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Bette Davis

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Bette Davis



 
 
Ruth Elizabeth "Bette" Davis (April 5, 1908 – October 6, 1989) was an American actress of film
Film

Film encompasses individual motion pictures, the field of film as an art form, and the film industry. Films are produced by recording images from the world with cameras, or by creating images using animation techniques or special effects....
, television
Television

Television is a widely used telecommunication mass-media for transmitting and receiving moving , either monochrome or color, usually accompanied by sound....
 and theatre
Theatre

Theatre is the branch of the performing arts defined by Bernard Beckerman as what "occurs when one or more actor, isolated in time and/or Theater , present themselves to Audience." By this broad definition, theatre has existed since the dawn of man, as a result of human tendency for story telling....
. Noted for her willingness to play unsympathetic characters, she was highly regarded for her performances in a range of film genres; from contemporary crime melodrama
Crime film

A crime film, in the most general sense, is a film that involves various aspects crime and the criminal justice system. Stylistically, it can fall under many different genres, most commonly drama, Thriller , Mystery fiction and film noir....
s to historical and period films
Period piece

"Period piece" is phrase that is used to describe creative works....
 and occasional comedies
Comedy

Comedy as a popular meaning, is any humorous discourse generally intended to amuse, especially in television, film, and stand-up comedy. This must be carefully distinguished from its academic definition, namely the comic theatre, whose Western culture origins are found in Ancient Greece....
, though her greatest successes were her roles in romantic dramas
Romance film

While most films have some aspect of Romantic love between characters a romance film can be loosely defined as any film in which the central Plot revolves around the romantic involvement of the story's protagonists....
.

After appearing in Broadway
Broadway theatre

Broadway theatre, commonly called simply Broadway, refers to theatrical performances presented in one of the 39 large professional theaters with 500 seats or more located in the Theatre District, New York in Manhattan, New York City....
 plays, Davis moved to Hollywood
Hollywood, Los Angeles, California

Hollywood is a district in Los Angeles, California, situated west-northwest of Downtown Los Angeles. Due to its fame and cultural identity as the historical center of movie studios and movie stars, the word "Hollywood" is often used as a metonym of cinema of the United States....
 in 1930, but her early films for Universal Studios
Universal Studios

Universal Studios , a subsidiary of NBC Universal, is one of the six Worldwide major American film studios. Its production studios are located at 100 Universal City Plaza Drive in Universal City, California....
 were unsuccessful.






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Quotations


I must start wearing a watch. I never have you know.

Three years ago I was forty... forty! Four-oh! That slipped out. Now I suddenly feel as if I've taken all my clothes off.

It is my last wish to be buried sitting up.






Encyclopedia


Ruth Elizabeth "Bette" Davis (April 5, 1908 – October 6, 1989) was an American actress of film
Film

Film encompasses individual motion pictures, the field of film as an art form, and the film industry. Films are produced by recording images from the world with cameras, or by creating images using animation techniques or special effects....
, television
Television

Television is a widely used telecommunication mass-media for transmitting and receiving moving , either monochrome or color, usually accompanied by sound....
 and theatre
Theatre

Theatre is the branch of the performing arts defined by Bernard Beckerman as what "occurs when one or more actor, isolated in time and/or Theater , present themselves to Audience." By this broad definition, theatre has existed since the dawn of man, as a result of human tendency for story telling....
. Noted for her willingness to play unsympathetic characters, she was highly regarded for her performances in a range of film genres; from contemporary crime melodrama
Crime film

A crime film, in the most general sense, is a film that involves various aspects crime and the criminal justice system. Stylistically, it can fall under many different genres, most commonly drama, Thriller , Mystery fiction and film noir....
s to historical and period films
Period piece

"Period piece" is phrase that is used to describe creative works....
 and occasional comedies
Comedy

Comedy as a popular meaning, is any humorous discourse generally intended to amuse, especially in television, film, and stand-up comedy. This must be carefully distinguished from its academic definition, namely the comic theatre, whose Western culture origins are found in Ancient Greece....
, though her greatest successes were her roles in romantic dramas
Romance film

While most films have some aspect of Romantic love between characters a romance film can be loosely defined as any film in which the central Plot revolves around the romantic involvement of the story's protagonists....
.

After appearing in Broadway
Broadway theatre

Broadway theatre, commonly called simply Broadway, refers to theatrical performances presented in one of the 39 large professional theaters with 500 seats or more located in the Theatre District, New York in Manhattan, New York City....
 plays, Davis moved to Hollywood
Hollywood, Los Angeles, California

Hollywood is a district in Los Angeles, California, situated west-northwest of Downtown Los Angeles. Due to its fame and cultural identity as the historical center of movie studios and movie stars, the word "Hollywood" is often used as a metonym of cinema of the United States....
 in 1930, but her early films for Universal Studios
Universal Studios

Universal Studios , a subsidiary of NBC Universal, is one of the six Worldwide major American film studios. Its production studios are located at 100 Universal City Plaza Drive in Universal City, California....
 were unsuccessful. She joined Warner Bros.
Warner Bros.

Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc. is one of the world's largest film producer of film and television.It is a subsidiary of Time Warner, with its headquarters in Burbank, California and New York City....
 in 1932 and established her career with several critically acclaimed performances. In 1937, she attempted to free herself from her contract and although she lost a well-publicized legal case, it marked the beginning of the most successful period of her career. Until the late 1940s, she was one of American cinema's most celebrated leading ladies, known for her forceful and intense style. Davis gained a reputation as a perfectionist who could be highly combative, and her confrontations with studio executives, film directors and costars were often reported. Her forthright manner, clipped vocal style and ubiquitous cigarette
Cigarette

A cigarette is a product consumed through smoking and manufactured out of curing and finely cut tobacco leaves and reconstituted tobacco, often combined with other List of additives in cigarettes, then rolled or stuffed into a paper-wrapped cylinder ....
 contributed to a public persona which has often been imitated and satirized.

Davis was the co-founder of the Hollywood Canteen
Hollywood Canteen

The Hollywood Canteen operated at 1451 Cahuenga Boulevard in Hollywood, California between October 3 1942 and November 22 1945 as a club offering food, dancing and entertainment for servicemen, usually on their way overseas....
, and was the first female president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is a professional honorary organization dedicated to the advancement of the arts and sciences of motion pictures....
. She was the first actress to receive 10 Academy Award nominations and the first woman to receive a Lifetime Achievement Award
AFI Life Achievement Award

The AFI Life Achievement Award was established by the Board of Directors of the American Film Institute on February 26, 1973 to honor a single individual for his or her lifetime contribution to enriching American culture through motion pictures and television....
 from the American Film Institute
American Film Institute

The American Film Institute is an independent non-profit organization created by the National Endowment for the Arts, which was established in 1967 when President Lyndon B....
. Her career went through several periods of eclipse, and she admitted that her success had often been at the expense of her personal relationships. Married four times, she was once widowed and thrice divorced, and raised her children as a single parent. Her final years were marred by a long period of ill health, but she continued acting until shortly before her death from breast cancer
Breast cancer

Breast cancer is a cancer that starts in the Cell of the breast in women and men. Worldwide, breast cancer is the second most common type of cancer after lung cancer and the fifth most common cause of cancer death....
, with more than 100 film, television and theater roles to her credit. In 1999, Davis was placed second, behind Katharine Hepburn
Katharine Hepburn

Katharine Houghton Hepburn was an United States actress of film, television and stage.Acclaimed throughout her 73-year career, Hepburn holds the record for the most Academy Award for Best Actress Academy Awards wins with four, from 12 nominations....
, on the American Film Institute
American Film Institute

The American Film Institute is an independent non-profit organization created by the National Endowment for the Arts, which was established in 1967 when President Lyndon B....
's list of the greatest female stars of all time
AFI's 100 Years... 100 Stars

Part of the AFI 100 Years... series, AFI's 100 Years... 100 Stars is a list of the top 50 stars of United States Cinema of the United States. They were presented by 50 stars of today, adding up to the total of 100 stars....
.

Life and career


Background and early acting career

Ruth Elizabeth Davis, known from early childhood as "Betty", was born in Lowell, Massachusetts
Lowell, Massachusetts

Lowell is a city in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 105,167....
, the daughter of Ruth ("Ruthie") Augusta (née
Married and maiden names

A married name is the family name adopted by a person upon marriage, and in speaking of the many cultures where the practice is traditional for women, the maiden name is the family name that the married name replaces....
 Favor), and Harlow Morrell Davis, a patent attorney; her sister Barbara ("Bobby") was born October 25, 1909. The family was Protestant, of English
English people

The English are a nation and ethnic group native to England who speak English language in England. The English identity as a people is of early medieval origin, when they were known in Old English as the Anglecynn....
, French
French people

French people can refer to:* The legal residents and citizens of France, regardless of ancestry. For a legal discussion, see French nationality law....
, and Welsh
Welsh people

The Welsh people are an ethnic group and nation associated with Wales and the Welsh language. John Davies argues that the origin of the "Welsh nation" can be traced to the late 4th and early 5th centuries, following the Roman withdrawal from Britain, although Celtic languages seem to have been spoken in Wales far longer....
 ancestry. In 1915, Davis's parents separated and Betty and Bobby attended a Spartan boarding school called Crestalban in Lanesborough
Lanesborough, Massachusetts

Lanesborough is a New England town in Berkshire County, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States. It is part of the Pittsfield, Massachusetts, Massachusetts Metropolitan Statistical Area....
, which is located in the Berkshires. In 1921, Ruth Davis moved to New York City
New York City

The City of New York is the List of United States cities by population in the United States, while the New York metropolitan area ranks among the List of urban areas by population....
 with her daughters, where she worked as a portrait photographer. Betty was inspired to become an actress after seeing Rudolph Valentino
Rudolph Valentino

Rudolph Valentino was an Italy actor, sex symbol, and early pop icon. Known as the "Latin Lover", he was one of the most popular stars of the 1920s, and one of the most recognized stars from the silent film....
 in The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1921) and Mary Pickford
Mary Pickford

Mary Pickford was an Academy Award-winning Canada film actor, as well as a co-founder of the film studio United Artists and one of the original 36 founders of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences....
 in Little Lord Fauntleroy
Little Lord Fauntleroy

'Little Lord Fauntleroy' is the first children's novel written by England?United States playwright and author Frances Hodgson Burnett. It was originally published as a serial in the St....
 (1921), and changed the spelling of her name to "Bette" after Honoré de Balzac
Honoré de Balzac

Honor? de Balzac was a French novelist and playwright. His magnum opus was a Novel sequence of almost 100 novels and plays collectively entitled La Com?die humaine, which presents a panorama of French life in the years after the fall of Napol?on Bonaparte in 1815....
's La Cousine Bette
La Cousine Bette

La Cousine Bette is an 1846 novel by Honor? de Balzac. It has been adapted for film or television at least four times, including a 1998 movie starring Jessica Lange....
. She received encouragement from her mother, who had aspired to become an actress.

She attended Cushing Academy
Cushing Academy

Cushing Academy is a boarding school in Ashburnham, Massachusetts, Massachusetts. Founded in 1865 by Thomas Parkman Cushing, the Academy is the oldest coeducational boarding school in the nation....
, a boarding school in Ashburnham
Ashburnham, Massachusetts

Ashburnham is a town in Worcester County, Massachusetts, Massachusetts. At the 2000 census the town population was 5,546. It is home to Cushing Academy, a private preparatory school....
, Massachusetts
Massachusetts

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts is a U.S. state located in the New England region of the Northeastern United States United States. It borders Rhode Island and Connecticut to the south, New York to the west, and Vermont and New Hampshire to the north....
, where she met her future husband, Harmon O. Nelson, known as "Ham". In 1926, she saw a production of Henrik Ibsen
Henrik Ibsen

Henrik Johan Ibsen was a major Nineteenth-century theatre Norway playwright of realism drama and poet. He is often referred to as the "father of modern drama" and is one of the founders of modernism in the theatre....
's The Wild Duck
The Wild Duck

The Wild Duck is an 1884 Play by the Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen....
 with Blanche Yurka
Blanche Yurka

Blanche Yurka was an United States theatre and film actress.----Born in St Paul, Minnesota, Yurka was an opera star before she became an actress....
 and Peg Entwistle
Peg Entwistle

Peg Entwistle was a Welsh people-born actress of theatre and film, who gained notoriety after she killed herself by jumping from the Hollywood sign, shortly following her appearance in the RKO film Thirteen Women....
. Davis later recalled that it inspired her full commitment to her chosen career, and said, "Before that performance I wanted to be an actress. When it ended, I had to be an actress... exactly like Peg Entwistle." She auditioned for admission to Eva LeGallienne's Manhattan Civic Repertory, but was rejected by LeGallienne who described her attitude as "insincere" and "frivolous". She was accepted by the John Murray Anderson
John Murray Anderson

John Murray Anderson was a theatre director and theatre producer, songwriter, screenwriter, and lighting designer. He worked almost every genre of show business, including vaudeville, Broadway theatre, and film....
 School of Theatre, and studied dance with Martha Graham
Martha Graham

Martha Graham was an American dancer and choreographer regarded as one of the foremost pioneers of modern dance, whose influence on dance can be compared to the influence Igor Stravinsky had on music, Pablo Picasso had on the visual arts, or Frank Lloyd Wright had on architecture....
.

She auditioned for George Cukor
George Cukor

'George Cukor' was an Academy Award-winning United States film director. His career flourished at RKO and later MGM, where he directed a string of impressive films including What Price Hollywood? , A Bill of Divorcement , Dinner at Eight , Little Women , Personal History, Adventures, Experience, and Observation of David Copp...
's stock theater company, and although he was not very impressed, he gave Davis her first paid acting assignment anyway – a one-week stint playing the part of a chorus girl in the play Broadway. She was later chosen to play Hedwig, the character she had seen Entwistle play, in The Wild Duck. After performing in Philadelphia, Washington and Boston, she made her Broadway
Broadway theatre

Broadway theatre, commonly called simply Broadway, refers to theatrical performances presented in one of the 39 large professional theaters with 500 seats or more located in the Theatre District, New York in Manhattan, New York City....
 debut in 1929 in Broken Dishes, and followed it with Solid South. A Universal Studios talent scout saw her perform and invited her to Hollywood for a screen test
Screen test

A screen test is a method of determining the suitability of an actor or actor for performing on film and/or in a particular role.The performer is generally given a scene, or selected lines and actions, and instructed to perform in front of a camera to see if they are suitable....
.

Transition from stage to film

Accompanied by her mother, Davis traveled by train to Hollywood, arriving on December 13, 1930. She later recounted her surprise that nobody from the studio was there to meet her; a studio employee had waited for her, but left because he saw nobody who "looked like an actress". She failed her first screen test but was used in several screen tests for other actors. In a 1971 interview with Dick Cavett
Dick Cavett

Richard Alva "Dick" Cavett is an United States former television talk show host known for his conversational style and in-depth discussion of issues....
, she related the experience with the observation, "I was the most Yankee-est, most modest virgin who ever walked the earth. They laid me on a couch, and I tested fifteen men ... They all had to lie on top of me and give me a passionate kiss. Oh, I thought I would die. Just thought I would die." A second test was arranged for Davis, for the film A House Divided (1931). Hastily dressed in an ill-fitting costume with a low neckline, she was rebuffed by the director
Film director

A film director, or filmmaker, is a person who directs the making of a film. A film director visualizes the Screenplay, controlling a film's artistic and dramatic aspects, while guiding the technical crew and actors in the fulfillment of his or her vision....
 William Wyler
William Wyler

William Wyler was a three-time Academy Award-winning film film director....
, who loudly commented to the assembled crew, "What do you think of these dames who show their chests and think they can get jobs?" Carl Laemmle
Carl Laemmle

Carl Laemmle Sr. , born in Laupheim, W?rttemberg, Germany, was a pioneer in American film making and a founder of one of the original major Hollywood movie studios - Universal Studios....
, the head of Universal Studios, considered terminating Davis's employment, but cinematographer
Cinematographer

A cinematographer is one photography with a motion picture camera . The title is generally equivalent to director of photography , used to designate a chief over the camera and lighting film crews working on a film, responsible for achieving artistic and technical decisions related to the image....
 Karl Freund
Karl Freund

Karl W. Freund, A.S.C. was an Oscar-winning Germany cinematography and film director.Born in K?niginhof, Bohemia, his career began in 1905 when, at age 15, he got a job as an assistant projectionist for a film company in Berlin....
 told him she had "lovely eyes" and would be suitable for The Bad Sister
The Bad Sister

The Bad Sister is a 1931 in film Cinema of the United States drama film made by Universal Pictures, directed by Hobart Henley, produced byCarl Laemmle Jr....
 (1931), in which she subsequently made her film debut. Her nervousness was compounded when she overheard the Chief of Production, Carl Laemmle Jr.
Carl Laemmle Jr.

Carl Laemmle Jr. was in charge of production at Universal Studios from about 1928 to 1936. He was the son of Carl Laemmle, the founder of Universal Pictures....
, comment to another executive that she had "about as much sex appeal as Slim Summerville
Slim Summerville

Slim Summerville was an American film actor, best known as a comedy performer.Born George Joseph Summerville in Albuquerque, New Mexico, Summerville began his career as a "Keystone Kops" in 1912....
", one of the film's co-stars. The film was not a success, and her next role in Seed (1931) was too brief to attract attention.

Universal Studios renewed her contract for three months, and she appeared in a small role in Waterloo Bridge
Waterloo Bridge (1931 film)

Waterloo Bridge is a 1931 in film drama film made by Universal Pictures, directed by James Whale and produced by Carl Laemmle Jr.. The screenplay was by Benn Levy and Tom Reed from the popular Broadway theatre play by Robert E....
 (1931) before being lent to Columbia Pictures
Columbia Pictures

Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. is an United States film production company and distribution company. It was one of the so-called studio system among the eight major film studios of Hollywood Cinema of the United States#Golden Age of Hollywood....
 for The Menace, and to Capital Films for Hell's House
Hell's House

Hell's House is a 1932 United States drama film directed by Howard Higgin and starring Bette Davis. The screenplay by Paul Gangelin and B. Harrison Orkow, set during the waning days of the Prohibition in the United States era, is based on a story by Higgin....
 (all 1932). After nine months, and six unsuccessful films, Laemmle elected not to renew her contract. George Arliss
George Arliss

George Arliss was an England Academy Award-winning actor, author, playwright and film maker who found success in United States. He was the first United Kingdom actor to win an Academy Award....
 chose Davis for the lead female role in The Man Who Played God
The Man Who Played God

The Man Who Played God is a 1932 in film film drama produced by Warner Brothers.It was film director by John G. Adolfi and starred George Arliss, Violet Heming, Bette Davis, in one of her earliest important roles, Louise Closser Hale and Alan Cook....
 (1932), and for the rest of her life, Davis credited him with helping her achieve her "break" in Hollywood. The Saturday Evening Post wrote, "she is not only beautiful, but she bubbles with charm", and compared her to Constance Bennett
Constance Bennett

Constance Campbell Bennett was an United States actor. Known as much for her elegant persona as for her acting career, Bennett was one of Hollywood's most luminous stars, delivering amusing, madcap, and occasionally arch performances that belie her ornamental reputation....
 and Olive Borden
Olive Borden

Olive Borden was an United States actress in silent film and early Sound films. Nicknamed "The Joy Girl", Borden was known for her jet-black hair and overall beauty....
. Warner Bros. signed her to a five-year contract.

In 1932, she married Harmon "Ham" Nelson, who was scrutinized by the press; his $100 a week earnings compared unfavorably with Davis's reported $1,000 a week income. Davis addressed the issue in an interview, pointing out that many Hollywood wives earned more than their husbands, but the situation proved difficult for Nelson, who refused to allow Davis to purchase a house until he could afford to pay for it himself.

Bettedavisinofhumanbondage
After more than 20 film roles, the role of the vicious and slatternly Mildred Rogers in Of Human Bondage
Of Human Bondage (film)

Of Human Bondage is a 1934 in film drama film, the first film adaptation of the 1915 Of Human Bondage by the Great Britain author W. Somerset Maugham....
 (1934), a film adaptation of W. Somerset Maugham
W. Somerset Maugham

William Somerset Maugham , Order of the Companions of Honour was an English language playwright, novelist and short story writer. He was one of the most popular authors of his era, and reputedly the highest paid of his profession during the 1930s....
's novel, earned Davis her first major critical acclaim. Many actresses feared playing unsympathetic characters and several had refused the role, but Davis viewed it as an opportunity to show the range of her acting skills. Her costar, Leslie Howard
Leslie Howard (actor)

Leslie Howard was an English people Academy Award-nominated Stage and film actor, director, and Theatrical producer. He is best known by international audiences as Ashley Wilkes in the film Gone with the Wind ....
, was initially dismissive of her, but as filming progressed his attitude changed and he subsequently spoke highly of her abilities. The director, John Cromwell
John Cromwell (director)

Elwood Dager John Cromwell was an United States Film director, actor and Film producer....
, allowed her relative freedom, and commented, "I let Bette have her head. I trusted her instincts." She insisted that she be portrayed realistically in her death scene, and said, "the last stages of consumption, poverty and neglect are not pretty and I intended to be convincing-looking".

The film was a success, and Davis's confronting characterization won praise from critics, with Life Magazine writing that she gave "probably the best performance ever recorded on the screen by a U.S. actress". Davis anticipated that her reception would encourage Warner Bros. to cast her in more important roles, and was disappointed when Jack Warner refused to lend her to Columbia Studios to appear in It Happened One Night
It Happened One Night

It Happened One Night is an Cinema of the United States 1934 in film screwball comedy film directed by Frank Capra, in which a pampered socialite tries to get out from under her father's thumb, and falls in love with a roguish reporter ....
, and instead cast her in a melodrama, Housewife. When Davis was not nominated for an Academy Award for Of Human Bondage, The Hollywood Citizen News questioned the omission and Norma Shearer
Norma Shearer

Edith Norma Shearer was an Academy Awards Canadian-American actor....
, herself a nominee, joined a campaign to have Davis nominated. This prompted an announcement from the Academy president, Howard Estabrook, who said that under the circumstances "any voter ... may write on the ballot his or her personal choice for the winners", thus allowing, for the only time in the Academy's history, the consideration of a candidate not officially nominated for an award. Claudette Colbert
Claudette Colbert

Claudette Colbert was a French-born American stage and film actress.Born in Saint-Mand?, France and raised in New York City, Colbert began her career in Broadway theater productions during the 1920s, progressing to film with the advent of talking pictures....
 won the award for It Happened One Night but the uproar led to a change in Academy voting procedures the following year, whereby nominations were determined by votes from all eligible members of a particular branch, rather than by a smaller committee, with results independently tabulated by the accounting firm Price Waterhouse.

Davis appeared in Dangerous
Dangerous (film)

Dangerous is a 1935 in film United States drama film directed by Alfred E. Green. The screenplay by Laird Doyle is based on his story Hard Luck Dame....
 (1935) as a troubled actress and received very good reviews. E. Arnot Robertson wrote in Picture Post, "I think Bette Davis would probably have been burned as a witch if she had lived two or three hundred years ago. She gives the curious feeling of being charged with power which can find no ordinary outlet." The New York Times hailed her as "becoming one of the most interesting of our screen actresses". She won the Academy Award for Best Actress
Academy Award for Best Actress

Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role is one of the Academy Award presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to recognize an actor who has delivered an outstanding performance while working within the film industry....
 for the role, but commented it was belated recognition for Of Human Bondage, calling the award a "consolation prize". For the rest of her life, Davis maintained that she gave the statue its familiar name of "Oscar" because its posterior resembled that of her husband, whose middle name was Oscar, although her claim has been disputed by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, among others.

In her next film, The Petrified Forest
The Petrified Forest

The Petrified Forest is a predecessor to film noir, with an original screenplay by Delmer Daves and Charles Kenyon derived from the play by Robert E....
 (1936), Davis co-starred with Leslie Howard and Humphrey Bogart
Humphrey Bogart

Humphrey DeForest Bogart was an United_States_of_America actor and cultural icon. In 1997, Entertainment Weekly magazine named him the number one movie legend of all time....
, but Bogart, in his first important role, received most of the critics' praise. Davis appeared in several films over the next two years but most were poorly received.

Legal case

Convinced that her career was being damaged by a succession of mediocre films, Davis accepted an offer in 1936 to appear in two films in England. Knowing that she was breaching her contract with Warner Bros.
Warner Bros.

Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc. is one of the world's largest film producer of film and television.It is a subsidiary of Time Warner, with its headquarters in Burbank, California and New York City....
, she fled to Canada to avoid legal papers being served upon her. Eventually, Davis brought her case to court in England, hoping to get out of her contract with Warner Bros. She later recalled the opening statement of the barrister, Sir Patrick Hastings
Patrick Hastings

Sir Patrick Gardiner Hastings was a noted United Kingdom barrister who served as Attorney General for England and Wales in 1924 and inadvertently brought down the first Labour Party government....
, who represented Warner Brothers. Hastings urged the court to "come to the conclusion that this is rather a naughty young lady and that what she wants is more money". He mocked Davis's description of her contract as "slavery" by stating, incorrectly, that she was being paid $1,350 per week. He remarked, "if anybody wants to put me into perpetual servitude on the basis of that remuneration, I shall prepare to consider it". The British press offered little support to Davis, and portrayed her as overpaid and ungrateful.

Davis explained her viewpoint to a journalist, saying "I knew that, if I continued to appear in any more mediocre pictures, I would have no career left worth fighting for." Davis's counsel presented her complaints – that she could be suspended without pay for refusing a part, with the period of suspension added to her contract, that she could be called upon to play any part within her abilities regardless of her personal beliefs, that she could be required to support a political party against her beliefs, and that her image and likeness could be displayed in any manner deemed applicable by the studio. Jack Warner testified, and was asked, "Whatever part you choose to call upon her to play, if she thinks she can play it, whether it is distasteful and cheap, she has to play it?" Warner replied, "Yes, she must play it."

The case, decided by Branson J. in the English High Court, was reported as Warner Bros. Studios Incorporated v. Nelson in [1937] 1 KB 209. Davis lost the case and returned to Hollywood, in debt and without income, to resume her career. Olivia de Havilland
Olivia de Havilland

Olivia Mary de Havilland is a two-time Academy Awards-winning actor. She is the older sister of actress Joan Fontaine, also an Academy Award winner....
 mounted a similar case in 1943 and won.

Success as "The Fifth Warner Brother"

Davis began work on Marked Woman
Marked Woman

Marked Woman is a crime melodrama film released by Warner Brothers in 1937 in film.It was film director by Lloyd Bacon, and starred Bette Davis, Humphrey Bogart, Lola Lane , Isabel Jewell, Mayo Methot, Eduardo Ciannelli, Rosalind Marquis, Jane Bryan and Allen Jenkins....
 (1937), as a prostitute in a contemporary gangster drama inspired by the case of Lucky Luciano
Lucky Luciano

Charles "Lucky" Luciano was a Sicilian mobster. Luciano is considered the father of modern organized crime and the mastermind of the massive postwar expansion of the international heroin trade....
. The film and Davis's performance received excellent reviews, and her stature as a leading actress was enhanced.

During the filming of her next film, Jezebel
Jezebel (1938 film)

Jezebel is an United States drama film released in 1938 in film and directed by William Wyler. It stars Bette Davis and Henry Fonda, supported by George Brent, Margaret Lindsay, Donald Crisp, Richard Cromwell , and Fay Bainter....
, Davis entered a relationship with director William Wyler
William Wyler

William Wyler was a three-time Academy Award-winning film film director....
. She later described him as the "love of my life", and said that making the film with him was "the time in my life of my most perfect happiness". The film was a success, and Davis's performance as a spoiled Southern belle
Southern belle

A southern belle is an archetype for a young woman of the United States Old South's antebellum upper class.During the period, Kentuckian Sallie Ward of Louisville was the most noted belle in the South, and her portrait, which hangs in the Speed Museum in Louisville, Kentucky, is often called "The Southern Belle." A Southern belle epitom...
 earned her a second Academy Award, which led to speculation in the press that she would be chosen to play a similar character, Scarlett O'Hara
Scarlett O'Hara

Scarlett O'Hara is the protagonist in Margaret Mitchell's 1936 novel Gone with the Wind and in the later Gone with the Wind . She also is the main character in the 1970 musical Scarlett and the 1991 book Scarlett , a sequel to Gone with the Wind that was written by Alexandra Ripley and adapted for a television mini-series in...
, in Gone with the Wind
Gone with the Wind (film)

Gone with the Wind is a 1939 in film Cinema of the United States drama film-romance film-film adapted from Margaret Mitchell's 1936 in literature Gone with the Wind and directed by Victor Fleming ....
. Davis expressed her desire to play Scarlett, and while David O. Selznick
David O. Selznick

David O. Selznick, born David Selznick , was one of the iconic Hollywood film producer of the Golden Age. He is best known for producing the epic blockbuster Gone with the Wind which earned him an Academy Awards for Best Picture....
 was conducting a search for the actress to play the role, a radio poll named her as the audience favorite. Warner offered her services to Selznick as part of a deal that also included Errol Flynn
Errol Flynn

Errol Leslie Flynn was an Australian-born film actor, known for his romantic swashbuckler roles in Hollywood films and his flamboyant lifestyle....
 and Olivia de Havilland
Olivia de Havilland

Olivia Mary de Havilland is a two-time Academy Awards-winning actor. She is the older sister of actress Joan Fontaine, also an Academy Award winner....
, but Selznick did not consider Davis as suitable, and rejected the offer.

Jezebel marked the beginning of the most successful phase of Davis's career, and over the next few years she was listed in the annual "Quigley Poll of the Top Ten Money Making Stars", which was compiled from the votes of movie exhibitors throughout the U.S. for the stars that had generated the most revenue in their theaters over the previous year. In contrast to Davis's success, her husband, Ham Nelson, had failed to establish a career for himself, and their relationship faltered. In 1938, Nelson obtained evidence that Davis was engaged in a sexual relationship with Howard Hughes
Howard Hughes

Howard Robard Hughes, Jr. was an American aviator, industrialist, film producer and director, philanthropist, and one of the wealthiest people in the world....
 and subsequently filed for divorce citing Davis's "cruel and inhuman manner". She was emotional during the making of her next film, Dark Victory
Dark Victory

Dark Victory is a 1939 in film United States drama film directed by Edmund Goulding. The screenplay by Casey Robinson was based on the unsuccessful 1934 play of the same title by George Brewer and Bertram Bloch....
 (1939), and considered abandoning it until the producer Hal Wallis convinced her to channel her despair into her acting. The film became one of the highest grossing films of the year, and the role of Judith Traherne brought her an Academy Award nomination. In later years, Davis cited this performance as her personal favorite.

She appeared in three other box office hits in 1939, The Old Maid
The Old Maid

The Old Maid is a 1939 in film romantic drama film, produced by Warner Brothers.It was film director by Edmund Goulding, and stars Bette Davis, Miriam Hopkins, George Brent, Donald Crisp, Jane Bryan, James Stephenson, Jerome Cowan, William Lundigan and Louise Fazenda....
 with Miriam Hopkins
Miriam Hopkins

Ellen Miriam Hopkins was an Academy Award-nominated American actress....
, Juarez
Juarez (1939 film)

Juarez is a 1939 in film film with Paul Muni, Brian Aherne, Bette Davis, and John Garfield about the conflict between Maximilian I of Mexico, a European political dupe who, according to the film, is installed as the puppet ruler of Mexico by the French, and Benito Juarez, the country's president....
 with Paul Muni
Paul Muni

Paul Muni was an United States Academy Awards-winning and Tony Award-winning Stage and film actor.BiographyEarly life and career...
 and The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex
The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex

The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex is a Romantic film drama film based on the relationship between Elizabeth I of England, portrayed by Bette Davis, and Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, played by Errol Flynn....
 with Errol Flynn. The latter was her first color film and her only color film made during the height of her career. To play the elderly Elizabeth I of England
Elizabeth I of England

Elizabeth I was List of English monarchs and Queen of Ireland from 17 November 1558 until her death. Sometimes called The Virgin Queen, Gloriana, or Good Queen Bess, Elizabeth was the fifth and last monarch of the House of Tudor....
, Davis shaved her hairline and eyebrows. During filming she was visited on the set by the actor Charles Laughton
Charles Laughton

Charles Laughton was an England Academy Award-winning Theatre and film actor, screenwriter, Film producer and one-time Film director.While best known for his historical roles in films, he started his career as a remarkable stage actor....
. She commented that she had a "nerve" playing a woman in her sixties, to which Laughton replied, "Never not dare to hang yourself. That's the only way you grow in your profession. You must continually attempt things that you think are beyond you, or you get into a complete rut." Recalling the episode many years later, Davis remarked that Laughton's advice had influenced her throughout her career.

By this time, Davis was Warner Bros.' most profitable star, described as "The Fifth Warner Brother", and she was given the most important of their female leading roles. Her image was considered with more care; although she continued to play character roles, she was often filmed in close-ups that emphasized her distinctive eyes. All This and Heaven Too
All This and Heaven Too

All This, and Heaven Too is a 1940 in film drama film made by Warner Bros.-First National Pictures, produced and directed by Anatole Litvak with Hal B....
 (1940) was the most financially successful film of Davis's career to that point, while The Letter
The Letter (1940 film)

The Letter is a 1940 United States film noir directed by William Wyler. The screenplay by Howard Koch is based on the The Letter by W. Somerset Maugham, The Letter ....
 was considered "one of the best pictures of the year" by The Hollywood Reporter
The Hollywood Reporter

The Hollywood Reporter is a major trade publication of the entertainment industry in the United States. During the last century it was one of the two major publications ? the other being Variety ....
, and Davis won admiration for her portrayal of an adulterous killer. During this time, she was in a relationship with her former costar George Brent
George Brent

George Brent was an Ireland film and television actor in Cinema of the United States....
, who proposed marriage. Davis refused, as she had met Arthur Farnsworth, a New England
New England

New England is a region of the United States located in the northeastern corner of the country, bounded by the Atlantic Ocean, Canada and New York State, and consisting of the modern U.S....
 innkeeper. They were married in December 1940.

In January 1941, Davis became the first female president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is a professional honorary organization dedicated to the advancement of the arts and sciences of motion pictures....
 but antagonized the committee members with her brash manner and radical proposals. Faced with the disapproval and resistance of the committee, Davis resigned, and was succeeded by Jean Hersholt
Jean Hersholt

'Jean Hersholt' was a Danish actor who lived in the United States where he was a leading film and radio talent, best known for his 17 years starring on radio in Dr....
, who implemented the changes she had suggested.

William Wyler directed Davis in Lillian Hellman
Lillian Hellman

Lillian Florence Hellman was an United States playwright, linked throughout her life with many Left-wing politics causes. She was romantically involved for 30 years with mystery novel and crime novel writer Dashiell Hammett , and was also a long-time friend and literary executor of author Dorothy Parker....
's The Little Foxes
The Little Foxes (film)

The Little Foxes is a 1941 in film United States drama film directed by William Wyler. The screenplay by Lillian Hellman is based on her The Little Foxes....
 (1941), but they clashed over the character of Regina Giddens. Taking a role originally played on stage by Tallulah Bankhead
Tallulah Bankhead

Tallulah Brockman Bankhead was an United States actress, talk-show host and wikt:bon vivant....
, Davis felt Bankhead's original interpretation was appropriate and followed Hellman's intent, but Wyler wanted her to soften the character. Davis refused to compromise. She received another Academy Award nomination for her performance, and she never worked with Wyler again.

In the same year, Davis appeared briefly in Shining Victory
Shining Victory

Shining Victory is a 1941 in film film based on the play, Jupiter Laughs, by A. J. Cronin. It stars James Stephenson, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Donald Crisp, and Barbara O'Neil, and it was the first film directed by Irving Rapper....
, the directorial debut of her friend Irving Rapper
Irving Rapper

Irving Rapper was a British-born American film director. Overall, his most successful body of work is comprised of the ten films Rapper made while under contract with Warner Bros....
. He would go on to direct her in four more films: Now, Voyager
Now, Voyager

Now, Voyager is a 1942 in film United States drama film directed by Irving Rapper. The screenplay by Casey Robinson is based on the 1941 novel of the same name by Olive Higgins Prouty, who borrowed her title from a line in the Walt Whitman poem "The Untold Want," which reads in its entirety, "The untold want by life and land ne'er granted...
 (1942), The Corn is Green
The Corn is Green

The Corn is Green is a semi-autobiographical play by Emlyn Williams.At its core is L. C. Moffat, a strong-willed Wales schoolteacher working in a small poverty-stricken coal mining town....
 (1945), Deception
Deception (film)

This article is about the 1946 version of the film. For the 2008 film starring Hugh Jackman and Ewan McGregor see Deception .Deception is a 1946 in film film noir made by First National Pictures-Warner Bros.....
 (1946), and Another Man's Poison
Another Man's Poison

Another Man's Poison is a 1951 Great Britain drama film directed by Irving Rapper. The screenplay by Val Guest is based on the play Deadlock by Leslie Sands, adapted from ?mile Zola's 1868 novel Th?r?se Raquin....
 (1952).

War effort and personal tragedy

Following the attack on Pearl Harbor
Attack on Pearl Harbor

The attack on Pearl Harbor was a surprise military strike conducted by the Empire of Japan Imperial Japanese Navy against the United States' naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on the morning of Sunday, December 7, 1941, later resulting in the United States becoming militarily involved in World War II....
, Davis spent the early months of 1942 selling war bonds. After Jack Warner
Jack Warner

Jack Leonard "J.L." Warner , born Jacob Warner in London, Ontario, Canada, was the president and driving force behind the successful development of Warner Bros....
 criticized her tendency to cajole crowds into buying, she reminded him that her audiences responded most strongly to her "bitch" performances. She sold two million dollars of bonds in two days, as well as a picture of herself in Jezebel for $250,000. She also performed for black regiments as the only white member of an acting troupe formed by Hattie McDaniel
Hattie McDaniel

Hattie McDaniel was an United States actress and the first black performer to win an Academy Awards. She won the award for Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role of Mammy in Gone with the Wind ....
, that also included Lena Horne
Lena Horne

Lena Mary Calhoun Horne is an American singer and actress. She has recorded and performed extensively, independently and with other jazz notables, including Artie Shaw, Teddy Wilson, Billy Strayhorn, Duke Ellington, Charlie Barnet, Benny Carter, and Billy Eckstine....
 and Ethel Waters
Ethel Waters

Ethel Waters was an United States blues and jazz vocalist and actress. She frequently performed jazz, big band, rock and roll and pop music, on the Broadway theatre stage and in concerts, although she began her career in the 1920s singing blues....
.

At John Garfield
John Garfield

John Garfield was an Academy Award-nominated United States actor. Garfield was especially adept at playing brooding, rebellious, working-class character roles....
's suggested opening of a servicemen's club in Hollywood, Davis – with the aid of Warner, Cary Grant
Cary Grant

Archibald Alec Leach , better known by his stage name, Cary Grant, was a British-born American actor. With his distinctive yet not quite placeable accent, he was noted as perhaps the foremost exemplar of the debonair leading man, handsome, virile, charismatic and charming....
 and Jule Styne
Jule Styne

Jule Styne was a United Kingdom-born United States songwriter especially famous for a series of Broadway theatre musical theatre, which included several very well known and frequently revived shows....
 – transformed an old nightclub into the Hollywood Canteen
Hollywood Canteen

The Hollywood Canteen operated at 1451 Cahuenga Boulevard in Hollywood, California between October 3 1942 and November 22 1945 as a club offering food, dancing and entertainment for servicemen, usually on their way overseas....
, which opened on October 3, 1942. Hollywood's most important stars volunteered to entertain servicemen. Davis ensured that every night there would be a few important "names" for the visiting soldiers to meet. She appeared as herself in the film Hollywood Canteen
Hollywood Canteen (1944 film)

Hollywood Canteen is a Warner Bros. feature film starring Joan Leslie, Robert Hutton, and Dane Clark. The film was written and directed by Delmer Daves, and is notable for featuring many stars in cameo appearance....
 (1944) which used the canteen as the setting for a fictional story. Davis later commented, "There are few accomplishments in my life that I am sincerely proud of. The Hollywood Canteen is one of them." In 1980, she was awarded the Distinguished Civilian Service Medal
Department of Defense Distinguished Civilian Service Award

The Department of Defense Distinguished Civilian Service Award is the highest Awards and decorations of the United States government given by the United States Department of Defense....
, the United States Department of Defense
United States Department of Defense

The United States Department of Defense is the federal department charged with coordinating and supervising all agencies and functions of the government relating directly to national security and the Military of the United States....
's highest civilian award, for her work with the Hollywood Canteen.

Davis had initially shown little interest in the film Now, Voyager
Now, Voyager

Now, Voyager is a 1942 in film United States drama film directed by Irving Rapper. The screenplay by Casey Robinson is based on the 1941 novel of the same name by Olive Higgins Prouty, who borrowed her title from a line in the Walt Whitman poem "The Untold Want," which reads in its entirety, "The untold want by life and land ne'er granted...
 (1942) until Hal Wallis advised her that female audiences needed romantic dramas to distract them from the reality of their lives. It became one of the best known of her "women's pictures". In one of the film's most imitated scenes Paul Henreid
Paul Henreid

Paul Henreid , whose birthname was Paul Georg Julius Hernried Ritter von Wassel-Waldingau, was an Austrians actor and film director....
 lights two cigarettes as they are held in his lips before passing one to Davis. Film reviewers complimented Davis on her performance, the National Board of Review commenting that she gave the film "a dignity not fully warranted by the script".

During the early 1940s, several of Davis's film choices were influenced by the war, such as Watch on the Rhine
Watch on the Rhine

Watch on the Rhine is a 1943 in film drama film that was adapted by Dashiell Hammett and Lillian Hellman from Hellman's play. The film stars Bette Davis, Paul Lukas and Geraldine Fitzgerald and was directed by Herman Shumlin and Hal Mohr ....
 (1943) and Thank Your Lucky Stars
Thank Your Lucky Stars (1943 film)

Thank Your Lucky Stars is a 1943 film made by Warner Brothers as a World War II fundraiser. It was directed by David Butler and starred Dennis Morgan, Joan Leslie, Edward Everett Horton and S....
 (1943), a lighthearted all-star musical cavalcade
Cavalcade

Cavalcade may refer to:*Cavalcade, a horseback procession, parade, or mass trail ride*A huge parade*A huge procession*Cavalcade *Cavalcade , 1933 Academy Award-winning film...
, with each of the featured stars donating their fee to the Hollywood Canteen. Davis performed a novelty song, "They're Either Too Young or Too Old", which became a hit record after the film's release.

Old Acquaintance
Old Acquaintance

Old Acquaintance is a 1943 in film drama film made by Warner Bros. It was directed by Vincent Sherman and produced by Henry Blanke with Jack L....
 (1943) reunited her with Miriam Hopkins
Miriam Hopkins

Ellen Miriam Hopkins was an Academy Award-nominated American actress....
 in a story of two old friends who deal with the tensions created when one of them becomes a successful novelist. Davis felt that Hopkins tried to upstage her throughout the film. The director Vincent Sherman
Vincent Sherman

Vincent Sherman , born in Vienna, Georgia), USA, was a Hollywood film director. His movies include Mr. Skeffington , Nora Prentiss , and The Young Philadelphians ....
 recalled the intense competitiveness and animosity between the two actresses, and Davis often joked that she held back nothing in a scene in which she was required to shake Hopkins in a fit of anger.

In August 1943, Davis's husband, Arthur Farnsworth, collapsed while walking along a Hollywood street, and died two days later. An autopsy
Autopsy

An autopsy, also known as a post-mortem examination, necropsy , autopsia cadaverum, or obduction, is a medical procedure that consists of a thorough examination of a Dead body to determine the cause and manner of death and to evaluate any disease or injury that may be present....
 revealed that his fall had been caused by a skull fracture which had occurred about two weeks earlier. Davis testified before an inquest
Inquest

Inquests in England and Wales are held into sudden and unexplained deaths and also into the circumstances of discovery of a certain class of valuable artefacts known as "treasure trove"....
 that she knew of no event that might have caused the injury. A finding of "accidental death" was reached. Highly distraught, Davis attempted to withdraw from her next film Mr. Skeffington
Mr. Skeffington

Mr. Skeffington is a 1944 in film drama film which portrays a woman whose many love affairs cost her the love of her husband and her daughter....
 (1944), but Jack Warner, who had halted production following Farnsworth's death, convinced her to continue.

Although she had gained a reputation for being forthright and demanding, her behavior during filming of Mr. Skeffington was erratic and out of character. She alienated director Vincent Sherman by refusing to film certain scenes and insisting that some sets be rebuilt. She improvised dialogue, causing confusion among other actors, and infuriated the writer Julius Epstein
Julius J. Epstein

Julius J. Epstein was an United States screenwriter, who had a long career, most noted for the adaptation - in partnership with his twin brother, Philip G....
, who was also called upon to rewrite scenes at her whim. Davis later explained her actions with the observation, "when I was most unhappy I lashed out rather than whined". Some reviewers criticized Davis for the excess of her performance; James Agee
James Agee

James Rufus Agee was an United States author, journalist, poet, screenwriter and film critic. In the 1940s, he was one of the most influential film critics in the U.S....
 wrote that she "demonstrates the horrors of egocentricity on a marathonic scale", but despite the mixed reviews, she received another Academy Award nomination.

Professional setbacks

Davis married an artist, William Grant Sherry
William Grant Sherry

William Grant Sherry is a Painting and artist.Born in Amagansett, New York, on Long Island, Sherry studied at the Academie Julian in Paris and at the Heatherly School of Art in London....
, who also, when necessary, worked as a masseur, in 1945. She had been drawn to him because he claimed that he had never heard of her and was therefore not intimidated by her.

Davis refused the title role in Mildred Pierce
Mildred Pierce (film)

Mildred Pierce is a Warner Bros. feature film starring Joan Crawford, Ann Blyth, Jack Carson, Zachary Scott, and Eve Arden in a film noir tale about a sacrificing mother and her ungrateful daughter....
, a role for which Joan Crawford
Joan Crawford

Joan Crawford After an absence of nearly two years from the screen, Crawford staged a comeback by starring in Mildred Pierce , for which she won the Academy Award for Academy Award for Best Actress....
 ultimately won an Academy Award, and instead made The Corn Is Green
The Corn Is Green (1945 film)

The Corn Is Green is a 1945 in film drama film starring Bette Davis as a schoolteacher determined to bring education to a Welsh coal mining town, despite great opposition....
 (1945). Davis played a dowdy English teacher, who saves a young Welsh
Wales

native_name = Cymru|conventional_long_name = Wales|common_name = Wales|image_flag = Flag of Wales 2.svg|national_motto = ...
 miner from a life in the coal pits, by offering him education. The film was well received by critics but did not find a substantial audience. Her next film, A Stolen Life
A Stolen Life

A Stolen Life is a 1946 drama film, film director by Curtis Bernhardt. It stars Bette Davis, who also produced; her last production for Warner Bros.....
 (1946), was the first and only film that Davis made with her own production company, BD Productions. The film received poor reviews, but was one of her biggest box-office successes. It was followed by Deception
Deception (film)

This article is about the 1946 version of the film. For the 2008 film starring Hugh Jackman and Ewan McGregor see Deception .Deception is a 1946 in film film noir made by First National Pictures-Warner Bros.....
 (1946), the first of her films to lose money.

Possessed
Possessed

Possessed may refer to:* Possession, having some degree of control over something else**Spirit possession, whereby gods, daemons, demons, animas, or other disincarnate entities may temporarily take control of a human body...
 (1947) had been tailor-made for Davis and was to have been her next project after Deception
Deception

Deception is the act of convincing another to believe information that is not true, or not the whole truth as in certain types of half-truths....
 (1946). However, she was pregnant and went on maternity leave. Joan Crawford
Joan Crawford

Joan Crawford After an absence of nearly two years from the screen, Crawford staged a comeback by starring in Mildred Pierce , for which she won the Academy Award for Academy Award for Best Actress....
 played her role in Possessed and was nominated for an Academy Award as Best Actress. In 1947, Davis gave birth to a daughter, Barbara
B. D. Hyman

B. D. Hyman is an United States author and pastor.The daughter of the actress Bette Davis and artist William Sherry, she was adopted by Davis's husband Gary Merrill in 1950....
 (known as B.D.) and later wrote in her memoir that she became absorbed in motherhood and considered ending her career. Her relationship with Sherry began to deteriorate and she continued making films, but her popularity with audiences was steadily declining.

Among the film roles offered to Davis following her return to film making was Rose Sayer in The African Queen
The African Queen

The African Queen is an Cinema of the United States drama film directed by John Huston and produced by Sam Spiegel and John Woolf. The screenplay was adapted by James Agee, John Huston, John Collier and Peter Viertel from the 1935 in literature novel by C....
. When informed that the film was to be made in Africa, Davis refused the part, telling Jack Warner, "If you can't shoot the picture in a boat on the back lot, then I'm not interested." Katharine Hepburn
Katharine Hepburn

Katharine Houghton Hepburn was an United States actress of film, television and stage.Acclaimed throughout her 73-year career, Hepburn holds the record for the most Academy Award for Best Actress Academy Awards wins with four, from 12 nominations....
 played the role. Davis was also offered a role in a film version of the Virginia Kellogg
Virginia Kellogg

Virginia Kellogg was a film writer whose scripts for White Heat and Caged were nominated for Academy Awardss.At one time, she was married to film director Frank Lloyd....
 prison drama Women Without Men. Originally intended to pair Davis with Joan Crawford, Davis made it clear that she would not appear in any "dyke movie", and the lead roles were played by Agnes Moorehead
Agnes Moorehead

Agnes Robertson Moorehead was an American actress. Although she began with the Mercury Theatre, appeared in more than seventy films beginning with Citizen Kane and on dozens of television shows during a career that spanned more than thirty years, Moorehead is most widely known to modern audiences for her role as the witch Endora in the t...
 and Eleanor Parker
Eleanor Parker

Eleanor Jean Parker is an American film and television actress....
 when it was filmed as Caged (1950). She lobbied Jack Warner to make two films, Ethan Frome
Ethan Frome

Ethan Frome is a novel that was published in 1911 in literature by the Pulitzer Prize for the Novel-winning United States author Edith Wharton....
 and a biography of Mary Todd Lincoln
Mary Todd Lincoln

Mary Ann Todd Lincoln was the wife of the 16th President of the United States, Abraham Lincoln, and was First Lady of the United States from 1861 to 1865....
, however Warner vetoed each proposal.

In 1948, Davis was cast in Winter Meeting
Winter Meeting

Winter Meeting is a United States drama film directed by Bretaigne Windust. The screenplay by Catherine Turney is based on a novel by Ethel Vance....
 and, although she was initially enthusiastic, she soon learned that Warner had arranged for "softer" lighting to be used to disguise her age. She recalled that she had seen the same lighting technique "on the sets of Ruth Chatterton
Ruth Chatterton

Ruth Chatterton was a two-time Academy Award-nominated American actress....
 and Kay Francis
Kay Francis

Kay Francis was an Cinema of the United States stage and film actress. After a brief period on Broadway theatre in the late 1920s, she moved to film and achieved her greatest success between 1930 and 1936, when she was the number one female star at the Warner Bros....
, and I knew what they meant". She began to regret accepting the role and, to add to her disappointment, she was not confident in the abilities of her leading man, Jim Davis
Jim Davis (actor)

Marlin "Jim" Davis , was an American actor, best known for his role as Jock Ewing in the CBS prime-time soap Dallas , a role which he held up until his death in April 1981....
. She disagreed with amendments made to the script because of censorship restrictions and found that many of the aspects of the role that had initially appealed to her were no longer to be included. The film was later described by Bosley Crowther
Bosley Crowther

Bosley Crowther was a journalist and author who was film critic for The New York Times for over a quarter century. His reviews and articles helped shape the careers of actors, directors and screenwriters....
 as "interminable" and he noted that "of all the miserable dilemmas in which Miss Davis has been involved ... this one is probably the worst". It failed at the box office and the studio lost nearly one million dollars.

Davis clashed with her co-star Robert Montgomery
Robert Montgomery (actor)

Robert Montgomery was an United States actor and director.Montgomery was born Henry Montgomery Jr. in Beacon, New York, then known as "Fishkill Landing", the son of Mary Weed and Henry Montgomery, Sr....
 while making June Bride (1948), later describing him as "a male Miriam Hopkins
Miriam Hopkins

Ellen Miriam Hopkins was an Academy Award-nominated American actress....
... an excellent actor, but addicted to scene-stealing". The film marked her first comedy in several years, and earned her some positive reviews, but it was not particularly popular with audiences and returned only a small profit. Despite the lackluster box office receipts from her more recent films, in 1949, she negotiated a four film contract with Warner Bros. which paid $10,285 per week and made her the highest paid woman in the United States.

Jack Warner refused to allow her script approval and cast her in Beyond the Forest
Beyond the Forest

Beyond the Forest is a Warner Brothers film noir directed by King Vidor, produced by Henry Blanke with Jack L. Warner as executive producer from a screenplay by Lenore J....
 (1949). Davis reportedly loathed the script and begged Warner to recast the role, but he refused. After the film was completed, Warner released Davis from her contract, at her request. The reviews that followed were scathing; Dorothy Manners writing for the Los Angeles Examiner, described the film as "an unfortunate finale to her brilliant career". Hedda Hopper
Hedda Hopper

Hedda Hopper was an United States actor and gossip columnist, whose long-running feud with friend turned arch-rival Louella Parsons became at least as notorious as many of Hopper's columns....
 wrote, "If Bette had deliberately set out to wreck her career, she could not have picked a more appropriate vehicle." The film contained the line, "What a dump!", which became closely associated with Davis after impersonators used it in their acts. In later years, Davis often used it as her opening line at speaking engagements.

Starting a freelance career

By 1949, Davis and Sherry were estranged and Hollywood columnists were writing that Davis's career was at an end. She filmed The Story of a Divorce (released in 1951 as Payment on Demand
Payment on Demand

Payment on Demand is a 1951 in film drama film directed by Curtis Bernhardt. The screenplay by Bernhardt and Bruce Manning chronicles a marriage from its idealistic early days to its dissolution....
) but had received no other offers. Shortly before filming was completed, the producer Darryl F. Zanuck
Darryl F. Zanuck

Darryl Francis Zanuck was an Academy Award-winning Film producer, writer, actor, Film director, and studio executive who played a major part in the Hollywood studio system as one of its longest survivors ....
 offered her the role of the aging theatrical actress Margo Channing in All About Eve
All About Eve

All About Eve is an Cinema of the United States drama film, written and directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz, based on the short story "The Wisdom of Eve," by Mary Orr....
 (1950). Claudette Colbert
Claudette Colbert

Claudette Colbert was a French-born American stage and film actress.Born in Saint-Mand?, France and raised in New York City, Colbert began her career in Broadway theater productions during the 1920s, progressing to film with the advent of talking pictures....
, for whom the part had been written, had severely injured her back, and although production had been halted for two months in the hope that she might recover, she was unable to continue. Davis read the script, described it as the best she had ever read, and accepted the role. Within days she joined the cast in San Francisco to begin filming. During production, she established what would become a life-long friendship with her costar, Anne Baxter
Anne Baxter

Anne Baxter was an Academy Award-winning United States actress....
, and a romantic relationship with her leading man, Gary Merrill
Gary Merrill

Gary F. Merrill was an United States film and television character actor whose credits included more than fifty feature films, a half-dozen mostly short-lived TV series, and dozens of television guest appearances....
, which led to marriage. The film's director Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Joseph L. Mankiewicz

Joseph Leo Mankiewicz was an United States Academy Award-winning film director, screenwriter, and film producer....
 later remarked, "Bette was letter perfect. She was syllable-perfect. The director's dream: the prepared actress."

Critics responded positively to Davis's performance and several of her lines became well-known, particularly, "Fasten your seatbelts, it's going to be a bumpy night." She was again nominated for an Academy Award and critics such as Gene Ringgold described her Margo as her "all-time best performance". Pauline Kael
Pauline Kael

Pauline Kael was an American film critic who wrote for The New Yorker magazine from 1968 to 1991. Earlier in her career she was published by City Lights, McCall's and The New Republic....
 wrote that much of Mankiewicz's vision of "the theater" was "nonsense" but commended Davis, writing "[the film is] saved by one performance that is the real thing: Bette Davis is at her most instinctive and assured. Her actress – vain, scared, a woman who goes too far in her reactions and emotions – makes the whole thing come alive."

Davis won a "Best Actress
Best Actress Award (Cannes Film Festival)

The Best Actress Award is an award presented at the Cannes Film Festival. It is chosen by the jury from the 'official section' of movies at the festival. It was first awarded in 1946....
" award from the Cannes Film Festival
Cannes Film Festival

The Cannes Film Festival , founded in 1946, is one of the world's oldest, most influential and prestigious film festivals alongside Venice Film Festival and Berlin Film Festival....
, and the New York Film Critics Circle Award. She also received the San Francisco Film Critics Circle Award
San Francisco Film Critics Circle Awards

San Francisco Film Critics Circle Awards are given annually to honor fine achievements in filmmaking by an organisation of film reviewers from San Francisco-based publications....
 as "Best Actress", having been named by them as the "Worst Actress" of 1949 for Beyond the Forest. During this time she was invited to leave her handprints in the forecourt of Grauman's Chinese Theatre
Grauman's Chinese Theatre

Grauman's Chinese Theatre is a movie theater located at 6925 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California. It is located along the historic Hollywood Walk of Fame....
.

On July 3, 1950 Davis's divorce from William Sherry was finalized, and on July 28 she married Gary Merrill
Gary Merrill

Gary F. Merrill was an United States film and television character actor whose credits included more than fifty feature films, a half-dozen mostly short-lived TV series, and dozens of television guest appearances....
. With Sherry's consent, Merrill adopted B.D., Davis's daughter with Sherry, and in 1950, Davis and Merrill adopted a baby girl they named Margot. The family traveled to England, where Davis and Merrill starred in a murder-mystery film, Another Man's Poison
Another Man's Poison

Another Man's Poison is a 1951 Great Britain drama film directed by Irving Rapper. The screenplay by Val Guest is based on the play Deadlock by Leslie Sands, adapted from ?mile Zola's 1868 novel Th?r?se Raquin....
. When it received lukewarm reviews and failed at the box office, Hollywood columnists wrote that Davis's comeback had petered out, and an Academy Award nomination for The Star
The Star

The Star may refer to:* The Star , a 1952 Bette Davis film* The Star , a Major Arcana card in Tarot* The Star , by Arthur C. Clarke**The Star , an episode of The New Twilight Zone based on Clarke's story...
 (1952) did not halt her decline.

Davis and Merrill adopted a baby boy, Michael, in 1952, and Davis appeared in a Broadway
Broadway theatre

Broadway theatre, commonly called simply Broadway, refers to theatrical performances presented in one of the 39 large professional theaters with 500 seats or more located in the Theatre District, New York in Manhattan, New York City....
 revue
Revue

A revue is a type of multi-act popular theatre entertainment that combines music, dance and sketch comedy. The revue has its roots in nineteenth-century American popular entertainment and melodrama, but grew into a substantial cultural presence of its own during its golden years from ca....
, Two's Company
Two's Company

Two's Company was a musical theatre revue with principal sketches by Charles Sherman and Peter DeVries, principal lyrics by Ogden Nash and Sammy Cahn, and principal music by Vernon Duke....
 directed by Jules Dassin
Jules Dassin

Jules Dassin, born Julius Dassin , was an United States film director. He was a subject of the Hollywood blacklist, and subsequently moved to France where he revived his career....
. She was uncomfortable working outside of her area of expertise; she had never been a musical performer and her limited theater experience had been more than 20 years earlier. She was also severely ill and was operated on for osteomyelitis
Osteomyelitis

Osteomyelitis is an infection of bone or bone marrow, usually caused by pyogenic bacteria or mycobacteria. It can be usefully subclassified on the basis of the causative organism, the route, duration and anatomic location of the infection....
 of the jaw. Margot was diagnosed as severely brain damaged due to an injury sustained during or shortly after her birth, and was eventually placed in an institution. Davis and Merrill began arguing frequently, with B.D. later recalling episodes of alcohol abuse
Alcohol abuse

Alcohol abuse, as described in the DSM-IV, is a psychiatric diagnosis describing the use of alcoholic beverages despite negative consequences. It is differentiated from alcohol dependence by the lack of symptoms such as Drug tolerance and withdrawal....
 and domestic violence
Domestic violence

Domestic violence occurs when a family member, partner or ex-partner attempts to physically or psychologically dominate another. Domestic violence often refers to violence between spouses, or spousal abuse but can also include cohabitants and non-married intimate partners....
.

Few of Davis's films of the 1950s were successful and many of her performances were condemned by critics. The Hollywood Reporter wrote of mannerisms "that you'd expect to find in a nightclub impersonation of [Davis]", while the London critic, Richard Winninger, wrote, "Miss Davis, with more say than most stars as to what films she makes, seems to have lapsed into egoism. The criterion for her choice of film would appear to be that nothing must compete with the full display of each facet of the Davis art. Only bad films are good enough for her." As her career declined, her marriage continued to deteriorate until she filed for divorce in 1960. The following year, her mother died.

Renewed success

In 1962, Davis opened in the Broadway production The Night of the Iguana
The Night of the Iguana

The Night of the Iguana is a stageplay written by United States author Tennessee Williams. Based on Williams' 1948 short story, the play premiered on Broadway theatre in 1961....
 to mostly mediocre reviews, and left the production after four months due to "chronic illness". She then joined Glenn Ford
Glenn Ford

Gwyllyn Samuel Newton "Glenn" Ford was a Canada-born United States actor from Classical Hollywood cinema's Golden Era with a career that spanned seven decades....
 and Ann-Margret
Ann-Margret

Ann-Margret is a Sweden-born American actress, singer and dancer. She has won the Golden Globe Award five times, and has been nominated for the Academy Award, Emmy Award and Grammy....
 for the Frank Capra
Frank Capra

'Frank Russell Capra' was an Italian-American film director and a major creative force behind a number of highly popular films of the 1930s and 1940s, including It's a Wonderful Life and Mr....
 film A Pocketful of Miracles (a remake of Capra's 1933 Lady for a Day
Lady for a Day

Lady for a Day is a 1933 in film film which was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. It was written by Robert Riskin, based on the Damon Runyon story Madame la Gimp....
), based on a story by Damon Runyon
Damon Runyon

Damon Runyon was a newspaperman and writer.He was best known for his short stories celebrating the world of Broadway in New York City that grew out of the Prohibition in the United States era....
. She accepted her next role, in the Grand Guignol
Grand Guignol

The Grand Guignol was a theatre in the Pigalle area of Paris , which, from its opening in 1897 to its closing in 1962, specialized in naturalistic horror shows....
 horror film
Horror film

Horror films are movies that strive to elicit responses of fear, horror and terror from viewers. Their plots frequently involve themes of the supernatural....
 What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?
What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (film)

What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? is a 1962 in film United States drama film produced and directed by Robert Aldrich. The screenplay by Lukas Heller is based on What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? by Henry Farrell....
 after reading the script and believing it could appeal to the same audience that had recently made Alfred Hitchcock
Alfred Hitchcock

Sir Alfred Joseph Hitchcock, Order of the British Empire was a British filmmaker and film producer who pioneered many techniques in the suspense and psychological thriller genres....
's Psycho
Psycho (1960 film)

Psycho is an Cinema of the United States Thriller /thriller directed by Alfred Hitchcock, from the screenplay by Joseph Stefano. It is based on the Psycho by Robert Bloch, which was in turn inspired by the crimes of Wisconsin serial killer Ed Gein....
 (1960) a success. She negotiated a deal that would pay her 10 percent of the worldwide gross profits, in addition to her salary. The film became one of the year's biggest successes.

Davis and Joan Crawford
Joan Crawford

Joan Crawford After an absence of nearly two years from the screen, Crawford staged a comeback by starring in Mildred Pierce , for which she won the Academy Award for Academy Award for Best Actress....
 played two aging sisters, former actresses forced by circumstance to share a decaying Hollywood mansion. The director, Robert Aldrich
Robert Aldrich

Robert Aldrich was an American film director, writer and Film producer, notable for such films as Kiss Me Deadly, The Big Knife, What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? , The Flight of the Phoenix, Hush? Hush, Sweet Charlotte and The Dirty Dozen....
, explained that Davis and Crawford were each aware of how important the film was to their respective careers and commented, "It's proper to say that they really detested each other, but they behaved absolutely perfectly." After filming was completed, their public comments against each other allowed the tension to develop into a lifelong feud, and when Davis was nominated for an Academy Award, Crawford campaigned against her. Davis also received her only BAFTA Award
British Academy of Film and Television Arts

The British Academy of Film and Television Arts is a British charity that hosts annual awards shows for excellence in film, television, television craft, video games and forms of animation....
 nomination for this performance.

Daughter B.D. played a small role in the film and when she and Davis visited the Cannes Film Festival
Cannes Film Festival

The Cannes Film Festival , founded in 1946, is one of the world's oldest, most influential and prestigious film festivals alongside Venice Film Festival and Berlin Film Festival....
 to promote it, she met Jeremy Hyman, an executive for Seven Arts Productions
Seven Arts Productions

Seven Arts Productions was founded in 1957 by Ray Stark and Eliot Hyman. The company was a frequent producer of movies for other studios, including Lolita for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, The Misfits for United Artists, and Is Paris Burning for Paramount Pictures....
. After a short courtship, she married Hyman at the age of 16, with Davis's permission.

Following the completion of Jane and with no offers coming in, Davis shocked Hollywood by placing an ad in Variety
Variety (magazine)

Variety is a weekly entertainment trade newspaper founded in New York in 1905 by Sime Silverman. With the rise of the importance of the motion picture industry, Daily Variety, a daily edition based in Hollywood, was founded by Silverman in 1933....
 soliciting work. Under the heading of "Situations wanted - women artists", Davis's ad read:
Mother of three—10, 11 & 15—divorcee. American. Thirty years experience as an actress in Motion Pictures. Mobile still and more affable than rumor would have it. Wants steady employment in Hollywood. (Has had Broadway)
Davis would later claim that the ad was a joke.

Davis sustained her comeback over the course of several years. Dead Ringer
Dead Ringer (1964 film)

Dead Ringer, also known as Who is Buried in my Grave? is a 1964 in film thriller film made by Warner Bros. It was directed by Paul Henreid and produced by William H....
 (1964) was a crime drama in which she played twin sisters and Where Love Has Gone
Where Love Has Gone (film)

Where Love Has Gone is a 1964 in film drama film made by Embassy Pictures , Joseph E. Levine Productions and Paramount Pictures. It was directed by Edward Dmytryk and produced by Joseph E....
 (1964) was a romantic drama based on a Harold Robbins
Harold Robbins

Harold Robbins was an United States author.Robbins, born Harold Rubin in New York City, claimed to be a Jewish orphan raised in a Catholic boys home; actually, he was the son of well-educated Russian and Polish immigrants....
 novel. Davis played the mother of Susan Hayward
Susan Hayward

Susan Hayward was an American actress.After working as a fashion model in New York, Hayward travelled to Hollywood in 1937 in the hope of playing the role of Scarlett O'Hara in Gone With the Wind ....
 but filming was hampered by heated arguments between Davis and Hayward. Hush... Hush, Sweet Charlotte (1964) was Robert Aldrich's follow-up to What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?, in which he planned to reunite Davis and Crawford, but when Crawford withdrew allegedly due to illness soon after filming began, she was replaced by Olivia de Havilland
Olivia de Havilland

Olivia Mary de Havilland is a two-time Academy Awards-winning actor. She is the older sister of actress Joan Fontaine, also an Academy Award winner....
. The film was a considerable success and brought renewed attention to its veteran cast, which also included Joseph Cotten
Joseph Cotten

Joseph Cheshire Cotten was an American actor of stage and film. He was perhaps best known for his collaborations with Orson Welles, which included Citizen Kane, The Third Man, The Magnificent Ambersons and Journey into Fear , which Cotten wrote, and for his work with Alfred Hitchcock in Shadow of a Doubt....
, Mary Astor
Mary Astor

Mary Astor was an Academy Awards-winning United States actress. Most famous for her role as Brigid O'Shaughnessy in The Maltese Falcon opposite Humphrey Bogart, Astor began her long film career as a teenager in the silent films of the early 1920 in film....
 and Agnes Moorehead
Agnes Moorehead

Agnes Robertson Moorehead was an American actress. Although she began with the Mercury Theatre, appeared in more than seventy films beginning with Citizen Kane and on dozens of television shows during a career that spanned more than thirty years, Moorehead is most widely known to modern audiences for her role as the witch Endora in the t...
.

By the end of the decade, Davis had also appeared in the British films The Nanny
The Nanny (film)

The Nanny was a 1965 in film suspense film directed by Seth Holt and starring Bette Davis as a devoted nanny caring for a ten-year-old boy recently discharged from a home for disturbed children....
 (1965), The Anniversary
The Anniversary (film)

The Anniversary is a 1968 in film United Kingdom black comedy film directed by Roy Ward Baker. The screenplay by Jimmy Sangster is based on the play of the same title by Bill MacIlwraith....
 (1968), and Connecting Rooms
Connecting Rooms

Connecting Rooms is a 1970 in film Great Britain drama film written and directed by Franklin Gollings. The screenplay is based on the play The Cellist by Marion Hart....
 (1970), but her career again stalled.

Late career

Davistaylor
In the early 1970s, Davis was invited to appear in New York, in a stage presentation, Great Ladies of the American Cinema. Over five successive nights, a different female star discussed her career and answered questions from the audience; Myrna Loy
Myrna Loy

Myrna Loy was an American actress. Trained as a dancer, but after a few minor roles in silent films, she devoted herself fully to an acting career, and from 1925 gradually established herself as a film actress....
, Rosalind Russell
Rosalind Russell

Rosalind Russell was an American actress of theatre and film, perhaps best known for her role as a fast-talking newspaper reporter in the Howard Hawks screwball comedy His Girl Friday, as well as originating the role of Auntie Mame on Broadway theatre and in film....
, Lana Turner
Lana Turner

Lana Turner was an Academy Awards-nominated American film and occasionally television actress. On-screen, she was well-known for the glamour and sensuality she brought to almost all her movie roles....
 and Joan Crawford
Joan Crawford

Joan Crawford After an absence of nearly two years from the screen, Crawford staged a comeback by starring in Mildred Pierce , for which she won the Academy Award for Academy Award for Best Actress....
 were the other participants. Davis was well received and was invited to tour Australia with the similarly themed, Bette Davis in Person and on Film, and its success allowed her to take the production to the United Kingdom.

In 1972, she played the lead role in two television films that were each intended as a pilot for an upcoming series for NBC, Madame Sin
Madame Sin

Madame Sin is a 1972 television movie directed by David Greene. The screenplay was written by Greene and Barry Oringer....
 with Robert Wagner
Robert Wagner

Robert John Wagner is a Golden Globe- nominated prolific United States film and television actor of theatre and screen, who starred in movies, soap operas and television....
, and The Judge and Jake Wyler
The Judge and Jake Wyler

The Judge and Jake Wyler is a United States television movie directed by David Lowell Rich. The teleplay was written by Richard Levinson, William Link, and David Shaw....
,
with Joan Van Ark
Joan Van Ark

Joan Van Ark is an Emmy- and Tony Award-nominated American actress, most notable for her role as Valene Ewing on the Columbia Broadcasting System hit television series Dallas and, most prominently, its long-running spin-off, Knots Landing....
, but in each case, NBC decided against producing a series. She also appeared on the NBC interview program Here's Hollywood
Here's Hollywood

Here's Hollywood is a former National Broadcasting Company television celebrity interview program which aired on weekday afternoons at 4:30 Eastern time from September 26, 1960, to December 28, 1962....
.

In the U.S., she appeared in the stage production, Miss Moffat, a musical adaptation of The Corn is Green, but after the show was panned by the Philadelphia critics during its pre-Broadway run, she cited a back injury and abandoned the show, which closed immediately. She played supporting roles in Burnt Offerings
Burnt Offerings (film)

Burnt Offerings is a 1976 in film horror film based on the 1973 novel of the same name by Robert Marasco. It is about a family who moves into a haunted house that rejuvenates itself with each death that occurs inside of it....
 (1976) and The Disappearance of Aimee
The Disappearance of Aimee

The Disappearance of Aimee is a 1976 television movie drama. It was film director by Anthony Harvey for Hallmark Hall of Fame.It stars Faye Dunaway as the Evangelism Aimee Semple McPherson, with Bette Davis and James Woods....
 (1976), but she clashed with Karen Black
Karen Black

Karen Black is an United States actor, screenwriter, singer and songwriter. She is noted for films such as Five Easy Pieces, The Great Gatsby and Nashville in a career that has spanned five decades....
 and Faye Dunaway
Faye Dunaway

Dorothy Faye Dunaway , known as Faye Dunaway, is an United States actor. She has starred in a variety of films, from blockbusters such as The Towering Inferno and the camp classic Mommie Dearest , to the most critically acclaimed including Bonnie and Clyde , Chinatown , and Network ....
, respectively the stars of the two productions, because she felt that neither extended her an appropriate degree of respect, and that their behavior on the film sets was unprofessional.

In 1977, Davis became the first woman to receive the American Film Institute
American Film Institute

The American Film Institute is an independent non-profit organization created by the National Endowment for the Arts, which was established in 1967 when President Lyndon B....
's Lifetime Achievement Award
AFI Life Achievement Award

The AFI Life Achievement Award was established by the Board of Directors of the American Film Institute on February 26, 1973 to honor a single individual for his or her lifetime contribution to enriching American culture through motion pictures and television....
. The televised event included comments from several of Davis's colleagues including William Wyler
William Wyler

William Wyler was a three-time Academy Award-winning film film director....
 who joked that given the chance Davis would still like to refilm a scene from The Letter to which Davis nodded. Jane Fonda
Jane Fonda

Jane Fonda is an United States actress, writer, political activism, former fashion model and Physical fitness guru. She rose to fame in the 1960s with films such as Barbarella and Cat Ballou and, with interruptions, has appeared in films ever since....
, Henry Fonda
Henry Fonda

Henry Jaynes Fonda was an United States Academy Awards-winning film and Stage actor, best known for his roles as plain-speaking idealists. Fonda's subtle, Naturalism acting style preceded by many years the popularization of method acting....
, Natalie Wood
Natalie Wood

Natalie Wood was an American actress.Following her film debut at the age of four, Wood became a successful child actor in such films as the Christmas classic Miracle on 34th Street ....
 and Olivia de Havilland
Olivia de Havilland

Olivia Mary de Havilland is a two-time Academy Awards-winning actor. She is the older sister of actress Joan Fontaine, also an Academy Award winner....
 were among the actors who paid tribute, with de Havilland commenting that Davis "got the roles I always wanted".

Following the telecast she found herself in demand again, often having to choose between several offers. She accepted roles in the television miniseries The Dark Secret of Harvest Home
The Dark Secret of Harvest Home

The Dark Secret of Harvest Home is a 1978 television miniseries Thriller , produced by Universal Studios.It was directed by Leo Penn and stars Bette Davis, David Ackroyd, Joanna Miles, Rosanna Arquette, Rene Auberjonois, and Tracey Gold....
 (1978) and the film Death on the Nile
Death on the Nile (1978 film)

Death on the Nile is a 1978 in film film based on the Agatha Christie mystery novel Death on the Nile, directed by John Guillermin. The film features the Belgium detective Hercule Poirot played by Peter Ustinov....
 (1978). For the rest of her career the bulk of her work was for television. She won an Emmy Award
Emmy Award

The Emmy Award, also known as the 'Emmy', is a television production award, similar in nature to the Peabody Awards but more focused on entertainment, and is considered the television equivalent to the Academy Awards....
 for Strangers: The Story of a Mother and Daughter
Strangers: The Story of a Mother and Daughter

Strangers: The Story of a Mother and Daughter is a 1979 television film drama film director by Milton Katselas.It stars Bette Davis and Gena Rowlands as a mother and daughter, long estranged who attempt to repair their relationship when the daughter is diagnosed with cancer....
 (1979) with Gena Rowlands
Gena Rowlands

Gena Rowlands is an American award nominated actress....
, and was nominated for her performances in White Mama
White Mama

White Mama is a 1980 television film drama film director by Jackie Cooper.It stars Bette Davis in the title role, with Ernest Harden Jr., Eileen Heckart, Virginia Capers, Anne Ramsey, Lurene Tuttle and Vincent Schiavelli....
 (1980) and Little Gloria... Happy at Last
Little Gloria... Happy at Last

Little Gloria... Happy at Last is a 1982 television miniseries film director by Waris Hussein.It stars Martin Balsam, Bette Davis, Michael Gross , Lucy Gutteridge, John Hillerman, Barnard Hughes, Glynis Johns, Angela Lansbury, Christopher Plummer and Maureen Stapleton....
 (1982). She also played supporting roles in two Disney
Walt Disney Pictures

Walt Disney Pictures refers to several different entities associated with The Walt Disney Company:Walt Disney Pictures, the film banner, was found as a designation in 1983, prior to which Disney films since the death of Walt Disney were released under the name of the parent company, then named Walt Disney Productions....
 films, Return from Witch Mountain
Return from Witch Mountain

Return from Witch Mountain is the 1978 in film sequel to 1975's Escape to Witch Mountain. It was written by Malcolm Marmorstein and is based on the novel by Alexander Key....
 (1978) and The Watcher in the Woods
The Watcher in the Woods

The Watcher in the Woods is a 1980 horror film from Walt Disney Pictures, that has developed into something of a cult film over the years. It was based on the A Watcher in the Woods by Florence Engel Randall....
 (1980).

Davis's name became well-known to a younger audience when Kim Carnes
Kim Carnes

Kim Carnes is a Grammy Award-winning United States singer-songwriter. She is noted for her distinctive, raspy voice which she attributes to many hours spent singing in smoky bars and nightclub....
's song "Bette Davis Eyes
Bette Davis Eyes

"Bette Davis Eyes" is the name of a popular song, best known for being performed by Kim Carnes.The song was written in 1974 by Donna Weiss and Jackie DeShannon....
" became a worldwide hit and the best-selling record of 1981 in the U.S., where it stayed at number one on the music charts for more than two months. Davis's grandson was impressed that she was the subject of a hit song and Davis considered it a compliment, writing to both Carnes and the songwriters, and accepting the gift of gold and platinum records
Music recording sales certification

Music recording sales certification is a system of certifying that a music Sound recording has shipped a certain number of copies.Almost all countries follow variations of the RIAA certification categories, which are named after the precious materials gold, platinum and diamond ....
 from Carnes, and hanging them on her wall.

She continued acting for television, appearing in Family Reunion (1981) opposite her grandson J. Ashley Hyman, A Piano for Mrs. Cimino
A Piano for Mrs. Cimino

A Piano for Mrs. Cimino is a 1982 in television United States television movie produced and directed by George Schaefer . The screenplay by John Gay is based on the novel of the same name by Robert Oliphant....
 (1982) and Right of Way
Right of Way

Right of Way is a 1983 television film drama film director by George Schaefer .It stars films veterans Bette Davis and James Stewart as an elderly long-married couple, who must decide how to deal with the situation of one of them being diagnosed with a terminal illness....
 (1983) with James Stewart
James Stewart (actor)

James Maitland Stewart , popularly known as Jimmy Stewart, was an United States film and stage actor best known for his self-effacing persona....
.

In 1985, Davis donated 59 scrapbooks to Boston University
Boston University

Boston University is a private nonsectarian university located in Boston, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States. Although chartered by the Massachusetts Legislature in 1869, Boston University traces its roots to the establishment of the Newbury Biblical Institute in Newbury, Vermont in 1839....
 library. Upon examination, the library's staff found a picture of Joan Crawford
Joan Crawford

Joan Crawford After an absence of nearly two years from the screen, Crawford staged a comeback by starring in Mildred Pierce , for which she won the Academy Award for Academy Award for Best Actress....
 with all her teeth blacked out.

Illness, conflict and death

Bettedavisthewhalesofaugust
In 1983, after filming the pilot episode for the television series Hotel
Hotel (TV series)

Hotel is an United States prime time drama series which aired on American Broadcasting Company from September 21, 1983 to May 5, 1988 in the timeslot following Dynasty ....
,
she was diagnosed with breast cancer
Breast cancer

Breast cancer is a cancer that starts in the Cell of the breast in women and men. Worldwide, breast cancer is the second most common type of cancer after lung cancer and the fifth most common cause of cancer death....
 and underwent a mastectomy
Mastectomy

In medicine, mastectomy is the medical term for the surgical removal of one or both breasts, partially or completely. Mastectomy is usually done to treat breast cancer; in some cases, women and some men believed to be at high risk of breast cancer have the operation prophylaxis, that is, to prevent cancer rather than treat it....
. Within two weeks of her surgery she suffered four stroke
Stroke

A stroke is the rapidly developing loss of brain function due to a disturbance in the blood supply to the brain. According to the National Stroke Association, a "stroke" occurs when a blood clot blocks and artery or a blood vessel breaks, interrupting blood flow to an area of the brain....
s which caused paralysis
Paralysis

Paralysis is the complete loss of muscle function for one or more muscle groups. Paralysis can cause loss of feeling or loss of mobility in the affected area....
 in the right side of her face and in her left arm, and left her with slurred speech. She commenced a lengthy period of physical therapy and, aided by her personal assistant, Kathryn Sermak, gained partial recovery from the paralysis.

During this time, her relationship with her daughter, B. D. Hyman
B. D. Hyman

B. D. Hyman is an United States author and pastor.The daughter of the actress Bette Davis and artist William Sherry, she was adopted by Davis's husband Gary Merrill in 1950....
, deteriorated when Hyman became a born-again Christian and attempted to persuade Davis to follow suit. With her health stable, she traveled to England to film the Agatha Christie
Agatha Christie

Agatha Mary Clarissa, Lady Mallowan, Order of the British Empire , commonly known as Agatha Christie, was an English people crime writer of novels, short stories and Play ....
 mystery Murder with Mirrors
Murder with Mirrors

Murder with Mirrors is a 1985 TV movie based on the Dame Agatha Christie mystery novel, They Do It with Mirrors, using the novel's US title....
 (1985). Upon her return, she learned that Hyman had published a memoir, My Mother's Keeper
My Mother's Keeper

My Mother's Keeper is a 1985 book by B. D. Hyman, daughter of legendary film star Bette Davis, which recounts her view of their mother/daughter relationship....
,
in which she chronicled a difficult mother-daughter relationship and depicted scenes of Davis's overbearing and drunken behavior.

Several of Davis's friends commented that Hyman's depictions of events were not accurate; one said, "so much of the book is out of context". Mike Wallace
Mike Wallace (journalist)

Mike Wallace is an United States journalism. Wallace has been a correspondent for CBS' 60 Minutes since its debut in 1968. During his career at 60 Minutes, he has interviewed a wide range of prominent newsmakers, including Deng Xiaoping, Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, Ayatollah Khomeini, Kurt Waldheim, Yasser Arafat, Menachem Begin, Anw...
 rebroadcast a 60 Minutes
60 Minutes

or 60 Minutes 60 Minutes is an United States investigative television newsmagazine on United States television, which has run on CBS News since 1968....
 interview he had filmed with Hyman a few years earlier in which she commended Davis on her skills as a mother, and said that she had adopted many of Davis's principles in raising her own children. Critics of Hyman noted that Davis had financially supported the Hyman family for several years and had recently saved them from losing their house. Despite the acrimony of their divorce years earlier, Gary Merrill also defended Davis. Interviewed by CNN
CNN

Cable News Network, almost always referred to by its initialism CNN, is a major US Cable News Network founded in 1980 by Ted Turner. Upon its launch, CNN was the first station to provide 24-hour television news coverage, and the first all-news television network in the United States....
, Merrill said that Hyman was motivated by "cruelty and greed". Davis's adopted son, Michael Merrill, ended contact with Hyman and refused to speak to her again, as did Davis, who also disinherited her.

In her second memoir, This 'N That
This 'N That

This 'N That is a memoir written by the actress Bette Davis and Michael Herskovitz, first published in 1987.As Davis had already written a successful autobiography, The Lonely Life, published in 1962, she had discussed in some detail the most important years of her acting career....
 (1987), Davis wrote, "I am still recovering from the fact that a child of mine would write about me behind my back, to say nothing about the kind of book it is. I will never recover as completely from B.D.'s book as I have from the stroke. Both were shattering experiences." Her memoir concluded with a letter to her daughter, in which she addressed her several times as "Hyman", and described her actions as "a glaring lack of loyalty and thanks for the very privileged life I feel you have been given". She concluded with a reference to the title of Hyman's book, "If it refers to money, if my memory serves me right, I've been your keeper all these many years. I am continuing to do so, as my name has made your book about me a success."

Davis appeared in the television film As Summers Die
As Summers Die

As Summers Die is a 1986 television movie drama film director by Jean-Claude Tramont.It stars Scott Glenn, Jamie Lee Curtis, Bette Davis and Beah Richards....
 (1986) and Lindsay Anderson
Lindsay Anderson

Lindsay Gordon Anderson was an Indian-born England feature film, theatre and documentary film director, film critic, and leading light of the Free Cinema movement and the British New Wave....
's The Whales of August (1987), in which she played the blind sister of Lillian Gish
Lillian Gish

Lillian Diana Gish , was an United States stage, screen and television actor whose film acting career spanned 75 years, from 1912 to 1987. She was a prominent film star of the 1910s and 1920s, particularly associated with the films of director D.W....
. The film earned good reviews, with one critic writing, "Bette crawls across the screen like a testy old hornet on a windowpane, snarling, staggering, twitching – a symphony of misfired synapses." Her last performance was the title role in Larry Cohen
Larry Cohen

Lawrence G. "Larry" Cohen is an United States film producer, Film director, and screenwriter. Although he writes and produces for others, he is best known for directing his own low-budget, satirical, and inventive horror films and thrillers that are laced with scathing social commentary about modern society....
's Wicked Stepmother
Wicked Stepmother

Wicked Stepmother is a 1989 United States comedy film written, produced, and directed by Larry Cohen. It is best known for being the last film of Bette Davis, who withdrew from the project after filming began, citing major problems with the script and the way she was being photographed....
 (1989). By this time her health was failing, and after disagreements with Cohen she walked off the set. The script was rewritten to place more emphasis on Barbara Carrera
Barbara Carrera

Barbara Carrera is a Nicaraguan-born American film and Television actress as well as a former Model ....
's character, and the reworked version was released after Davis's death.

After abandoning Wicked Stepmother
Wicked Stepmother

Wicked Stepmother is a 1989 United States comedy film written, produced, and directed by Larry Cohen. It is best known for being the last film of Bette Davis, who withdrew from the project after filming began, citing major problems with the script and the way she was being photographed....
 and with no further film offers, Davis appeared on several talk shows and was interviewed by Johnny Carson
Johnny Carson

John William ?Johnny? Carson was an American television host and comedian, known as host of The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson for 30 years....
, Joan Rivers
Joan Rivers

Joan Rivers is an United States comedian, actress, talk show Host , and businesswoman. She is known for her brash manner and loud, raspy voice with a heavy New York dialect....
, Larry King
Larry King

Lawrence Harvey Zeiger , better known by his stage name Larry King, is an US television and radio host. He is recognized in the United States as one of the premier broadcast interviewers of modern times....
 and David Letterman
David Letterman

David Michael Letterman is an United States comedian, known for hosting the Late Show with David Letterman on CBS since 1993. Letterman's Irony, often Surreal humour comedy is heavily influenced by former The Tonight Show hosts Steve Allen, Johnny Carson and Jack Paar....
, discussing her career but refusing to discuss her daughter. Her appearances were popular; Lindsay Anderson observed that the public enjoyed seeing her behaving "so bitchy". He commented, "I always disliked that because she was encouraged to behave badly. And I'd always hear her described by that awful word, feisty."

During 1988 and 1989, Davis was feted for her career achievements, receiving the Kennedy Center Honor
Kennedy Center Honors

The Kennedy Center Honors is an annual honor given to those in the performing arts for theirlifetime of contributions to Culture of the United States....
, the Legion of Honor from France, the Campione d'Italia
Campione d'Italia

Campione d'Italia is an Italy comune of the Province of Como in the Lombardy region, occupying an enclave within the Switzerland cantons of Switzerland of Ticino, separated from the rest of Italy by Lake Lugano and mountains....
 from Italy and the Film Society of Lincoln Center Lifetime Achievement Award
Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts

Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts is a complex of buildings in New York City....
. She collapsed during the American Cinema Awards in 1989 and later discovered that her cancer had returned. She recovered sufficiently to travel to Spain where she was honored at the Donostia-San Sebastián International Film Festival, but during her visit her health rapidly deteriorated. Too weak to make the long journey back to the U.S., she traveled to France where she died on October 6, 1989, at 11:20 pm, at the American Hospital in Neuilly-sur-Seine
Neuilly-sur-Seine

Neuilly-sur-Seine is a commune in France bordering the western limit of the city of Paris, France. It is located from the Kilometre Zero. It is one of the most densely populated municipalities in Europe....
. She was 81 years old.

She was interred in Forest Lawn – Hollywood Hills Cemetery
Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Hollywood Hills)

Forest Lawn - Hollywood Hills Cemetery is part of the Forest Lawn Memorial-Parks & Mortuaries chain of Southern California cemeteries. It is located at 6300 Forest Lawn Drive in the Hollywood district of Los Angeles, California, which is on the lower north slope at the far east end of the Santa Monica Mountains range that overlooks North Hol...
 in Los Angeles, California
Los Angeles, California

Los Angeles is the largest city in the U.S. state of California and the List of United States cities by population in the United States. Often abbreviated as L.A. and nicknamed The City of Angels, Los Angeles is rated as a beta global city, has an estimated population of 3.8 million and spans over in Southern California....
, alongside her mother, Ruthie, and sister, Bobby. On her tombstone is written: "She did it the hard way", an epitaph
Epitaph

An epitaph is a short text honoring a deceased person, strictly speaking that inscribed on their tombstone or plaque, but also used figuratively....
 that she mentioned in her memoir Mother Goddam as having been suggested to her by Joseph L. Mankiewicz shortly after they had filmed All About Eve.

In 1997, the executors of her estate, Michael Merrill, her son, and Kathryn Sermak, her former assistant, established "The Bette Davis Foundation" which awards college scholarships to promising actors and actresses.

Comments and criticism

In 1964, Jack Warner spoke of the "magic quality that transformed this sometimes bland and not beautiful little girl into a great artist", and in a 1988 interview, Davis remarked that, unlike many of her contemporaries, she had forged a career without the benefit of beauty. She admitted she was terrified during the making of her earliest films and that she became tough by necessity. "Until you're known in my profession as a monster, you are not a star", she said, "[but] I've never fought for anything in a treacherous way. I've never fought for anything but the good of the film." During the making of All About Eve, Joseph L. Mankiewicz told her of the perception in Hollywood that she was difficult, and she explained that when the audience saw her on screen, they did not consider that her appearance was the result of numerous people working behind the scenes. If she was presented as "a horse's ass ... forty feet wide, and thirty feet high", that is all the audience "would see or care about".

While lauded for her achievements, Davis and her films were sometimes derided; Pauline Kael
Pauline Kael

Pauline Kael was an American film critic who wrote for The New Yorker magazine from 1968 to 1991. Earlier in her career she was published by City Lights, McCall's and The New Republic....
 described Now, Voyager
Now, Voyager

Now, Voyager is a 1942 in film United States drama film directed by Irving Rapper. The screenplay by Casey Robinson is based on the 1941 novel of the same name by Olive Higgins Prouty, who borrowed her title from a line in the Walt Whitman poem "The Untold Want," which reads in its entirety, "The untold want by life and land ne'er granted...
 as a "shlock classic", and by the mid-1940s her sometimes mannered and histrionic performances had become the subject of caricature. Reviewers such as Edwin Schallert for the Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times

The Los Angeles Times is a daily newspaper published in Los Angeles, California and distributed throughout the Western United States. It is the second-largest metropolitan newspaper in the United States and the fourth-most widely distributed newspaper in the United States....
 praised Davis's performance in Mr. Skeffington
Mr. Skeffington

Mr. Skeffington is a 1944 in film drama film which portrays a woman whose many love affairs cost her the love of her husband and her daughter....
 (1944), while observing, "the mimics will have more fun than a box of monkeys imitating Miss Davis", and Dorothy Manners writing for the Los Angeles Examiner said of her performance in the poorly received Beyond the Forest
Beyond the Forest

Beyond the Forest is a Warner Brothers film noir directed by King Vidor, produced by Henry Blanke with Jack L. Warner as executive producer from a screenplay by Lenore J....
,
"no night club caricaturist has ever turned in such a cruel imitation of the Davis mannerisms as Bette turns on herself in this one". Time
Time (magazine)

Time is a weekly United States newsmagazine, similar to Newsweek and U.S. News & World Report. A European edition is published from London....
 magazine noted that Davis was compulsively watchable even while criticizing her acting technique, summarizing her performance in Dead Ringer
Dead Ringer

A dead ringer is an exact duplicate. It combines "dead," in the sense of "exact and precise," and "ringer," in the sense of "a double or substitute." "Dead" in this phrase has the same meaning as in "dead shot," "dead center," and "dead heat." "Ringer" began as a term for a horse that replaced a similar-looking horse so as to cheat in hors...
 (1964) with the observation, "her acting, as always, isn't really acting: it's shameless showing off. But just try to look away!"

She attracted a gay
Gay

The term gay was originally used, until well into the mid-20th century, primarily to refer to feelings of being "carefree," "happy," or "bright and showy"; it had also come to acquire some connotations of "immorality" as early as 1637....
 following and was frequently imitated by female impersonators such as Charles Pierce. Attempting to explain her popularity with gay audiences, the journalist Jim Emerson wrote, "Was she just a camp figurehead because her brittle, melodramatic style of acting hadn't aged well? Or was it that she was 'Larger Than Life,' a tough broad who had survived? Probably some of both."

Her film choices were often unconventional; she sought roles as manipulators and killers in an era when actresses usually preferred to play sympathetic characters, and she excelled in them. She favored authenticity over glamour and was willing to change her own appearance if it suited the character. Claudette Colbert
Claudette Colbert

Claudette Colbert was a French-born American stage and film actress.Born in Saint-Mand?, France and raised in New York City, Colbert began her career in Broadway theater productions during the 1920s, progressing to film with the advent of talking pictures....
 commented that Davis was the first actress to play roles older than herself, and therefore did not have to make the difficult transition to character parts as she aged.

As she entered old age, Davis was acknowledged for her achievements. John Springer, who had arranged her speaking tours of the early 1970s, wrote that despite the accomplishments of many of her contemporaries, Davis was "the star of the thirties and into the forties", achieving notability for the variety of her characterizations and her ability to assert herself, even when her material was mediocre. Individual performances continued to receive praise; in 1987, Bill Collins
Bill Collins (television presenter)

William Roderick Collins Order of Australia Medal is an Australian film critic and television presenter.Originally a school teacher, Collins' appreciation of cinema led him to write reviews in the early 1960s and resulted in him working as a film presenter for the Australian Broadcasting Commission....
 analyzed The Letter (1941), and described her performance as "a brilliant, subtle achievement", and wrote, "Bette Davis makes Leslie Crosbie one of the most extraordinary females in movies." In a 2000 review for All About Eve, Roger Ebert noted, "Davis was a character, an icon with a grand style, so even her excesses are realistic."

A few months before her death in 1989, Davis was one of several actors featured on the cover of Life
Life (magazine)

File:Coles Phillips2 Life.jpgLife generally refers to three United States magazines:*A humor and general interest magazine published from 1883 to 1936....
.
In a film retrospective that celebrated the films and stars of 1939, Life concluded that Davis was the most significant actress of her era, and highlighted Dark Victory
Dark Victory

Dark Victory is a 1939 in film United States drama film directed by Edmund Goulding. The screenplay by Casey Robinson was based on the unsuccessful 1934 play of the same title by George Brewer and Bertram Bloch....
 as one of the most important films of the year. Her death made front-page news throughout the world as the "close of yet another chapter of the Golden Age of Hollywood". Angela Lansbury
Angela Lansbury

Angela Brigid Lansbury, Order of the British Empire is a United Kingdom actor and singer whose career has spanned six decades. She made her first film appearance in Gaslight , for which she received an Academy Award nomination, and expanded her repertoire to Broadway theatre and television in the 1950s....
 summed up the feeling of those of the Hollywood community who attended her memorial service, commenting after a sample from Davis's films were screened, that they had witnessed "an extraordinary legacy of acting in the twentieth century by a real master of the craft", that should provide "encouragement and illustration to future generations of aspiring actors".

Davis was one of many Hollywood stars mentioned in Madonna
Madonna (entertainer)

Madonna is an American recording artist, actress and entrepreneur. Born in Bay City, Michigan and raised in Rochester Hills, Michigan, Madonna moved to New York City in 1977, for a career in modern dance....
's 1990 song "Vogue
Vogue (song)

"Vogue" was the first single by United States singer-songwriter Madonna from her soundtrack album I'm Breathless and was released on March 20, 1990 by Sire Records....
", with the line, "Bette Davis, we love you."

In 1999, the American Film Institute
American Film Institute

The American Film Institute is an independent non-profit organization created by the National Endowment for the Arts, which was established in 1967 when President Lyndon B....
 published its list of the "AFI's 100 Years... 100 Stars
AFI's 100 Years... 100 Stars

Part of the AFI 100 Years... series, AFI's 100 Years... 100 Stars is a list of the top 50 stars of United States Cinema of the United States. They were presented by 50 stars of today, adding up to the total of 100 stars....
", which was the result of a film industry poll to determine the "50 Greatest American Screen Legends" in order to raise public awareness and appreciation of classic film. Of the 25 actresses listed, Davis was ranked at number two, behind Katharine Hepburn
Katharine Hepburn

Katharine Houghton Hepburn was an United States actress of film, television and stage.Acclaimed throughout her 73-year career, Hepburn holds the record for the most Academy Award for Best Actress Academy Awards wins with four, from 12 nominations....
.

The United States Postal Service
United States Postal Service

The United States Postal Service is an Independent agencies of the United States government responsible for providing postal service in the United States....
 honored Davis with a commemorative
Commemorative stamp

A commemorative stamp is a postage stamp issued to honor or commemorate a place, event or person. Most mails of the world issue several of these each year, often holding first day of issue ceremonies at locations connected with the subjects....
 postage stamp in 2008, marking the 100th anniversary of her birth. The stamp features an image of her in the role of Margo Channing in All About Eve. The First Day of Issue celebration took place September 18, 2008 at Boston University, which houses an extensive Bette Davis archive. Featured speakers included her son Michael Merrill and the actress Lauren Bacall.

Academy Awards and nominations

In 1962 Bette Davis became the first person to secure 10 Academy Award nominations for acting. Since then only four people have equalled or surpassed this figure, Meryl Streep
Meryl Streep

Mary Louise "Meryl" Streep is an American actress who has worked in theatre, television, and film. She is widely regarded as being one of the most talented and respected movie actors of the modern era....
 (with 15 nominations and 2 wins), Katharine Hepburn
Katharine Hepburn

Katharine Houghton Hepburn was an United States actress of film, television and stage.Acclaimed throughout her 73-year career, Hepburn holds the record for the most Academy Award for Best Actress Academy Awards wins with four, from 12 nominations....
 (12 nominations and 4 wins), Jack Nicholson
Jack Nicholson

John Joseph "Jack" Nicholson is an United States actor, film director, film producer, and screenwriter, Movie star for his often dark-themed portrayals of Neurosis Fictional character....
 (12 nominations and 3 wins) and Laurence Olivier
Laurence Olivier

Laurence Kerr Olivier, Baron Olivier, Order of Merit was an English people Stage actor, Theatre director, and Theatrical producer. He is one of the most famous and revered actors of the 20th century, along with his contemporaries John Gielgud, Peggy Ashcroft and Ralph Richardson....
 (10 nominations and 1 win).

Steven Spielberg
Steven Spielberg

Steven Allan Spielberg, KBE is an American film director, screenwriter and film producer. Forbes magazine places Spielberg's net worth at $3.1 billion....
 purchased Davis's Oscars for Dangerous (1935) and Jezebel (1938) when they were offered for auction for, respectively US$207,500 and US$578,000, and returned them to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is a professional honorary organization dedicated to the advancement of the arts and sciences of motion pictures....
.
  • 1934: Davis's performance in Of Human Bondage
    Of Human Bondage (film)

    Of Human Bondage is a 1934 in film drama film, the first film adaptation of the 1915 Of Human Bondage by the Great Britain author W. Somerset Maugham....
     (1934) was widely acclaimed and when she was not nominated for an Academy Award, several influential people mounted a campaign to have her name included. The Academy relaxed its rules for that year only to allow for the consideration of any performer nominated in a write-in vote, therefore any performance of the year was technically eligible for consideration. Given the well-publicized hoopla, some sources still consider this as a nomination for Davis; however, the Academy does not officially record this as a nomination.
  • 1935: Won for Dangerous
    Dangerous (film)

    Dangerous is a 1935 in film United States drama film directed by Alfred E. Green. The screenplay by Laird Doyle is based on his story Hard Luck Dame....
  • 1938: Won for Jezebel
    Jezebel (1938 film)

    Jezebel is an United States drama film released in 1938 in film and directed by William Wyler. It stars Bette Davis and Henry Fonda, supported by George Brent, Margaret Lindsay, Donald Crisp, Richard Cromwell , and Fay Bainter....
  • 1939: Nominated for Dark Victory
    Dark Victory

    Dark Victory is a 1939 in film United States drama film directed by Edmund Goulding. The screenplay by Casey Robinson was based on the unsuccessful 1934 play of the same title by George Brewer and Bertram Bloch....
  • 1940: Nominated for The Letter
    The Letter (1940 film)

    The Letter is a 1940 United States film noir directed by William Wyler. The screenplay by Howard Koch is based on the The Letter by W. Somerset Maugham, The Letter ....
  • 1941: Nominated for The Little Foxes
    The Little Foxes (film)

    The Little Foxes is a 1941 in film United States drama film directed by William Wyler. The screenplay by Lillian Hellman is based on her The Little Foxes....
  • 1942: Nominated for Now, Voyager
    Now, Voyager

    Now, Voyager is a 1942 in film United States drama film directed by Irving Rapper. The screenplay by Casey Robinson is based on the 1941 novel of the same name by Olive Higgins Prouty, who borrowed her title from a line in the Walt Whitman poem "The Untold Want," which reads in its entirety, "The untold want by life and land ne'er granted...
  • 1944: Nominated for Mr. Skeffington
    Mr. Skeffington

    Mr. Skeffington is a 1944 in film drama film which portrays a woman whose many love affairs cost her the love of her husband and her daughter....
  • 1950: Nominated for All About Eve
    All About Eve

    All About Eve is an Cinema of the United States drama film, written and directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz, based on the short story "The Wisdom of Eve," by Mary Orr....
  • 1952: Nominated for The Star
    The Star (film)

    The Star is a 1952 film which tells the story of a washed up actress who tries anything to restart her career, even at the risk of alienating her husband and daughter....
  • 1962: Nominated for What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?
    What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (film)

    What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? is a 1962 in film United States drama film produced and directed by Robert Aldrich. The screenplay by Lukas Heller is based on What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? by Henry Farrell....


Filmography


Further reading


External links