Santa Monica home that she decorated in a style she once described as “early mishmash.”

She is survived by her two daughters, Tracy Granger and Kate Brooks.

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