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TRULY, MADLY by Stephen Galloway

TRULY, MADLY

Vivien Leigh, Laurence Olivier, and the Romance of the Century

by Stephen Galloway

Pub Date: March 22nd, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-5387-3197-0
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing

The sweeping story of a relationship between two Hollywood legends.

Galloway, the former executive editor of the Hollywood Reporter, braids political, personal, and cinematic history in this dishy narrative about the tumultuous marriage of Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh. While this relationship has been written about countless times, the author endeavors to make this account more nuanced, using the prism of our modern understanding of mental health to address the problems Leigh battled throughout her life. To that end, we get a slightly more sympathetic view of the actor. As a child, she was sent from her birthplace in Darjeeling, India, to boarding school in England. An unrequited hunger for love and kindness is the throughline of Galloway’s depiction. She was lonely, frightened, and never appeared to fully recover from feelings of abandonment caused by her parents sending her away. These characteristics are easily identified now as obvious contributors to Leigh’s mental health struggles; during her lifetime, not so much. While readers now might relate to Leigh, it’s clear that during her marriage to Olivier, onlookers, as well as “Larry” himself, were inclined to believe she was at best mercurial and at worst crazy, while the husband was long-suffering. Galloway excels at detailing the couple's world, complete with cameos by Marilyn Monroe, Arthur Miller, Katharine Hepburn, and Warren Beatty. We also see how World War II and Hollywood politics impacted the pair’s destiny. Leigh comes across at times as strong, smart, and scathing; at others, desperate and brittle, as she endured numerous rounds of electroshock therapy in hopes of changing enough to keep Olivier’s love. Olivier, for his part, eventually gave up on his “Vivling” and made it about him. The first two-thirds of the book race by in full Technicolor, while the last third is thinner, reading more like an IMDB page or an obituary, which it eventually becomes for Galloway’s two tragic and beautiful subjects.

A good choice for lovers of theater and cinema—and for those who live for the drama.