The clue to the misfortune awaiting so many actresses can be found hidden within the most famous Oscar acceptance line of all time.
“I can’t deny the fact that you like me, right now, you like me!”
This iconic Oscars line was uttered by Sally Field as she accepted her Best Actress award for her role in the 1984 film Places In The Heart.
“Right now, you like me” is a phrase that so rightly sums up the disposable role so many actresses play in the churning, money-making machine that is Hollywood.
It appears that when actresses are young, beautiful and successful they are happily handed statutes, adoration and acclaim, but it all often comes with a ticking clock attached. From an audience perspective, it can often appear that scoring an Oscar is a pretty much life’s golden ticket, one that sets you up for further career success.
But history has proven that nothing could be further from the truth.
From battling drug addiction, to losing film roles after rebuffing sexual advances, to bankruptcy and stepping away from movies due to poor mental health, here are just some of the actresses whose lives became difficult after they won an Oscar.
Joan Crawford
Joan Crawford (who was born Lucille Fay LeSueur) won the Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role in 1946 for Mildred Pierce.
At the height of her career, she was one of Hollywood’s most lauded leading ladies, but following her Oscar win her career took a downward turn. In order to try and reclaim her career and continue working in the youth-obsessed film industry, Crawford pitched and starred in What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? in 1962, opposite her “arch-nemesis” Bette Davis who was also finding it hard to land film roles following her own Oscar wins.