Dame Elizabeth Rosemond Taylor, DBE
(born 27 February 1932), also known as Liz Taylor, is an Anglo-American
actress. She is known for her acting skills and beauty, as well as her
Hollywood lifestyle, including many marriages. Taylor is considered one
of the great actresses of Hollywood's golden age.
The American Film Institute named Taylor seventh on its Female Legends list.
Early years (1932–1942)
Taylor was born in Hampstead, a
wealthy district of north-west London, the second child of Francis Lenn
Taylor (1897–1968) and Sara Viola Warmbrodt (1895–1994), who were
Americans residing in England. Taylor's older brother, Howard Taylor,
was born in 1929. Both of her parents were originally from Arkansas
City, Kansas. Her father was an art dealer and her mother a former
actress whose stage name was 'Sara Sothern'. Sothern retired from the
stage when she and Francis Taylor married in 1926 in New York City.
Taylor's two first names are in honour of her paternal grandmother,
Elizabeth Mary (Rosemond) Taylor. A dual citizen of the UK and the U.S.,
Taylor was born a British subject through her birth on British soil and
an American citizen through her parents.
At
the age of three, Taylor began taking ballet lessons with Vaccani.
Shortly before the beginning of World War II, her parents decided to
return to the United States to avoid hostilities. Her mother took the
children first, arriving in New York in April 1939, while her father
remained in London to wrap up matters in the art business, arriving in
November. They settled in Los Angeles, California, where Sara's family,
the Warmbrodts, were then living.
Through
Hopper, the Taylors were introduced to Andrea Berens, a wealthy English
socialite and also fiancée of Cheever Cowden, chairman and major
stockholder of Universal Pictures in Hollywood. Berens insisted that
Sara bring Elizabeth to see Cowden, who she was adamant would be taken
away by Elizabeth's breathtaking dark beauty. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer soon
took interest in the British youngster as well but she failed to secure a
contract with them after an informal audition with producer John
Considine proved that she couldn't sing. However, on 18 September 1941,
Universal Pictures signed Elizabeth to a six-month renewable contract at
$100 a week.
Taylor appeared in
her first motion picture at the age of nine in There's One Born Every
Minute, her first and only film for Universal Pictures. Less than six
months after she signed with Universal, her contract was reviewed by
Edward Muhl, the studio's production chief. Muhl met with Taylor's
agent, Myron Selznick (brother of David) and with Cheever Cowden. Muhl
challenged Selznick's and Cowden's constant support of Taylor: "She
can't sing, she can't dance, she can't perform. What's more, her mother
has to be one of the most unbearable women it has been my displeasure to
meet."[4] Universal cancelled Taylor's contract just short of her tenth
birthday in February 1942. Nevertheless on 15 October 1942,
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer signed Taylor to $100 a week for up to three months
to appear as Priscilla in Lassie Come Home.
Career
Adolescent star
Lassie
Come Home starred child star Roddy McDowall, with whom Taylor would
share a lifelong friendship. Upon its release in 1943, the film received
favourable attention for both McDowall and Taylor. On the basis for her
performance in Lassie Come Home MGM signed Taylor to a conventional
seven-year contract at $100 a week but increasing at regular intervals
until it reached a hefty $750 during the seventh year. Her first
assignment under her new contract at MGM was a loan-out to 20th Century
Fox for the character of Helen Burns in a film version of the Charlotte
Bronte novel Jane Eyre (1944). During this period she also returned to
England to appear in another Roddy McDowall picture for MGM, The White
Cliffs of Dover (1944). But it was Taylor's persistence in campaigning
for the role of Velvet Brown in MGM's National Velvet that skyrocketed
Taylor to stardom at the tender age of 12. Taylor's character, Velvet
Brown, is a young girl who trains her beloved horse to win the Grand
National. National Velvet, which also costarred beloved American
favorite Mickey Rooney and English newcomer Angela Lansbury, became an
overwhelming success upon its release in December 1944 and altered
Taylor's life forever. Also, many of her back problems have been traced
to when she hurt her back falling off a horse during the filming of
National Velvet.
National Velvet
grossed over US$4 million at the box office and Taylor was signed to a
new long-term contract that raised her salary to $30,000 per year. To
capitalize on the box office success of Velvet, Taylor was shoved into
another animal opus, Courage of Lassie, in which a different dog named
"Bill", cast as an Allied combatant in World War II, regularly outsmarts
the Nazis, with Taylor going through another outdoors role. The 1946
success of Courage of Lassie led to another contract drawn up for Taylor
earning her $750 per week, her mother $250, as well as a $1,500 bonus.
Her roles as Mary Skinner in a loan-out to Warner Brothers' Life With
Father (1947), Cynthia Bishop in Cynthia (1947), Carol Pringle in A Date
with Judy (1948) and Susan Prackett in Julia Misbehaves (1948) all
proved to be successful. Her reputation as a bankable adolescent star
and nickname of "One-Shot Liz" (referring to her ability to shoot a
scene in one take) promised her a full and bright career with Metro.
Taylor's portrayal as Amy, in the American classic Little Women (1949)
would prove to be her last adolescent role. In October 1948, she sailed
aboard the RMS Queen Mary travelling to England where she would begin
filming on Conspirator, where she would play her first adult role.
Transition into adult roles
in Father of the Bride (1950)
When
released in 1949, Conspirator bombed at the box office, but Taylor's
portrayal of 21-year-old debutante Melinda Grayton (keeping in mind that
Taylor was only 16 at the time of filming) who unknowingly marries a
communist spy (played by 38-year-old Robert Taylor), was praised by
critics for her first adult lead in a film, even though the public
didn't seem ready to accept her in adult roles. Taylor's first picture
under her new salary of $2,000 per week was The Big Hangover (1950),
both a critical and box office failure, that paired her with screen idol
Van Johnson. The picture also failed to present Taylor with an
opportunity to exhibit her newly-realized sensuality. Her first box
office success in an adult role came as Kay Banks in the romantic comedy
Father of the Bride (1950), alongside Spencer Tracy and Joan Bennett.
The film spawned a sequel, Father's Little Dividend (1951), which
Taylor's costar Spencer Tracy summarised with
"boring...boring...boring." The film was received well at the box office
but it would be Taylor's next picture that would set the course for her
career as a dramatic actress.
In
late 1949, Taylor had begun filming George Stevens' A Place In The Sun.
Upon its release in 1951, Taylor was hailed for her performance as
Angela Vickers, a spoiled socialite who comes between George Eastman
(Montgomery Clift) and his poor, pregnant factory-working girlfriend
Alice Tripp (Shelley Winters).
The
film became the pivotal performance of Taylor's career as critics
acclaimed it as a classic, a reputation it sustained throughout the next
50 years of cinema history. The New York Times' A.H. Weiler wrote,
"Elizabeth's delineation of the rich and beauteous Angela is the top
effort of her career," and the Boxoffice reviewer unequivocally stated
"Miss Taylor deserves an Academy Award." "If you were considered pretty,
you might as well have been a waitress trying to act – you were treated
with no respect at all", she later bitterly reflected.
Even
with such critical success as an actress, Taylor was increasingly
unsatisfied with the roles being offered to her at the time. While she
wanted to play the leads in The Barefoot Contessa and I'll Cry Tomorrow,
MGM continued to restrict her to mindless and somewhat forgettable
films such as: a cameo as herself in Callaway Went Thataway (1951), Love
Is Better Than Ever (1952), Ivanhoe (1952), The Girl Who Had Everything
(1953) and Beau Brummel (1954).
Taylor
had made it perfectly clear that she wanted to play the role of Lady
Rowena in Ivanhoe, but the part had already been given to Joan Fontaine
and she was handed the thankless role of Rebecca. When she became
pregnant with her first child, MGM forced her through The Girl Who Had
Everything (even adding two hours to her daily work schedule) so as to
get one more film out of her before she became too heavily pregnant.
Taylor lamented that she needed the money, as she had just bought a new
house with second husband Michael Wilding and with a child on the way
things would be pretty tight. Taylor had been forced by her pregnancy to
turn down Elephant Walk (1954), though the role had been designed for
her. Vivien Leigh, to whom Taylor bore a striking resemblance, got the
part and went to Ceylon to shoot on location. Leigh had a nervous
breakdown during filming, and Taylor finally reclaimed the role after
the birth of her child Michael Wilding, Jr. in January 1953.
Taylor's
next screen endeavor, Rhapsody (1954), another tedious romantic drama,
proved equally frustrating. Taylor portrayed Louise Durant, a beautiful
rich girl in love with a temperamental violinist (Vittorio Gassman) and
an earnest young pianist (John Ericson). A film critic for the New York
Herald Tribune wrote: "There is beauty in the picture all right, with
Miss Taylor glowing into the camera from every angle...but the dramatic
pretenses are weak, despite the lofty sentences and handsome manikin
poses."
Taylor's fourth period
picture, Beau Brummell, made just after Elephant Walk and Rhapsody, cast
her as the elaborately costumed Lady Patricia, which many felt was only
a screen prop—a ravishing beauty whose sole purpose was to lend
romantic support to the film's title star, Stewart Granger.
The
Last Time I Saw Paris (1954) fared only slightly better than her
previous pictures, with Taylor being reunited with The Big Hangover
costar Van Johnson. The role of Helen Ellsworth Willis was based on that
of Zelda Fitzgerald and, although pregnant with her second child,
Taylor went ahead with the film, her fourth in twelve months. Although
proving somewhat successful at the box office, she still yearned for
meatier roles.
1955-1979
In Cleopatra (1963)
Following
a more substantial role opposite Rock Hudson and James Dean in George
Stevens' epic Giant (1956), Taylor was nominated for an Academy Award
for Best Actress for the following films: Raintree County (1957)
opposite Montgomery Clift; Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958) opposite Paul
Newman; and Suddenly, Last Summer (1959)with Montgomery Clift, Katharine
Hepburn and Mercedes McCambridge.
In
1960, Taylor became the highest paid actress up to that time when she
signed a one million dollar contract to play the title role in 20th
Century Fox's lavish production of Cleopatra, which would eventually be
released in 1963. During the filming, she began a romance with her
future husband Richard Burton, who played Mark Antony in the film. The
romance received much attention from the tabloid press, as both were
married to other spouses at the time.
Taylor
won her first Academy Award, for Best Actress in a Leading Role, for
her performance as Gloria Wandrous in BUtterfield 8 (1960), which
co-starred then husband Eddie Fisher.
Her
second and final Academy Award, also for Best Actress in a Leading
Role, was for her performance as Martha in Who's Afraid of Virginia
Woolf? (1966),playing opposite then husband Richard Burton. Taylor and
Burton would appear together in six other films during the decade – The
V.I.P.s (1963), The Sandpiper (1965), The Taming of the Shrew (1967),
Doctor Faustus (1967), The Comedians {1967} and Boom! (1968).
Taylor
appeared in John Huston's Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967) opposite
Marlon Brando (replacing Montgomery Clift who died before production
began) and Secret Ceremony (1968) opposite Mia Farrow. However, by the
end of the decade her box-office drawing power had considerably
diminished, as evidenced by the failure of The Only Game in Town (1970),
with Warren Beatty.
Taylor
continued to star in numerous theatrical films throughout the 1970s,
such as Zee and Co. (1972) with Michael Caine, Ash Wednesday (1973), The
Blue Bird (1976) with Jane Fonda and Ava Gardner, and A Little Night
Music (1977). With then-husband Richard Burton, she co-starred in the
1972 films Under Milk Wood and Hammersmith Is Out, and the 1973
made-for-TV movie Divorce His, Divorce Hers.
1980-2003
Taylor
starred in the 1980 mystery/thriller The Mirror Crack'd opposite Kim
Novak. In 1985, she played movie gossip columnist Louella Parsons in the
TV film Malice in Wonderland opposite Jane Alexander, who played Hedda
Hopper; and also appeared in the miniseries North and South. Her last
theatrical film to date was 1994's The Flintstones. In 2001, she played
an agent in the TV film These Old Broads. She has also appeared on a
number television series, including the soap operas General Hospital and
All My Children, as well as the animated series The Simpsons—once as
herself, and once as the voice of Maggie Simpson. She has not done any
acting since 2003.
Taylor has also
acted on the stage, making her Broadway and West End debuts in 1982
with a revival of Lillian Hellman's The Little Foxes. She was then in a
production of Noel Coward's Private Lives (1983), in which she starred
with her former husband, Richard Burton. The student-run Burton Taylor
Theatre in Oxford was named for the famous couple after Burton appeared
as Doctor Faustus in the Oxford University Dramatic Society (OUDS)
production of the Marlowe play. Taylor played the ghostly, wordless
Helen of Troy, who is entreated by Faustus to 'make [him] immortal with a
kiss'.
Retirement
In November 2004, Taylor
announced that she had been diagnosed with congestive heart failure, a
progressive condition in which the heart is too weak to pump sufficient
blood throughout the body, particularly to the lower extremities: the
ankles and feet. She has broken her back five times, had both her hips
replaced, survived a benign brain tumor operation, skin cancer, and has
faced life-threatening bouts with pneumonia twice. She is reclusive and
sometimes fails to make scheduled appearances due to illness or other
personal reasons. She now uses a wheelchair and when asked about it she
said that she has osteoporosis and was born with scoliosis.
In
2005, Taylor was a vocal supporter of her friend Michael Jackson in his
trial in California on charges of sexually abusing a child. He was
acquitted.
On 30 May 2006, Taylor
appeared on Larry King Live to refute the claims that she has been ill,
and denied the allegations that she was suffering from Alzheimer's
disease and was close to death.
In
late August 2006, Taylor decided to take a boating trip to help prove
that she was not close to death. She also decided to make Christie's
auction house the primary place where she will sell her jewellery,
artwork, clothing, furniture and memorabilia (September 2006).
The
February 2007 issue of Interview magazine was devoted entirely to
Taylor. It celebrated her life, career and her upcoming 75th birthday.
On
5 December 2007, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and First
Lady Maria Shriver inducted Taylor into the California Hall of Fame,
located at The California Museum for History, Women and the Arts.
Taylor
was in the news recently for a rumoured ninth marriage to her companion
Jason Winters. This has been dismissed as a rumour. However, she was
quoted as saying, "Jason Winters is one of the most wonderful men I've
ever known and that's why I love him. He bought us the most beautiful
house in Hawaii and we visit it as often as possible," to gossip
columnist Liz Smith. Winters accompanied Taylor to Macy's Passport
HIV/AIDS 2007 gala, where Taylor was honoured with a humanitarian award.
In 2008, Taylor and Winters were spotted celebrating the 4th of July on
a yacht in Santa Monica, California. The couple attended the Macy's
Passport HIV/AIDS gala again in 2008.
On
1 December 2007, Taylor acted on-stage again, appearing opposite James
Earl Jones in a benefit performance of the A. R. Gurney play Love
Letters. The event's goal was to raise $1 million for Taylor's AIDS
foundation. Tickets for the show were priced at $2,500, and more than
500 people attended. The event happened to coincide with the 2007
Writers Guild of America strike and, rather than cross the picket line,
Taylor requested a "one night dispensation." The Writers Guild agreed
not to picket the Paramount Pictures lot that night to allow for the
performance.
In October 2008, Taylor and Winters took a trip overseas to England. They spent time visiting friends, family and shopping.
Other interests
Taylor on a show that was celebrating her life, late 1981
Taylor
has a passion for jewellery. She is a client of well-known jewellery
designer, Shlomo Moussaieff. Over the years she has owned a number of
well-known pieces, two of the most talked-about being the 33.19-carat
(6.64 g) Krupp Diamond and the 69.42-carat (13.88 g) pear-shaped
Taylor-Burton Diamond, which were among many gifts from husband Richard
Burton. Taylor also owns the 50-carat (10 g) La Peregrina Pearl,
purchased by Burton as a Valentine's Day present in 1969. The pearl was
formerly owned by Mary I of England, and Burton sought a portrait of
Queen Mary wearing the pearl. Upon the purchase of the painting, the
Burtons discovered that the British National Portrait Gallery did not
have an original painting of Mary, so they donated the painting to the
Gallery. Her enduring collection of jewellery has been documented in her
book My Love Affair with Jewelry (2002) with photographs by the New
York photographer John Bigelow Taylor (no relation).
Taylor
started designing jewels for the The Elizabeth Collection, creating
fine jewellery with elegance and flair. The Elizabeth Taylor collection
by Piranesi is sold at Christie's. She has also launched three perfumes,
"Passion," "White Diamonds," and "Black Pearls," that together earn an
estimated US$200 million in annual sales. In fall 2006, Taylor
celebrated the 15th anniversary of her White Diamonds perfume, one of
the top 10 best selling fragrances for more than the past decade.
Taylor
has devoted much time and energy to AIDS-related charities and
fundraising. She helped start the American Foundation for AIDS Research
(amfAR) after the death of her former costar and friend, Rock Hudson.
She also created her own AIDS foundation, the Elizabeth Taylor Aids
Foundation (ETAF). By 1999, she had helped to raise an estimated US$50
million to fight the disease.
In
2006, Taylor commissioned a 37-foot (11 m) "Care Van" equipped with
examination tables and X Ray equipment and also donated US$40,000 to the
New Orleans Aids task force, a charity designed for the New Orleans
population with AIDS and HIV. The donation of the van was made by the
Elizabeth Taylor HIV/AIDS Foundation and Macy's.
In
the early 1980s, Taylor moved to Bel Air, Los Angeles, California,
which is her current home. She also owns homes in Palm Springs, London
and Hawaii. The fenced and gated property is on tour maps sold at street
corners and is frequently passed by tour guides.
Taylor
was also a fan of the soap opera General Hospital. In fact, she was
cast as the first Helena Cassadine, matriarch of the Cassadine family.
Taylor
is a supporter of Kabbalah and member of the Kabbalah Centre. She
encouraged long-time friend Michael Jackson to wear a red string as
protection from the evil-eye during his 2005 trial for molestation,
where he was eventually cleared of all charges. On 6 October 1991,
Taylor had married construction worker Larry Fortensky at Jackson's
Neverland Ranch.[citation needed] In 1997, Jackson presented Taylor with
the exclusively written-for-her epic song "Elizabeth, I Love You",
performed on the day of her 65th birthday celebration.
In
October 2007, Taylor won a legal battle, over a Vincent van Gogh
painting in her possession, when the US Supreme Court refused to
reconsider a legal suit filed by four persons claiming that the artwork
belongs to one of their Jewish ancestors,[28] regardless of any statute
of limitations.
Taylor attended Michael Jackson's private funeral on 3 September 2009.
Personal life
Marriages
Taylor has been married eight times to seven husbands:
Conrad "Nicky" Hilton (6 May 1950 – 29 January 1951) (divorced)
Michael Wilding (21 February 1952 – 26 January 1957) (divorced)
Michael Todd (2 February 1957 – 22 March 1958) (widowed)
Eddie Fisher (12 May 1959 – 6 March 1964) (divorced)
Richard Burton (15 March 1964 – 26 June 1974) (divorced)
Richard Burton (again) (10 October 1975 – 29 July 1976) (divorced)
John Warner (4 December 1976 – 7 November 1982) (divorced)
Larry Fortensky (6 October 1991 – 31 October 1996) (divorced)
Children
Taylor
and Wilding had two sons, Michael Howard Wilding (born 6 January 1953),
and Christopher Edward Wilding (born 27 February 1955). She and Todd
had one daughter, Elizabeth Frances Todd, called "Liza" (born 6 August
1957). In 1964 she and Fisher started adoption proceedings for a
daughter, whom Burton later adopted, Maria Burton (born 1 August 1961).
She became a grandmother on 25 August 1971, at age 39.
Treatment for alcoholism
In the 1980s, she received treatment for alcoholism.
Filmography
Elizabeth Taylor filmography and various appearances
List of awards and honours
Main article: List of awards and nominations received by Elizabeth Taylor
In 1999, Taylor was appointed Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire.
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