Thursday, 24 March 2011

William Flew Liz Taylor RIP

By the mid-1950s Taylor was a role model. A new hairstyle or strapless dress worn by her could change fashions. As a sex symbol, she was in the same league as her slightly older blonde equivalent, Monroe. Oscar nominations followed for
Raintree County (1957), in which she played a Southern belle, and Cat on a
Hot Tin Roof (1958), in which she was the frustrated wife of a homosexual (played by Paul Newman). During filming of the latter Todd was killed in a plane crash, and production ground to a halt as Taylor grieved. Suddenly, Last
Summer (1959) brought a third nomination, despite the ludicrous nature of her role — an unstable woman who has witnessed her homosexual cousin being eaten by cannibals, and who is being threatened with a lobotomy.
In the interim Taylor had flouted public opinion after her bereavement by almost immediately being seen out on the town with her dead husband’s best friend, the crooner Eddie Fisher, who was then married to Debbie Reynolds. Hedda Hopper, when she heard the rumours, rang Taylor to find out what was happening. “Mike’s dead and I’m alive,” Taylor snapped down the telephone. “What do you expect me to do — sleep alone?” Taylor never expected an old family friend to publish her ill-judged words, but Hopper did and the column fanned Taylor’s growing notoriety as a man-eater.
It seemed ironic, therefore, that the last film which MGM wrung out of her contract was Butterfield 8 (1960), in which she played a prostitute. She had wanted to go straight on to film Cleo
patra, for a reported $1 million. (In due course it was to pay her several times that much.) Incensed to be forced to make the film before her old studio would release her, she behaved badly on set. It was the last film she made as a contract player. From then on, like other stars of her generation, she became independent, and started making real money.
However, Butterfield 8 did bring her her first Oscar, though she called it a sympathy vote. Filming on Cleopatra was held up when she was stricken with pneumonia. Her health had never been robust. She had suffered from chronic back pain since a fall in 1956 on Lord Beaverbrook’s yacht, and despite surgery she took handfuls of painkillers daily for the rest of her life. This time the pneumonia had the benefit of restoring public affection.
That affection was tested again when the cast of Cleopatra continued filming in Rome, where Taylor, her new husband Fisher and their entourage took a villa. The former Shakespearean actor Richard Burton, playing Mark Antony, lived in a villa near by. He first met Taylor on the set when he was suffering from a hangover. She was solicitous and their friendship rapidly became a passionate and not very discreet love affair.
The director Joseph Mankiewicz did not have time to contain “ le scandale” as Burton jokingly called it, as he was battling with budgetary problems of his own. Cleopatra eventually cost about $40 million to make, and to pay for it Twentieth Century Fox had to sell many acres of its backlots. No studio could bear that kind of expense, and the fallout from Cleopatra changed irrevocably the way Hollywood did business.
Once the critics had seen the laboured product, they agreed unanimously that its cost and the TaylorBurton affair were the only aspects of
Cleopatra worth remembering — “The mountain of notoriety has produced a mouse,” wrote Judith Crist in The
Herald Tribune.
After filming ended, Burton wavered for a while between Taylor and his wife Sybil, before eventually getting a divorce and marrying Taylor in 1964. Her fifth marriage introduced Taylor to a more normal life than she had ever known. Burton took her to rugby matches, to his Welsh home town and taught her to drink beer and eat fish and chips. The daughter she had intended to adopt with Fisher became instead her adopted daughter with Burton.
Just as after Todd’s death she had converted to Judaism in his memory, so now she took up British citizenship in honour of Burton. Even as respectably married tax exiles living in Switzerland, the Burtons were still big news, and they cashed in by making a run of films together. Films such as The
VIPs (1963) and The Sandpiper (1965) were good as well as lucrative. The Tam
ing of the Shrew (1967), for which Burton threw out two fifths of Shakespeare’s lines and concentrated on gorgeous pictures, was rewarded with excellent box-office takings.
Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966), in which Taylor played the frowsy, academic wife, Martha, was the high point of their collaboration, and won Taylor her second Oscar. It was one of her most brilliant performances, vulgar yet truly passionate. Taylor yelled her “screw-yous” and “God-damnyous” at top volume, abandoning glamour to show the psyche’s underbelly.
The pendulum began to swing the other way at the end of 1967 with Reflections in a Golden Eye, an interesting film version of the Carson McCullers novel, The Comedians, and Boom! — all of them flops. Audiences were staying at home, perhaps out of boredom with the Burton-Taylor double act, perhaps because Taylor, despite always giving good performances, was looking out of date. Modern bare-faced actresses such as Vanessa Redgrave were casually stripping for the camera, where Taylor was still clinging to low-cut gowns.
Having bordered on chubby since the late 1950s, she was now becoming uncontrollably overweight. In the film of Under Milk Wood (1971) her personal photographer, according to one observer, “kept flinging himself to the ground to photograph her so that her double chins wouldn’t show”.
But if Taylor was not such good box office, her personal life was still as big news as ever. As the Burtons had become richer, so their lifestyle had become more ostentatious and imperial. Her habit of arriving late on set, which had been a minor annoyance to directors in MGM days, seriously threatened to undermine some of the independent productions in which she now appeared. Directors would be alerted to her arrival by a stately procession of secretaries and hairdressers.
It was during the 1960s that Taylor became the owner of some of the world’s costliest diamonds. Princess Margaret asked to try on one of them, the 33.19 carat Krupp, when she met Taylor at a wedding. “ How very vulgar,” she said when it was on her finger. “Yeah, ain’t it great?” was Taylor’s response. Besides the Krupp, she also owned the 69.42 carat pear-shaped Taylor-Burton diamond, a gift from the actor. A book, My Love Affair with
Jewellery, appeared in 2002. It was Burton’s yearning for a more normal life, as much as his wife’s professional slump, which led to their divorce in 1974. To a noisy fanfare they were remarried in Botswana in 1975, but the second marriage soon foundered on Burton’s womanising and drinking. He went on to marry Suzy Hunt, the former wife of the racing driver James Hunt, and Taylor, in 1976, wed the Republican senator John Warner.
In 1981 she leapt at the chance to act in a stage play, The Little Foxes, and, meeting Burton in London, she agreed to do another with him, Noël Coward’s
Private Lives. The plot about two middle-aged divorcees who still love each other would guarantee good box office.
Taylor divorced Warner in 1982. But any hopes that the old Burton-Taylor magic would be renewed on the American tour of Private Lives in 1983 were soon dashed. In rehearsal they were quarrelsome; in performance they were unexciting (and, in Taylor’s case, not always audible). Taylor had other problems too. Although not at her heaviest, she was 12 stone, and no amount of whalebone could conceal it. The show limped on to Los Angeles where it closed in November.
The next month Taylor was persuaded to book herself into the Betty Ford Centre in California to tackle her addiction to painkilling drugs and alcohol. Though the cure appeared to work, she readmitted herself in 1988, and it was then that she met her eighth husband, a recovering alcoholic builder named Larry Fortensky. Not many gave the Fortensky marriage more than six months. But Taylor, who had always enjoyed thumbing her nose at Hollywood, seemed genuinely happy with her young husband — until their divorce in 1996.
Her feature film career never recovered after the 1970s. There was an illfated attempt at a comeback as an ageing diva in Young Toscanini (1988). And there were also unworthy television movies, mini-series and cameo roles. She hardly needed the money. Apart from her fortune invested in jewels and Impressionist paintings, she was making a tidy sum from the launch in 1987 of a new scent, Passion.
But a shortage of good roles hardly affected her popularity. As she weathered the 1980s, in particular the deaths of Burton and her friend Rock Hudson, she was as newsworthy as ever. Her friendship with the singer Michael Jackson made her visible to a younger generation; and her charity work for an Aids foundation used up much of her formidable energy.
When she became 60 Taylor appeared on Oprah Winfrey’s talk show, and, for a moment, became introspective: “I worked all during my childhood, except for riding horses. My peers were all grown-ups. The child in me was really suppressed. I worked, and was paid. And it was on the screen, but it wasn’t me.” Typically, the introspection did not last long. A moment later she raised her fist, triumphantly and said: “I feel great. I am happy. My life is wonderful. I never think about growing old. I barely think about growing up.”
That vulgar joie de vivre was the key to Taylor’s longevity in the business. At home she looked at ease with herself, a plump, suburban grandmother in a tracksuit. And, at Hollywood parties, garishly dressed and pasted in diamonds, she showed that she could still play the grande dame.
As her film career wound down she concentrated on charitable work, notably in the field of combating Aids, through her own foundation and through the American Foundation for Aids Research, which she established in 1985. In 1982 she had initiated the Elizabeth Taylor-Ben Gurion University Fund for the Children of the Negev.
In 1987 France bestowed on her the Legion of Honour (she was also a Commander of Arts and Letters); in 2001 President Clinton awarded her the Presidential Citizens Medal in recognition of her philanthropic works. In 2000 she had been appointed DBE, and in 2005 she received the Britannia Award for Artistic Excellence in International Entertainment.
She had two sons from her marriage to Michael Wilding, and a daughter with Mike Todd. She and Burton adopted a daughter. Elizabeth Taylor, DBE, actress, was born on February 27, 1932. She died on March 23, 2011, aged 79

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