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TAYLOR, Elizabeth

by admin last modified 2007-05-10 10:44 AM

Amerikaans filmactrice (1932- )

* Londen. 27.2.1932 Taylor is van Engelse afkomst.

  

Zij trad reeds als kind op in Amerikaanse films, o.a. Jane Eyre (1943), National velvet (1944), maar hoofdrollen waren pas in de jaren vijftig voor haar weggelegd. Zij trad tweemaal in het huwelijk met de acteur R. Burton.

LITT. R. Waterbury, E. Taylor (1964).

Education:     Byron House School; Hawthorne School; University High School

The debatable acting skills of this breathtakingly beautiful, quintessential movie star of the 1950s and '60s have always been overshadowed by her much-publicized, scandal-ridden personal life. The British-born Taylor fled England during WWII and settled in the US. She appeared in her first film, THERE'S ONE BORN EVERY MINUTE (1942), at the age of ten. The following year, Taylor was cast as the young heroine opposite Roddy McDowall in LASSIE COME HOME (1943), which led to a long-term contract with MGM. She became a star at age 12 with her striking performance as horse-crazy Velvet Brown in the children's classic NATIONAL VELVET (1944), a performance about which one British reviewer raved: "whenever she speaks or thinks about horses …: her strange azure eyes gleam and her whole frame trembles with the intensity of her passion." Other early films included THE WHITE CLIFFS OF DOVER (1944), CYNTHIA and LIFE WITH FATHER (both 1947).

Before reaching her late teens, Taylor had physically outgrown juvenile parts and was playing young adults. Vincente Minnelli's domestic comedy FATHER OF THE BRIDE (1950) and George Stevens's much-lauded A PLACE IN THE SUN (1951) firmly established her as a major adult star. From a pretty child, she had grown into one of the great beauties of the age: black hair, heart-shaped face, violet eyes with thick black lashes, her breathy voice only slightly tinged with her British origins. Stevens' GIANT (1956), meanwhile, forged a new level of respect for Taylor as an actress, and over the next decade she developed into one of the most glamorous and highly-paid movie performers in the world, earning a then-astounding $1 million to star as CLEOPATRA (1963). Atypically for Taylor at that time, the film did less than overwhelming business at the box office, especially with respect to its unprecedented cost (reportedly $40 million).

By the early 1950s, Taylor had embarked on her career as a serial bride: her husbands included hotel heir Nicky Hilton, actor Michael Wilding, producer Mike Todd, crooner Eddie Fisher, actor Richard Burton (twice), US Senator John Warner, and construction worker Larry Fortensky. Taylor's glamorous and unapologetically hedonistic persona undoubtedly contributed to her popularity and notoriety, but somewhat limited her critical reputation. She received much sympathy when third husband Todd died in a plane crash, but she was widely criticized for "stealing" Fisher away from his wife, actress Debbie Reynolds. Her much-publicized near-death from pneumonia and her emergency tracheotomy, however, garnered Taylor the forgiveness of the public, but she again made the tabloids when she began an affair with Burton, then still married to his first wife.

Taylor's career during these sensational years, though, was at its peak. She was nominated for an Oscar three times—for her crazed belle in RAINTREE COUNTY (1957), for her even better performances as the manipulative Southern beauty in Tennessee Williams' CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF (1958) and as the overwrought boy-bait in Williams' SUDDENLY, LAST SUMMER (1959)—before winning the first of her two Best Actress Oscars for her performance as a disillusioned call girl in the melodrama BUTTERFIELD 8 (1960).

Insiders claimed that Taylor's life-threatening illness tipped the scales in her favor for this first win. No one disputed her second Oscar, as she and Burton tore into their roles as an unbalanced, battling middle-aged couple (Taylor was 34) in the blistering WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF? (1966).

Taylor has been particularly adept at playing somewhat neurotic, man-crazed beauties, and such roles as Maggie "the Cat," Catherine of SUDDENLY and Martha of VIRGINIA WOOLF have given full expression to her talent. But her film career petered out in the 1970s with a series of increasingly bizarre star vehicles (BOOM!, 1968; THE ONLY GAME IN TOWN, 1970; HAMMERSMITH IS OUT, 1972; THE BLUE BIRD, 1976. In 1981, Taylor made her Broadway debut as Regina in Lillian Hellman's The Little Foxes, winning a Tony Award nomination. The following year, she brought the production to London's West End. With Zev Bufman, Taylor formed the Elizabeth Theater Group which produced revivals of The Corn Is Green, starring Cicely Tyson and Peter Gallagher, and Noel Coward's Private Lives, that reteamed Taylor with her ex-husband Richard Burton.

Taylor has also acted in the occasional TV movies, sometimes in questionable casting. She made highly entertaining appearances in RETURN ENGAGEMENT(NBC, 1978), as a dancer turned history professor, MALICE IN WONDERLAND (CBS, 1985), as gossip columnist Louella Parsons to Jane Alexander's Hedda Hopper, POKER ALICE(CBS, 1987), as a Bible-toting madam, and Tennessee Williams' SWEET BIRD OF YOUTH (NBC, 1989). She has also turned up on innumerable awards and benefit shows and interviews, as well as guesting on her favorite soap, "General Hospital," and on such sitcoms as "Here's Lucy," "The Simpsons," as the voice of Baby Maggie, "The Nanny" and "Murphy Brown."

After the AIDS death of friend and co-star Rock Hudson in 1985, Taylor helped to launch the American Foundation for AIDS Research (AmFAR), campaigned vigorously on behalf of AIDS patients, and criticized lack of government funding in fighting the disease. Disillusioned with AmFAR, she created her own Elizabeth Taylor Foundation for AIDS in 1993. She has also launched several successful perfumes, whose promotional ads play up Taylor's status as one of the last of Hollywood's old-time glamour stars. In 1993, she was presented the American Film Institute Life Achievement Award, as well as a Jean Hersholt Award from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Taylor made a cameo appearance as Fred's mother-in-law in the feature film THE FLINTSTONES (1994), but her career as an "actress" has more or less remained dormant. Her career as a "star," however, has remained undimmed, as every drug or alcohol problem, weight gain or loss, troubled friendship and brush with death has been treated with mass hysteria by the media. She tried to legally block the TV miniseries LIZ: THE ELIZABETH TAYLOR STORY (NBC, 1995), but, by that time, even she had to realize that she had become 'public domain'.

Filmografie Elizabeth Taylor 

1942   THERE'S ONE BORN EVERY MINUTE
1943   LASSIE COME HOME 
1944   JANE EYRE    

1944   NATIONAL VELVET

1944   THE WHITE CLIFFS OF DOVER      
1946   COURAGE OF LASSIE
1947   CYNTHIA      
1947   LIFE WITH FATHER 
1948   A DATE WITH JUDY  
1948   JULIA MISBEHAVES  
1949   CONSPIRATOR        
1949   LITTLE WOMEN       
1950   THE BIG HANGOVER 

1950   FATHER OF THE BRIDE 


1951   CALLAWAY WENT THATAWAY       
1951   FATHER'S LITTLE DIVIDEND

1951   A PLACE IN THE SUN

 
1952   IVANHOE 

 
1952   LOVE IS BETTER THAN EVER         
1953   THE GIRL WHO HAD EVERYTHING   
1954   BEAU BRUMMEL    
1954   ELEPHANT WALK     
1054  THE LAST TIME I SAW PARIS
1954   RHAPSODY    

1956   GIANT   (zie foto rechts)

 

1957   RAINTREE COUNTY  

1958   CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF
  

1959   SUDDENLY, LAST SUMMER  
1960   BUTTERFIELD 8       
1963   CLEOPATRA  
1963   THE V.I.P.S  
1964   THE GUEST/THE CARETAKER        
1965   THE SANDPIPER   

1966   WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF? 

         

1967   THE COMEDIANS     
1967   THE COMEDIANS IN AFRICA
1967   REFLECTIONS IN A GOLDEN EYE    
1967   THE TAMING OF THE SHREW         producer, performer
1968   BOOM!
1968   DR. FAUSTUS
1968   SECRET CEREMONY  
1970   THE ONLY GAME IN TOWN  
1972   HAMMERSMITH IS OUT      

1972   X, Y AND ZEE

1973   ASH WEDNESDAY    
1973   DIVORCE HIS—DIVORCE HERS       
1973   THE DRIVER'S SEAT 
1973   NIGHT WATCH        
1973   UNDER MILK WOOD  
1974   IDENTIKIT    
1974   THAT'S ENTERTAINMENT!   
1976   THE BLUE BIRD        
1976   IT'S SHOWTIME      
1976   VICTORY AT ENTEBBE        
1978   A LITTLE NIGHT MUSIC      
1979   WINTER KILLS         
1980   THE MIRROR CRACK'D        
1981   GENOCIDE    
1983   BETWEEN FRIENDS  
1984   GEORGE STEVENS: A FILMMAKER'S JOURNEY      
1985   MALICE IN WONDERLAND    
1986   THERE MUST BE A PONY    
1987   POKER ALICE  performer
1988   YOUNG TOSCANINI/IL GIOVANE TOSCANINI        
1989   SWEET BIRD OF YOUTH     
1994   THE FLINTSTONES   

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