European Actors

Collection of Classic European Actors

Rosanna Podesta
Rossana Podesta
Rossana Podesta

Rossana Podesta was born in 1934 in Tripoli, Libya.   She starred in Italian movies in the 1950’s, “Ulysses” in 1955, “Helen of Troy” and “Sodom and Gomorrah”.   She died in 2013.

IMDB entry:

Rossana Podestà was born on August 20, 1934 in Zlitan, Misratah, Libya as Carla Podestà. She was an actress, known for 7 uomini d’oro (1965), Helen of Troy (1956) andHorror Castle (1963). She was married to Walter Bonatti and Marco Vicario. She died on December 10, 2013 in Rome, Lazio, Italy.

Italian sex siren of the late 50s and 60s best known for playing Helen of Troy on film and for her appearances in European sandal-and-spear spectacles.
After considering such established stars as Lana TurnerElizabeth TaylorRhonda FlemingAva Gardner and Yvonne De Carlo for the lead in Helen of Troy (1956), directorRobert Wise chose Podesta, an established actress but one who was relatively unknown outside of Italy. The problem was that she could not speak English. As she would be surrounded by British actors, and to avoid a clash of accents and dialects among the characters, Wise employed a vocal coach to help her learn her lines by rote.
Was one of the judges in the 1979 Miss Universe pageant.
She was the partner of climber/writer Walter Bonatti from 1980 until his death (13 September 2011).
 
Mother of directors Stefano Vicario and Francesco Vicario.
 
Moved to Rome after World War II.
Lisa Gastoni
Lisa Gastoni
Lisa Gastoni
 

Lisa Gastoni was born in Italy in 1935.   Virtually all her career has been in British films starting with “Doctor in the House” in 1954.   Her other movies include “The Baby and the Battleship”, “Three Men In A Boat” and “Blue Murder At St Trinians”.

“Wikipedia” entry:

Daughter of an Italian father and an Irish mother, Gastoni moved to England after World War II and there began her film and modeling career. She appeared in various B-movies throughout the 1950s, as well as co-starring as Giulia in the Sapphire Films TV series The Four Just Men (1959) for ITV.   Gastoni returned to Italy in the 1960s, at first appearing in sword-and-sandal and swashbuckler films, but eventually gaining the attention of respected directors. The turning point in her film career was her role in Grazie, zia by Salvatore Samperi. This would set the tone for the roles she would play for the next decade; bourgeois women who were seductive yet sexually frustrated, cruel and arrogant yet sad and sympathetic, manipulating the people around them to try and fill the emptiness in their own lives.   After 1979, she retired from acting for over 20 years, focusing on painting and writing. She returned to the screen with an appearance in the film Cuore Sacro.

The above “Wikipedia” entry can also be accessed online here.

Eva Gabor
Eva Gabor
Eva Gabor
Gia Scala, Anne Francis & Eva Gabor
Gia Scala, Anne Francis & Eva Gabor

Eva Gabor was born in 1919 in Budapest, Hungary.   She was the younger sister of Zsa Zsa Gabor.   She is best remembered for her role as ‘Lisa Douglas’ wife of Eddie Albert in the popular television series “Green Acres”.  The series ran from 1965 until 1971.   Her films include “Don’t Go Near the Water”, “My Man Godfrey” and “Gigi”.   She died in 1995.

TCM overview:

The youngest of the Gabor sisters, Eva came first to the United States in the thirties, establishing a fluffy career in films and later on Broadway. Fluffy best delineates the difference between the two sisters. Despite her jump on Zsa Zsa, her publicity was based more on mere sophistication, continental understanding and sweetness; she lacked the tartness and bite of Zsa Zsa. In the 1950’s, when publicity aspired to its peak for cynicism and zaniness, Zsa Zsa was destined to be the public favorite, just as she was Mama Jolie’s favorite at home.

But Eva paved the way, especially in early television’s live dramatic series that came out of New York (“GE Theater”, “Philco Playhouse”, “Climax”, etc.) and later guesting enough in the 1960s to keep herself moderately known. As Zsa Zsa’s career outstripped itself in the 60s on “Hollywood Squares”, Eva received a plum series opportunity on the inane, but popular, “Green Acres”. As Lisa Douglas, Manhattan socialite turned farmer’s wife (“I gad allergic smalling hay”) she was the Desi/Ricky figure opposite Eddie Albert’s supposed Lucy, drifting through chicken coops and hogpens in her eternal maribou negligees, blank but childlike, trusting and sweet. Middle America tuned in for a surprising five years and 170 episodes.

Her charm remained intact guesting on such happening series as “The Love Boat” and “Fantasy Island” and showing up to chat amicably on Merv Griffin and Mike Douglas, the former of which was engaged to her in some press agent’s dream. She smiled glamorously from the covers of her wig catalog, bewigged in the usual lookalike Gabor style,  causing more confusion about who’s-who than ever.

The above TCM overview can also be accessed online here.

Dany Robin
Dany Robin
Dany Robin

David Shipman’s “Independent” obituary in 1995:

Dany Robin was one of the first post-war French ingenues – very pretty, fragile, chic but elfin, shy but assured and with an ardent naivety which so well reflected the country’s then optimistic view of itself.
Robin had a small role in Lunegarde (1945), which starred Gaby Morlay; and another leading director, Marcel Carne, offered a part in Les Portes de la nuit (1946). But she was first really noticed in Le Silence est d’or (1947), Rene Clair’s first film after returning from Hollywood. It was a comedy about making silent movies, with Maurice Chevalier as a director, Francois Perier as his apprentice and Robin as the latter’s petite amie, deserting him for a wealthy, older man who is one of Chevalier’s backers.

In 1948 she co-starred with Georges Marchal in La Passagere, the first of several teamings; they were married in 1951. Marchal was probably France’s most popular movie idol after Jean Marais – and she co-starred with Marais in Roger Richebe’s Les Amants de minuit (1952), a modern Cinderella tale of charm and humour. She played a lonely girl who, on Christmas Eve, attracts the attention of a rich young man who buys her a dress from the shop where she works; this leads to complications when her boss sees them at a night- club.

It was the first of her films to be seen widely outside France; along with Julien Duvivier’s La Fete a Henriette, a comedy about a screenwriter (Michel Auclair), a dressmaker (Robin) and a circus performer – played by Hildegarde Neff, who had earlier starred in Film Ohne Titel, from which this movie borrowed several of its freewheeling ideas.

Robin acted in English for the first time on screen in Act of Love (1953), a Franco-American co-production directed by the Russian Anatole Litvak. His earlier attempt to examine some of the problems in post-war Europe, Decision before Dawn, was not particularly liked, and nor was this, as written by Irwin Shaw from a well-regarded novel by Alfred Hayes, The Girl on the Via Flaminia. Kirk Douglas played the lead, a GI whose romance with a country girl, Robin, becomes fraught for both of them. Karel Reisz said that Robin ”plays Lisa with a certain wan charm”, a verdict unlikely to lead to international stardom – not, anyway, with the advent of Brigitte Bardot, who had had a small role in Litvak’s film.

Robin had a few moments as Desiree Clary in Sacha Guitry’s Napoleon, and remained popular in France. She appeared in two rather risque films directed by Jacqueline Audrey, L’Ecole des cocottes (1958) and Le Secret du Chevalier d’Eon (1959), and in two of the proliferating ”sketch” films, both in episodes with the leading actor of the nouvelle vague, Jean-Paul Belmondo. Henri Verneuil directed the cynical ”adultery” section of La Francaise et l’amour (1960), with Robin as a bored wife and Belmondo as the man who consoles her; and in Les Amours celebres (1961) he was the courtier and soldier the Duc du Lauzan and she one of the mistresses of Louis XIV.

She returned to Britain to co-star with Peter Sellers in Waltz of the Toreadors (1962), as the Frenchwoman who expects to extricate him from his horrible marriage. Robin was a mysterious figure in Follow the Boys (1963), a Connie Francis vehicle set on the Riviera, and, now married to the British producer Michael Sullivan, she was Sid James’s light o’ love in one of the lesser ”Carry Ons”, Don’t Lose Your Head (1966). She was the mistress of both father and son – George Sanders and David Hemmings – in the Norden-Muir cornucopia of Victoriana, The Best House in London (1969), and in Hitchcock’s Topaz (1969), although married to Frederick Stafford (who had the leading role), she was having an affair with a fellow secret agent, Michel Piccoli. It was her last film.

David Shipman

Dany Robin, actress: born Clamart, France 14 April 1927; twice married; died Paris 25 May 1995.

The above “Independent” obituary can also be accessed online here.

Dany Robin was a French actress of the 1950s and the early 1960s who was married to fellow actorGeorges Marchal.   She performed with Peter Sellers in The Waltz of the Toreadors and co-starred opposite Kirk Douglas in the 1953 romantic drama Act of Love.   Robin co-starred with Connie FrancisPaula Prentiss, and Janis Paige in Follow the Boys (1963). Her last leading role was the agent’s wife Nicole Devereaux in Alfred Hitchcock‘s Topaz (1969). Hitchcock said that Robin and Claude Jade, cast as Robin’s daughter, would provide the glamour in the story.   She died with her husband, Michael Sullivan, during a fire in their apartment in Paris.

Gary Brumburgh’s entry:

This pert, delicate-looking French dish with the piled-high blonde hairdo was a one-time threat to the sexy, kittenish pedestal ‘Brigitte Bardot’ stood on during the 1950s. Born on April 4, 1927, the lithe and luscious Dany Robin trained as a ballerina as a child and eventually made her way to the Opera de Paris. At age 19, however, she opted for a movie career. Studying at the Paris Conservatoire, she made her screen debut inLunegarde (1946) and grew quickly in popularity as a sensual but virginal heroine of light, fluffy comedy with such pictures as Monelle (1948) (Monelle), Naughty Martine(1947) (Naughty Martine), Frou-Frou (1955), and Mimi Pinson (1958) endearing her to Gallic audiences. Working for such legendary directors as ‘Marcel Carne’ and René Clair, Dany first turned heads in the latter’s film Man About Town (1947) (Man About Town) opposite French sensation Maurice Chevalier. Though most of her films were produced in her homeland, she took in international pictures from time to time in the 1960s, appearing in the British sex comedy Waltz of the Toreadors (1962) opposite Peter Sellersand the innocuous Connie Francis starrer Follow the Boys (1963) here in the U.S. Her last film would be in Alfred Hitchcock‘s thriller Topaz (1969), also an American production. Divorced from French heartthrob Georges Marchal, she married producer Michael Sullivan and retired. On May 25, 1995, Dany was tragically killed in a fire that occurred inside her Paris apartment. She was 68.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: Gary Brumburgh / gr-home@pacbell.net

Britt Ekland
Britt Ekland
Britt Ekland

 Britt Ekland is a Swedish actress and singer, and a long-time resident of the United Kingdom. She is best known for her roles as a Bond girl inThe Man with the Golden Gun, and in the British cult horror film The Wicker Man, as well as her marriage to actor Peter Sellers.   Other films include “The Bobo”, “The Night They Raided Minskys” and “Night Games”.

TCM overview:

The epitome of the fresh-faced, sexually adventurous Swede, Britt Ekland was an alluring presence in a handful of popular films in the 1970s, most notably “Get Carter” (1972), “The Wicker Man” (1973) and “The Man with the Golden Gun” (1974). Blessed with a trim figure and impossibly wide eyes, Ekland played both sides of the cinematic sex object – the innocent and the libertine – though off-camera, she definitely fell into the latter category, thanks to relationships with the likes of Peter Sellers, Warren Beatty, Rod Stewart and many others. Ekland’s career essentially dissolved in the late 1970s, though she remained a fixture in low-budget films and on television, as well as an inspiration to younger men everywhere through her marriages to rockers Phil Lewis and Slim Jim Phantom, who were both two decades her junior. Her best films kept her image as one of the 1970’s most enticing starlets alive for generations.

Born Britt-Marie Eklund in Stockholm, Sweden on Oct. 6, 1942, she was the sole girl among three brothers. Her father was a successful retailer, and her mother a homemaker. Contrary to her glamorous screen appearance, she was a plain, slightly overweight girl during her adolescent years, but shed the weight before attending drama school and later, a traveling theater group. Discovered in Rome at the age of 20 by a 20th Century Fox representative, she was signed to a seven-year contract, and made her film debut in an uncredited turn as a German girl in Elvis Presley’s post-military feature “G.I. Blues” (1960). Petite, blonde and pert, she was an undeniably watchable background player in her earliest features, which took her from her native Sweden to Italy, opposite Toto in “The Commandant” (1963), and America, as an uncredited Swedish nudist in Mark Robson’s “The Prize” (1963), with Paul Newman as a Nobel laureate distracted by Elke Sommer.

Ekland’s star ascended nearly overnight when she became Peter Sellers’ second wife in 1964. The eccentric comedian had spotted a photograph of her in a newspaper and proposed to her shortly after meeting her in London. Their relationship was the stuff of tabloid legend, most notably after Sellers reportedly suffered the first of many heart attacks on their wedding night. Together, they would appear in three projects: the Rod Serling-penned “Carol for Another Christmas” (ABC, 1964), a bleak, modernized take on “A Christmas Carol” with Sterling Hayden as a Scrooge-like industrialist and Sellers as a post-apocalyptic ruler; Vittorio De Sica’s “After the Fox” (1966), with Sellers as an Italian master criminal and Ekland as his long-suffering sister; and “The Bobo” (1967), with Sellers as a bumbling matador who must seduce Ekland’s beauty in order to land a job at a local theater. None of the projects saw much success – “Carol” was screened only once and effectively banned for disturbing wartime imagery, while critics regarded Ekland as totally miscast in the subsequent comedies. Her marriage to Sellers also met with disaster, and they divorced in 1968. She soon developed a reputation as one of Hollywood’s most sought-after women, and enjoyed high-profile relationships with Warren Beatty, Jack Nicholson and George Hamilton, among others.

Ekland would then bounce between Hollywood and international projects of varying degrees of quality over the next decade. She was top-billed as an Amish girl who becomes the burlesque queen of Jazz Era Broadway in William Friedkin’s “The Night They Raided Minsky’s” (1968), then served as arm candy for the likes of Alex Cord in “Stiletto” (1969), John Cassavetes in “Machine Gun McCain” (1969) and most notably, in Mike Hodges’ gritty “Get Carter” (1972), where she made the most of a scene in which she indulged in phone sex with Michael Caine’s vengeful gangster. Supporting roles in minor British horror and mystery titles like “Endless Night” (1972) and “Asylum” (1972) preceded the two films for which she was best known: 1973’s “The Wicker Man” and “The Man with the Golden Gun” (1974).

In the former, a cerebral and chilling British horror film by Robin Hardy, Ekland played a sexually alluring young resident of a remote island who attempted to seduce virginal policeman Edward Woodward through a tempestuous naked dance in the hotel room next to his. Despite the notoriety it afforded the actress, Ekland was largely subbed by a body double, as she was pregnant with rock producer and promoter Lou Adler’s child at the time. The following year, she reunited with her “Wicker Man” co-star, Christopher Lee, for “The Man with the Golden Gun,” which marked the second appearance of Roger Moore as James Bond. Ekland played Mary Goodnight, a fellow British intelligence employee who aided Bond in his pursuit of international assassin Scaramanga (Lee) before succumbing to 007’s charms. A recurring character in Ian Fleming’s novels, Ekland’s portrayal lent a ditzier, wide-eyed innocence to the character, and helped to make her one of the more popular 1970s-era Bond Girls.

After leaving Adler in 1975, Ekland took up with British rocker Rod Stewart, which greatly reduced her screen appearances for the next decade. She settled into a domestic routine while Stewart became one of the most popular performers of the decade. On two occasions, their lives and his career came together: she lent vocals in French to his single “Tonight’s the Night,” then served as his muse for “You’re In My Heart, You’re In My Soul,” one of his most enduring ballads. But after learning from Hamilton that Stewart had taken up with his ex-wife, Alana Hamilton, Ekland severed the relationship and returned to acting. Sadly, there were few choice parts for the aging actress, save for low-budget horror like “The Monster Club” (1980) and softcore films like “Love Scenes” (1984).

Ekland instead devoted her time to an autobiography, True Britt, which became a bestseller upon its release in 1980. In the meantime, she took up with several younger lovers from the rock scene, including Phil Lewis from L.A. Guns and Stray Cats drummer Slim Jim Phantom, whom she married in 1984. At the time, she was 42, while Phantom was nearly two decades her junior. Their union produced a son, Thomas Jefferson, before ending in 1992. During this period, Ekland enjoyed her best screen role in over a decade in 1989’s “Scandal,” where she played the notorious prostitute Mariella Novotny. Her appearance in the film, where she appeared topless with gold-painted nipples, caused a stir among critics and longtime fans.

In the 1990s, Ekland busied herself with a beauty and fitness book, as well as an accompanying video, while appearing regularly on American and European television. In the new millennium, she was a fixture on the British stage as the Fairy Godmother in a touring production of the musical “Cinderella,” as well as other shows. In 2010, she journeyed to Australia to participate in the 10th season of “I’m a Celebrity Get Me Out of Here!” (ITV, 2002- ), the popular reality series/game show. She lasted 16 days before her elimination. After a 2004 diagnosis with osteoporosis, Eklund became a noted participant in charities for the disease, as well as for Alzheimer’s, which claimed her mother after a lengthy illness.

By Paul Gaita

The above TCM overview can also be accessed online here.
Enrique Iglesias
Enrique Iglesias
Enrique Iglesias

Enrique Iglesias was born in 1975 in Madrid.   He is the son of singer Julio Iglesias. He has a giant career in his own right.

“Guardian” interview with Rosanna Greenstreet:

Enrique Iglesias, 35, was born in Spain but raised in Miami, the son ofJulio Iglesias and his first wife, Isabel Preysler. At 18, he secured a record deal using an assumed name. Later, in 1995, he won a Grammy for his debut Spanish album, the self-titled Enrique Iglesias. Since then he has sold more than 55m albums in both English and Spanish. His latest is Euphoria. He lives in Miami and has been dating the tennis starAnna Kournikova since 2001.

When were you happiest?
At home with my dogs, or on the boat going waterskiing on a beautiful day in Miami. And having a hit song that connects with people.

What is your greatest fear?
To lose a passion for what I love.

What is your earliest memory? 
Going to Disney World when I was a kid, and being in a hospital when I was also very young. I got burned in the bathtub back when there used to be gas boilers. I have scars on my inner thighs – nothing on the nuts!

Which living person do you most admire, and why? 
Elvira, the lady that took care of me when my parents weren’t able to be there. She dedicated her whole life to me and my brother and my sister. Now I take care of her.

What was your most embarrassing moment? 
Being on a first date in a movie theatre and farting. I was 17.

What is your most treasured possession? 
My dogs.

Where would you like to live? 
Other than Miami, the west coast of Mexico or Australia.

What would your super power be? 
Flying.

If you could bring something extinct back to life, what would you choose? 
My dog, Grammy, who passed away three weeks ago.

What is your most unappealing habit? 
I bite the nails on my feet.

What is your favourite word? 
Que pasa.

What is your favourite book? 
Outliers, by Malcolm Gladwell.

What is your guiltiest pleasure? 
A guilty pleasure is something you’re a little embarrassed about. I could say reality shows – but I watch them and I don’t feel guilty about it.

Who would you invite to your dream dinner party? 
Elvis, Obama, Michael Jackson and Abraham Lincoln.

What has been your biggest disappointment? 
Trusting someone that was a fake.

If you could edit your past, what would you change? 
I wouldn’t change anything. I’ve made mistakes, but thanks to those mistakes, I’ve learnt.

If you could go back in time, where would you go? 
To the dinosaur era.

How do you relax? 
In my house, on the sofa.

What is the closest you’ve come to death? 
Probably every time I fly. I am a pilot, but I tend just to get rid of the checklist – only when I fly by myself!

What do you consider your greatest achievement? 
The great friends I have.

What song would you like played at your funeral? 
What A Wonderful World.

How would you like to be remembered? 
As someone who made a difference.

What is the most important lesson life has taught you? 
Enjoy it, because it’s short.

Tell us a joke
My jokes are stuff you can’t print!

Tell us a secret
I hate doing photo shoots.

The above “Guardian” interview can be accessed online here.

Javier Bardem
Javier Bardem
Javier Bardem

Javier Bardem was born in 1969 in Las Palmas, Canary Islands.  He came to fame with his performance in “No Country For Old Men” for which he won an Oscar.   He recently played the villain ‘Raoul Silva’ in “Skyfall”.

TCM Overview:

Hardly one to have hungered for a Hollywood career, Spanish-born actor Javier Bardem nonetheless achieved great stardom and acclaim while being highly selective of the roles he chose to play. After making his film debut in “The Ages of Lulu” (1990), Bardem graduated to leading roles with “Jamón, Jamón” (1992) and made his English language debut in “Perdita Durango” (1997). He made an international splash with his Oscar-nominated performance as openly gay Cuban author Reinaldo Arenas in “Before Night Falls” (2000), and continued to win serious praise for “The Dancer Upstairs” (2003). Bardem went on to deliver a sterling performance as quadriplegic Ramón Sampedro, who spent 29 years fighting for his right to die in the “The Sea Inside” (2004). Following a brief, but pivotal turn as Mexican drug lord in “Collateral” (2004), Bardem was the fictional Brother Lorenzo in the otherwise historical drama “Goya’s Ghosts” (2006), before starring in Mike Newell’s adaptation of “Love in the Time of Cholera” (2007). But it was his Oscar-winning performance as the ruthless, coin-tossing assassin Anton Chigurh in the Coen Brothers’ “No Country for Old Men” (2007) that catapulted Bardem into superstardom. From there, he was a Spanish painter in Wood Allen’s “Vicky Christina Barcelona” (2008), a deteriorating family man in “Biutiful” (2010), and James Bond’s arch-enemy in “Skyfall” (2012), all while embarking on a low-profile marriage with Penelope Cruz. Whether sympathetic hero or psychotic villain, Bardem was certainly worthy of the slew of awards and critical praise he routinely received.

Born on Mar. 1, 1969 in Las Palmas, Canary Islands, Spain, Bardem was raised in a show business family. His mother, Pilar, was a talented and well-known stage actress who exposed her children to the craft at an early age. His uncle, Juan Antonio Bardem, was an acclaimed filmmaker, and his grandfather, Rafael Bardem, also acted. At age 4, Bardem followed his mother to the theater where he watched her perform and routinely get sick from stage fright before stepping onstage. Though his mom helped secured him a small part in the miniseries, “El Picaro” (1974), Bardem decided painting was his path and began studying art at the Escuela de Arte y Oficios in Madrid. While struggling to become an artist, he took several odd jobs including as a waiter, security guard and even a stripper at a nightclub to earn his keep. By the time he was in his late-teens, Bardem working as an occasional extra segued into acting, leading to small parts that eventually blossomed into more prominent roles and eventually a burgeoning career.

Bardem had his start with famed Spanish director Bigas Luna, whose searing examinations of masculine obsessions were borderline pornographic. He landed a role in “Las Edades de Lulu (The Ages of Lulu)” (1990) after following his sister to the audition because he had “nothing better to do that day” (Hispanic, May 31, 2003). Though his sister failed to make the cut, Bardem went on appear in the nearly plotless erotic thriller about a sheltered adolescent (Francesca Neri) who loses her virginity to a family friends, sparking a sexual odyssey that leads her down several twisted paths. After brief appearances in “Amo Tu Cama Rica” (1991) and Pedro Almodovar’s “High Heels” (1991), Bardem landed his first starring role in Luna’s “Jamón, Jamón” (1992), playing an aspiring bullfighter tasked to seduce a beautiful working girl (Penélope Cruz) by the distraught mother (Stefania Sandrelli) of the girl’s upper class lover (Jordi Molla), only to work his charms on both.

His next film with Luna, “Huevos de Oro (Golden Balls)” (1993), saw Bardem as a macho, crotch-grabbing ex-military man obsessed with sex who wants to build a phallic skyscraper with the money inherited from his marriage to a rich man’s daughter (Maria de Medeiros). One of Luna’s most notorious films – really more soft-porn than anything else – also proved to be one of his most detested, despite a strong performance from Bardem. After appearing for a small role in “La Teta y la Luna (The Tit and the Moon)” (1994), Bardem’s early collaboration with Luna ended. But his being typecast as a type-A hunk continued with the sex comedy “Mouth to Mouth” (1995) – a role that earned him a Goya Award for Best Actor in 1996 – and the bizarre Rosie Perez black comedy “Perdita Durango” (“Dance With the Devil”) (1997), his English-language debut, spurned the young actor to be more selective in order to avoid being trapped in the same kinds of films.

Bardem finally began breaking the mold with another Almodovar film, “Live Flesh” (1997), playing an ex-cop bound to a wheelchair after a fateful shooting involving a heroin addict (Francesca Neri) and a pizza delivery man (Liberto Rabal), all of whom reunite years later in a web of fate to confront their guilt. After his first turn as executive producer on “Los Lobos de Washington” (1999), Bardem returned to his soft-core porn beginnings with “Entre Las Piernas (Between Your Legs)” (2000), playing a struggling screenwriter who joins a sex therapy group only to relapse with a radio announcer (Victoria Abril) while a series of murders happen around them. In “Second Skin” (2000), Bardem delivered a unique spin on his Lothario persona by playing a surgeon who seduces a man (Jordi Molla), disturbing the man’s marriage with his artist wife (Ariadna Gil). By this time, Bardem had built a pile of respected work, though he had failed to become known outside his native Spain. But his next film changed everything.

Bardem leaped from obscurity to become an Oscar-nominated actor and international star with “Before Night Falls,” the moving and elegiac story of Cuban poet and novelist Reinaldo Arenas. Raised in pre-Castro Cuba in the 1940s, Arenas leaves home as an adolescent and moves to Havana where he finds himself swept up in the revolutionary spirit, joining a circle of political writers and artists. After publishing his first novel, Castro’s oppressive regime engulfs Arenas because of his overt homosexuality and radical political writings. He is imprisoned after being falsely accused of molestation and later flees Cuba for New York City where his hopes for a new life are destroyed when he contracts AIDS. Bardem’s emotional, but gritty performance earned him several critics’ awards, a Best Actor statue at the Venice Film Festival, and nominations at the Golden Globes and Academy Awards.

Bardem went to work building on his success from “Before Night Falls” with another sterling performance. In “Los Lunes al Sol (Mondays in the Sun)” (2002), he played a gruff, out-of-work shipyard man spending his time drinking and commiserating with his fellow working class stiffs, all of whom are down on their luck and pine for better days. Finally, Bardem had moved beyond playing over-sexed macho guys in favor of more nuanced and dimensional characters. He completed his transformation with a strong, but subtle performance in “The Dancer Upstairs,” playing Agustin Rejas, an idealistic policeman in an unspecified Latin American country ravaged by a bloody conflict with a highly-organized terrorist group. Rejas hunts down the leader of the group while falling for a beautiful ballet teacher (Laura Morante), only to suspect her of being involved with the terrorists. Though no awards were forthcoming, Bardem nonetheless delivered a worthy performance to follow up the hoopla surrounding his Oscar nomination.

Taking the advice of actor John Malkovich, who made his directorial debut with “The Dancer Upstairs,” Bardem became decidedly choosier with his roles than he already had been. His constant thirst for good material led him to star in “The Sea Inside,” director Alejandro Amenabar’s moving account about Spanish poet Ramón Sampedro, who became a quadriplegic after a diving accident and his 29-year struggle to end his life with dignity. Bardem delivered a charismatic and witty performance that was counterbalanced by his character’s dark desire to end his life, earning the actor another Best Actor prize at the Venice Film Festival and a nod for Best Actor at the Golden Globes. Bardem made the jump to big Hollywood fare with a small role in Michael Mann’s adept thriller, “Collateral” (2004), playing a powerful drug lord using a determined assassin (Tom Cruise) to kill witnesses set to testify at his pending trial.

After “Collateral,” he returned to Spain to star in Milos Foreman’s historical drama, “Goya’s Ghosts” (2006), playing an enigmatic member of the powerful Spanish clergy who becomes infatuated with the beautiful teenage muse (Natalie Portman) of famed painter Francisco Goya (Stellan Skarsgard). Continuing to work with top directors, Bardem was tapped by the Coen Brothers to play the coldly psychopathic killer Anton Chigurh in their laconic thriller, “No Country for Old Men” (2007). Initially reserved about playing a role that required using guns and speaking English, Bardem nonetheless was excellent in his portrayal of Chigurh, a criminal who flips coins for lives and kills with a high-powered air gun while he hunts down a Vietnam vet (Josh Brolin) trying to make off with $2 million found at the bloody scene of a drug deal gone bad. So impressive and powerful was his performance, Bardem won both a Golden Globe and Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture in early 2008.

He followed his win with an Oscar nod for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role. Meanwhile, he had a much quieter and far less hailed starring turn in “Love in the Time of Cholera” (2007), Mike Newell’s adaptation of Gabriel García Márquez’s novel about a poet and telegraph clerk entangled in a love triangle with the beautiful young wife (Giovanna Mezzogiorno) of a sophisticated aristocrat (Benjamin Bratt). Bardem then starred in his first Woody Allen film, “Vicky Christina Barcelona” (2008), playing a suave artist who woos two American best friends (Rebecca Hall and Scarlett Johansson) on vacation in Spain, while contending with his darkly tempestuous ex-wife (Penélope Cruz). Bardem earned his third Golden Globe nomination, this time for Best Actor in the Motion Picture – Comedy or Musical category. He also earned an Independent Spirit Award nod in the same category. And off-screen, he won the heart of co-star Cruz. The couple became a hot fixture in tabloids once pictures of the couple on vacation surfaced on the Internet. In 2010, it was announced the pair had married in the Bahamas, while the following year Cruz gave birth to their son, Leo.

Meanwhile, Bardem lent his considerable talents to the lightweight romantic travelogue movie “Eat Pray Love” (2010), based on the best-selling novel by Elizabeth Gilbert. In the film, a recently divorced woman (Julia Roberts) goes on a globetrotting quest for self-discovery and inner peace, ultimately leading her into the arms of an irresistibly charming Brazilian lover (Bardem). Although carried along at the box office by fans of the book and the film’s lead, “Eat Pray Love” was shown little love by film critics. Returning to Spain and the type of complex, gritty material he had become known for, Bardem next appeared in Mexican director Alejandro González Iñárritu’s Spanish-language drama “Biutiful” (2010). This grim, yet ultimately hopeful story centered around the lives of the poor in the slums of Barcelona, with Bardem portraying Uxbal, a deeply flawed man with a connection to the dead, who desperately attempts to provide for his two young children as his own mortality looms ominously before him. While the film met with mixed reviews and his performance was overlooked by both the Golden Globe and SAG awards, Bardem’s work in the film was universally lauded by critics, cheerleaded publicly by “Eat Pray Love” co-star Roberts, and finally recognized with an Academy Award nomination for Best Actor. Following a lull in 2011, Bardem once again played the villain, this time portraying the arch-enemy of James Bond (Daniel Craig) in Sam Mendes’ highly-anticipated “Skyfall” (2012), which was released on the 50th anniversary of the first Bond film, “Dr. No” (1962). For his work in the film, Bardem was nominated for a Best Supporting Actor SAG Award.

The above TCM overview can also be accessed online here.

Genevieve Page

 

Genevieve Page was born in 1927 in Paris.   She made her film debut in 1951 in “Fanfan la Tulipe” with Gerard Philipe.   By the late 1950’s she was in Hollywood making such movies as “Song Without End” and “Youngblood Hawke”.  She retired from acting in 2003.

IMDB entry:

Geneviève Page was born on December 13, 1927 in Paris, France as Genevieve Bronjean. She is an actress, known for Belle de Jour (1967), El Cid (1961) and The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (1970). She has been married to Jean-Claude Bujard since 1959. They have two children.   Member of the jury at the Cannes Film Festival in 1964   Had a long and distinguished career on stage and was nominated for the Molière Award (the French equivalent of the Tony Award) in 1996 for her role in “Colombe”.   Winner of the 1980 “Prix de la meilleure comédienne du syndicat de la critique” for her role in “Les Larmes amères de Petra von Kant” at the Théâtre national de Chaillot in Paris.   Starring in “Les Grandes Forêts” on stage at the Théâtre des Bouffes du Nord in Paris.

The above IMDB entry can also be accessed online here.

Tamara Desni
Tamara Desni
Tamara Desni

Tamara Desni was born in 1910 in Berlin.   She began her film career in German movies in 1931.   By 1934 she was in the UK where she spent the bulk of her career.   Her films include “Fire Over England” in 1937, “The Squeaker” and “The Hills of Donegal” in 1947.   She died at the age of 97 in Grenoble, France.

Tom Vallance’s “Independent” obituary:

Tamara Desni was an exotic, brunette actress, singer and dancer of Russian descent, who had a measure of success on stage and in films. Her peak year as a movie star was 1937, when she was romanced by Laurence Olivier in the historical epic Fire Over England, and sang and danced as the lover of a small-time crook in The Squeaker.

Playing a cabaret performer named Tamara in The Squeaker, she sang two songs, “He’s Gone” and “I Don’t Get Along Without You”, in a light, sub-Dietrich voice, and performed some lithe steps and high-kicks wearing a see-through evening gown. In Fire Over England she played a Spanish aristocrat fiercely opposed to her father’s assisting an English spy – until she sets eyes on him.

When the spy (Laurence Olivier) returns years later she is now married to a Spanish nobleman, but has to fight the conflicting passions of patriotism and passion. She and Olivier also had a song together, a folk ballad entitled “The Spanish Lady’s Love”. Though her performance is fine, it tends to be forgotten because of the film’s notoriety: it was the movie that brought together Olivier and Vivien Leigh, who began a torrid affair while making it.

The daughter of the singer Xenia Desni (also known as Dada), who appeared in several German movies, she was born Tamara Brodsky in Berlin in 1911. She was only a child when her father abandoned the family to live in the United States. Tamara married her first husband, a dentist, while still in her teens. She made her film début in 1931 in Der Schrecken der Garnison (“Terror of the Garrison”), the same year she made a triumphant London stage début in the operetta White Horse Inn at the Coliseum Theatre. For this spectacular production, credited with saving the Coliseum, which was faltering as a music hall, the entire theatre was transformed into the Tyrol. “You have not time to breathe watching this wonderful spectacle,” stated the News Chronicle, and Tamara Desni was also featured in the next Coliseum show, Casanova (1932).

Desni made her first British film, Falling for You, in 1933, supporting the popular musical comedy team of Cicely Courtneidge and Jack Hulbert, who played reporters searching for a missing heiress (Desni), with whom Hulbert falls in love. She made an elegant dancing partner for Hulbert, who introduced several new songs by Vivien Ellis and Douglas Furber. The teaming was successful enough for Hulbert to cast her with him in another hit movie, Jack Ahoy, in which Hulbert introduced his famous number “My Hat’s on the Side of My Head”.

Her other films included Forbidden Territory (1934), adapted from a Dennis Wheatley novel, in which she was one of two Russian girls who assist in the rescue of a British nobleman from the secret police; a sprightly musical comedy, How’s Chances? (1934), in which she played the sweetheart of Harold French; and an excellent psychological thriller, Bernard Vorhaus’s Dark World (1935), in which Desni played a dancer loved by two brothers. Blue Smoke (1935), a story of gypsy life in which she again came between two rivals in love, is notable only because she and her co-star, Bruce Seton – best remembered for his television series Fabian of the Yard – fell in love. In 1937 he became the second of her five husbands.

Desni sang again when she played Olga, a gold-digging vamp who also brings tragedy to two brothers, this time in Roy William Neill’s His Brother’s Keeper (1939). Reportedly grim but gripping, this film is one of several made by Warner-First National at Teddington Studios that are now considered lost. Desni was then off the screen until 1945, when she returned in a supporting role in the musical Flight from Folly, a vehicle for Pat Kirkwood. Having divorced Seton in 1940, she was briefly married to a naval flyer during the Second World War, then in 1947 she wed one of the British screen’s most memorable villains, Canadian-born Raymond Lovell.

Her last three films were “B” movies – Send for Paul Temple (1946), the musical drama The Hills of Donegal (1947) and Dick Barton at Bay (1950). The radio show Dick Barton – Special Agent (1946) had built an audience of 15 million within a year, and was the third most popular radio show of its time after Radio Forfeits and Woman’s Hour, but the investigator’s screen adventures were lamentably low-budget, poorly written and weakly acted. Desni was second billed to its star Dick Stannard in Dick Barton at Bay, but as Madame Anna, one of the leaders of a gang out to steal a death-ray, she had little to do but accept compliments for her beauty and make observations about her cohorts (“You’re getting jumpy, Fingers”).

Shortly after the Barton film, Desni moved to France, where she and Albert Lavagna, a builder, successfully opened an inn and restaurant in the Alpes Maritimes: L’Auberge Chez Tamara, in Grasse. Though she was wary of taking another husband, when Desni discovered in 1955 that she was pregnant, she and Lavagna decided to marry. The first of two daughters was born in 1956, and the marriage lasted for 50 years until Lavagna’s death.

Tom Vallance

Tamara Brodsky (Tamara Desni), actress, singer and dancer: born Berlin 22 October 1911; married first Hans Wilhelm (marriage dissolved), secondly Roland Gillet (marriage dissolved), thirdly Bruce Seton (marriage dissolved), fourthly Raymond Lovell (marriage dissolved), fifthly 1955 Albert Lavagna (deceased; two daughters); died Valence d’Agen, France 7 February 2008.

The above “Independent” obituary can also be accessed online here.