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Elizabeth Taylor
Date of Birth:
February 27, 1932
Place
of Birth: London
Famous
for:Actress
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Elizabeth Taylor was the ultimate movie star:
violet-eyed, luminously beautiful, and bigger than life;
although never the most gifted actress, she was the most
magnetic, commanding the spotlight with unparalleled
power. Few figures have been the recipient of such
adoration, the target of such ridicule, or the subject
of such gossip and innuendo, and where so many before
and after her withered and died in the intense glare of
their fame, Taylor thrived; celebrity was her lifeblood,
the public eye her constant companion. She knew no
moderation -- it was all or nothing. Whether good (two
Oscars, the first-ever one-million-dollar paycheck, and
charity work), bad (health and weight problems, drug
battles, and other tragedies), or ugly (eight failed
marriages, movie disasters, and countless scandals), no
triumph or setback was too personal for media
consumption.
Born February 27, 1932, in London, Taylor literally grew
up in public. At the beginning of World War II, her
family relocated to Hollywood, and by the age of ten she
was already under contract at Universal. She made her
screen debut in 1942's There's One Born Every Minute,
followed a year later by a prominent role in Lassie Come
Home. For MGM, she co-starred in the 1944 adaptation of
Jane Eyre, then appeared in The White Cliffs of Dover.
With her first lead role as a teen equestrian in the
1944 family classic National Velvet, Taylor became a
star. To their credit, MGM did not exploit her, despite
her incredible beauty; she did not even reappear
onscreen for two more years, returning with Courage of
Lassie. Taylor next starred as Cynthia in 1947, followed
by Life With Father. In Julia Misbehaves, she enjoyed
her first grown-up role, and then portrayed Amy in the
1947 adaptation of Little Women.
Taylor's first romantic lead came opposite Robert Taylor
in 1949's Conspirator. Her love life was already
blossoming offscreen as well; that same year she began
dating millionaire Howard Hughes, but broke off the
relationship to marry hotel heir Nicky Hilton when she
was just 17 years old. The marriage made international
headlines, and in 1950 Taylor scored a major hit as
Spencer Tracy's daughter in Vincente Minnelli's Father
of the Bride; a sequel, Father's Little Dividend,
premiered a year later. Renowned as one of the world's
most beautiful women, Taylor was nevertheless largely
dismissed as an actress prior to an excellent
performance in the George Stevens drama A Place in the
Sun; soon, she was earning upwards of 5,000 dollars a
week.
Taylor's marriage to Hilton proved short-lived, and in
1952 she married actor Michael Wilding. Often her
romantic life overshadowed her career; indeed, her films
of the early '50s were largely undistinguished and
frequently performed poorly at the box office. In 1956,
however, the actress reunited with Stevens to star in
his epic adaptation of the Edna Ferber novel Giant. It
was a blockbuster, as was her 1957 follow-up Raintree
County, for which she earned a Best Actress Oscar
nomination. That same year, Taylor's marriage to Wilding
ended, and she soon announced her much-publicized
engagement to producer Mike Todd; his tragic death in a
plane crash the following year left her the world's most
glamorous widow, and her fame grew even larger. Whatever
sympathy audiences held for Taylor quickly vanished,
however, when she was soon identified as the other woman
in the break-up of singer Eddie Fisher and actress
Debbie Reynolds; their romantic triangle played out in
the headlines of tabloids the world over, and although
Taylor eventually stole Fisher away, the careers of all
three performers were boosted by the scandal -- the
public simply could not get enough.
Taylor's sexy image was further elevated by an
impossibly sensual performance in 1958's Cat on a Hot
Tin Roof; another Tennessee Williams adaptation,
Suddenly Last Summer, followed a year later, and both
were highly successful. To complete the terms of her MGM
contract, she grudgingly agreed to star in 1960's
Butterfield 8; upon completing the film Taylor traveled
to Britain to begin work on the much-heralded Cleopatra,
for which she received an unprecedented
one-million-dollar fee. In London she became dangerously
ill, and underwent a life-saving emergency tracheotomy.
Hollywood sympathy proved sufficient for her to win a
Best Actress Oscar for Butterfield 8, although much of
the good will extended toward her again dissipated in
the wake of the mounting difficulties facing Cleopatra.
With five million dollars already spent, producers
pulled the plug and relocated the shoot to Italy,
replacing co-star Stephen Boyd with Richard Burton. The
final tally placed the film at a cost of 37 million
dollars, making it the most costly project in film
history; scheduled for a 16-week shoot, the production
actually took years, and despite mountains of
pre-publicity, it was a huge disaster at the box office
upon its 1963 premiere.
Still, the notice paid to Cleopatra paled in comparison
to the scrutiny which greeted Taylor's latest romance,
with Burton; she left Fisher to marry the actor in 1964,
and perhaps no Hollywood relationship was ever the
subject of such intense media coverage. Theirs was a
passionate, stormy relationship, played out in the press
and onscreen in films including 1963's The V.I.P.'s and
1965's The Sandpiper. In 1966, the couple starred in
Mike Nichols' controversial directorial debut Who's
Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, arguably Taylor's best
performance; overweight, verbally cutting, and defiantly
unglamorous, she won a second Oscar for her work as the
embittered wife of Burton's alcoholic professor. Their
real-life marriage managed to survive, however, and
after Taylor appeared opposite Marlon Brando in 1967's
Reflections in a Golden Eye, she and Burton reunited for
The Comedians. She also starred in Franco Zeffirelli's
The Taming of the Shrew, but none were successful at the
box office; 1968's Doctor Faustus was a disaster, and
later that year Boom! failed to gross even one-quarter
of its costs. After 1969's Secret Ceremony, Taylor
starred in The Only Game in Town, a year later; when
they too failed, her days of million-dollar salaries
were over, and she began working on percentage.
With Burton, Taylor next appeared in a small role in
1971's Under Milk Wood; next was X, Y and Zee, followed
by another spousal collaboration, Hammersmith Is Out. In
1972 the Burtons also co-starred in a television
feature, Divorce His, Divorce Hers; the title proved
prescient, as two years later, the couple did indeed
divorce after a decade together. However, few
anticipated the next development in their relationship:
In 1975, it was announced that Taylor and Burton had
remarried, but this time their union lasted barely a
year. In the meantime, she was largely absent from
films, and did not reappear until 1976's The Blue Bird;
a year later, she starred in the telefilm Victory at
Entebbe. Taylor concluded the decade with a prolific
burst of feature films (A Little Night Music, Winter
Kills, The Mirror Crack'd) and TV work (Return
Engagement), but audiences no longer seemed interested.
Indeed, she made more headlines for her increasing
weight, continued health problems, and revelations of
drug and alcohol abuse than she did for any of her
films. As always, Taylor's love life remained the focus
of much speculation as well, and from 1976 to 1982 she
was married to politician John Warner.
With no film offers forthcoming, Taylor turned to the
stage, and in 1981 she starred in a production of The
Little Foxes. In 1983, she and Burton also reunited to
co-star on Broadway in Private Lives. Television also
remained an option, and in 1983 she and Carol Burnett
co-starred in Between Friends. However, Taylor's primary
focus during the decades to follow was charity work;
following the death of her close friend, Rock Hudson,
she became a leader in the battle against AIDS, and for
her efforts won the 1993 Jean Hersholt Humanitarian
Award. She also launched a successful line of perfumes.
And of course, Taylor remained a fixture of tabloid
headlines; she maintained a close friendship with
another favorite target of the tabloids, King-of-Pop
Michael Jackson, and during a well-publicized stay at
the Betty Ford Clinic, she began a romance with Larry
Fortensky, a construction worker many years her junior.
They married in 1989, but like her other relationships,
it did not last. In between, there was also the
occasional film or television project. In 1988, she and
Zeffirelli reunited for Young Toscanini, but the picture
was never released; a 1989 TV adaptation of Sweet Bird
of Youth earned Taylor considerable publicity, but she
didn't appear in another film until 1994 with The
Flintstones.
In 1997, the actress once again became a featured
tabloid topic when she underwent brain surgery to remove
a benign tumor. The same year, she received attention of
a more favorable variety with Happy Birthday Elizabeth:
A Celebration of Life, a TV special in which she was
paid tribute by a number of stars including Madonna,
Shirley MacLaine, John Travolta, Dennis Hopper, and Cher.
In 2001, Taylor managed the impressive feat of dredging
up both old tabloid headlines and creating new ones,
thanks to her starring role in the television movie
These Old Broads. Co-starring with Shirley MacLaine,
Joan Collins, and her old rival, Debbie Reynolds,
Taylor's involvement with the project -- which was
co-written by Reynolds' daughter, Carrie Fisher, and
featured her son, Todd Fisher, in a supporting role --
engendered more than a few inches in the nation's gossip
columns, although both Taylor and Reynolds were quick to
point out that they had laid their differences to rest a
long time ago. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Movie Guide
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