Hollywood sources said the star of "Gone With the Wind", Olivia de Havilland, died yesterday at the age of 104.
   The media representative of the late actress was quoted as saying that she died of natural causes at her home in Paris, where she has lived for more than 60 years.
  De Havilland, who was the last surviving actress from the golden age of Hollywood and famous for the movie "Gone with the Wind" in 1939, won two Oscars during her artistic career during which she participated in 50 films. Her life also witnessed fierce long-term competition with her sister, the late actress Joan Fontaine, who died at the age of 96 in 2013.
De Havilland, who has American citizenship and was born to English parents in Japan, has lived in Paris since 1953. She has not appeared much since she retired but returned to Hollywood 2003 to participate in the presentation of the seventy-fifth Academy Awards.
The de Havilland family moved to California as a child, and began her work in cinema after director Max Reinhard saw her in the screening of the play "A Midsummer Night's Dream" and assigned her a role in the movie he adapted from the play in 1935. And Warner Bros. movie production company impressed the girl in that Time and she signed a seven-year contract with her.
 The late actress has a son named Benjamin from her first husband, writer Marcus Gordis, and a daughter named Giselle from her second husband, journalist Pierre Gallanti.

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