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Actress Ava Lavinia Gardner (1922 - 1990), who many still consider the most beautiful woman to have appeared on film, starred in such popular films as "The Killers" (1946) and "Night of the Iguana" (1964).
Known for her dark, incandescent beauty, earthy nature, and hard - living lifestyle, Gardner enjoyed more than 30 years of stardom, appearing in such hit movies as The Barefoot Contessa (1954) and The Sun Also Rises (1957). Her stormy marriages to Frank Sinatra, Artie Shaw, and Mickey Rooney were short - lived and, unlike the intelligent, tough women she played, Gardner suffered from deep insecurity about her acting talent.
A Country Girl Went to Hollywood
Ava Lavinia Gardner was born on December 24, 1922, in Grabtown, North Carolina, the seventh and last child of a cotton and tobacco farmer, Jonas, and his wife, Molly. The farming kept food on the table, but Gardner said she had only one dress. She was happy and free, however, usually going barefoot and playing all day with her two brothers and four sisters. While the children were still young, the Gardners lost their property, forcing Jonas Gardner to work at a sawmill and Molly to begin working as a cook and housekeeper at a dormitory for teachers at the nearby Brodgen School.
When Ava was 13, the family soon decided to try their luck in a bigger town, Newport News, Virginia, where Molly Gardner found work managing a boardinghouse for the city's many shipworkers. That job did not last long, and the family moved to the Rock Ridge suburb of Wilson, North Carolina, where Molly Gardner ran another boarding house. Gardner's father died of bronchitis in 1935. Ava and some of her siblings attended high school in Rock Ridge and graduated from there in 1939. She then attended secretarial classes at Atlantic Christian College in Wilson for about a year. At this point, school had been insignificant to her. Gardner had reportedly read only two books thus far: the Bible and Gone with the Wind. Her scant education would contribute to her insecurity later in life.
Gardner, who by age eighteen had become a stunning, green - eyed brunette, was visiting her sister Beatrice in New York in 1941 when Beatrice's husband Larry, a professional photographer, offered to take her portrait. He liked the results and displayed the final product in the front window of his Fifth Avenue studio. An executive from Metro - Goldwyn - Mayer (MGM) Film Studios noticed it soon afterward, and asked about the young beauty. His inquiry led to a screen test for Gardner at MGM, although she had no acting experience. According to the Internet Movie Database, she later remembered that after the test - a silent one to conceal her heavy Southern accent - the director "clapped his hands gleefully and yelled, 'She can't talk! She can't act! She's sensational!' "
Bit Parts Led to Major Roles
MGM signed Gardner immediately, and she and her just - divorced sister moved to Hollywood so the new actress could start an intensive program of speaking, acting, and makeup lessons. Beatrice looked out for Ava and served essentially as her manager. Despite her looks, MGM was reluctant to give Gardner any good roles, given her inexperience. From 1942 to 1945, she appeared in 17 films in which she spoke no more than two lines. The first of these was We Were Dancing, in which she appeared on stage for just a moment. She had a bit more to work with in the 1944 Three Men in White, in which she played a sultry enchantress who tries to seduce a doctor played by Van Johnson. Some of her other credits during this period were This Time for Keeps, Reunion in France, and Sunday Punch.
Her personal life, meanwhile, was taking off. Despite her appearing only in tiny roles, the starlet had not escaped the notice of the many male stars whom she met frequently at nightclubs and parties around town. A self - proclaimed party girl, Gardner often stayed up all night, drinking hard and cavorting with the other "beautiful people" of Hollywood. They included Mickey Rooney, then the country's top - ranked movie star, who courted her furiously until she accepted his marriage proposal in 1942. After the wedding, Rooney continued to live a bachelor's life, usually leaving Gardner home alone as he caroused with friends. She was 19, Rooney not much older, and the marriage lasted just over a year. Many years later in her autobiography she said, "We were a couple of kids. We didn't have a chance." In 1943, she was introduced to Texas billionaire Howard Hughes. The two were instantly attracted to each other and would carry on a tempestuous, often violent, on - again - off - again romance that would last twenty years, mainly during the periods when Gardner was between husbands.
Trusting it would be different this time, Gardner married band leader Artie Shaw in 1945. However, they divorced within a year, as their busy schedules and Shaw's insistence that Gardner improve her education to meet his high standards quickly drove them apart. In 1946 Gardner, on loan briefly to United Artists, finally got a coveted role. Appearing opposite George Raft in the grade - B western film noir Whistle Stop, she played a woman who returns home to her small town after spending time in the big city. She appeared later that year in the melodramatic hit The Killers, while on loan to Universal Studios. Acting opposite another new star, Burt Lancaster, as the treacherous and deadly but smolderingly seductive Kitty Collins, one of Gardner's most memorable lines from the film is, "I'm poison to myself, Swede, and everyone around me." Unlike in many of her other films, MGM allowed Gardner to sing in her own voice for this one.
Achieved Marquee Status by Late 1940s
At the peak of her beauty, Gardner, having convinced Hollywood of her acting ability, got bigger and better film roles. In 1947 she starred opposite childhood idol Clark Gable in The Hucksters, and in 1958, her tiny waist and ample bosom appeared to great effect during her lead role in One Touch of Venus. Many people took notice, and her movie roles began to be confined to that of glamorous seductress. She played a compulsive gambler in 1949's The Great Sinner and a murder victim opposite James Mason in East Side, West Side later that year.
One of Gardner's finest roles came in 1951 when she played Julie La Verne, a biracial song - and - dance star whose heritage surfaces and makes her marriage to a white man illegal. Critics called her performance in the classic stage musical genuinely touching. MGM insisted on dubbing her voice when she sang in this movie, much to Gardner's disgust. The actress, meanwhile, had begun a highly public romance with Frank Sinatra, then a new Hollywood arrival whose finances were such that he sometimes accepted money from his more well - established paramour. The couple married in 1951.
Gardner landed some of her most interesting and best roles during the 1950s, including one as a stubborn and heartbroken nightclub singer opposite James Mason in the 1951 Pandora and the Flying Dutchman and another opposite Gregory Peck in The Snows of Kilimanjaro (1952) as his true love who encounters tragedy. Many critics believe Gardner's real acting ability surfaced when she worked with renowned director John Ford in his 1953 film Mogambo, a remake with Clark Gable of the 1932 Red Dust. She played Eloise "Honey Bear" Kelly, a spoiled, emotionally scarred, wisecracking rival of Grace Kelly, who plays Gable's do - gooder wife. Gardner's performance won her an Oscar nomination, the closest she would ever get to the coveted award.
In her early thirties, the actress appeared in 1954 in the lead role of The Barefoot Contessa, in which she starred opposite Humphrey Bogart as the mysterious and doomed peasant - turned - film star Maria Vargas. Gardner learned the flamenco for the film, and took immediately to the exotic, sensuous dance, sometimes practicing it all night. Her other notable roles that decade included a love - torn Anglo - Indian woman in Bhowani Junction (1954), a selfish and hedonistic patrician in The Sun Also Rises (1957), and opposite Peck in the postapocalyptic On the Beach (1959).
Fast Life Took Its Toll
Even as Gardner's film career blossomed, her personal life was feeling the effects of years of professional pressure and excessive partying. After six years of stormy marriage in which mutual jealousy triggered scenes that often splashed the front pages of popular tabloids, she and Sinatra divorced in 1957. People magazine named their relationship one of the "Romances of the Century." The actress had moved to Madrid, Spain in 1955, at age 33, to escape some of the press attention and personal disappointments. She was said to have privately entertained several of the country's leading bullfighters, including roguishly handsome but married Luis Miguel Dominguin. Gardner opted out her of her long - running MGM contract in 1958 after she starred as the Duchess of Alba in the critically condemned The Naked Maja.
Although she appeared in fewer films in the 1960s, some of them were among her best - although she claimed she did them only "for the loot." They enabled her to emerge from her typecast role. These included her performance as Maxine Faulk in Night of the Iguana as a low - class, strident hotel owner. Her other films during this period were Fifty - Five Days at Peking (1963), Seven Days in May (1964), Mayerling with Omar Sharif (1968), and The Bible (1969), directed by John Huston and starring George C. Scott as Abraham and Gardner as his wife Sarah. The actors carried on a stormy affair during the filming.
Tiring of her life in Spain and beleaguered by government demands for tax payments, the actress moved to London in 1969, but continued to appear in smaller supporting roles, such as Lilly Langtry in John Huston's 1972 The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean and as Charlton Heston's wife in the disaster epic Earthquake of 1974. In the latter, she stunned director Mark Robson by insisting that she do all her own stunts, which included dodging massive steel pipes and blocks of concrete.
Spent Final Years in Seclusion
Gardner's last film before leaving public life was The Sentinel in 1977, after which she went into seclusion at her London home. She told a reporter at the time, according to Internet Movie Database, "I haven't taken an overdose of sleeping pills and called my agent. I haven't been in jail, and I don't go running to my psychiatrist every two minutes. That's something of an accomplishment these days." Among her final appearances were at a Rock Ridge High School reunion in 1978, as a cast member on television's "Knot's Landing" (1979) and "Falcon Crest" (1985) series, and in "Karem," a 1986 made - for - television movie.
Gardner's sole companions at this point were her longtime maid, Carmen Vargas, and her Welsh corgi, Morgan. She never had children, but she was a favorite aunt of her brothers and sisters many children. Although two strokes in the late 1980s caused partial paralysis that confined her to bed, Gardner diligently worked on her autobiography, Ava: My Story, published posthumously, after her death at age 67 from pneumonia on January 25, 1990. Her body was buried in the Gardner family plot in Sunset Memorial Park in Smithfield, North Carolina. None of her former husbands attended the ceremony, but Sinatra had paid for her medical bills for some years and Peck took in both her maid and her dog when she died.
Empire magazine named Gardner one of the "100 Sexiest Stars in Film History" in 1995. Her fiery relationship with Hughes was depicted in the 2004 Martin Scorsese film The Aviator, starring Leonardo DiCaprio as Hughes and Kate Beckinsale as Gardner. Fans still commemorate her at the official Eva Gardner Museum in Smithfield.
Books
Dagneau, Gilles, Ava Gardner: Beautiful, Wild, Innocent, Greme Editore Publishers, 2003.
Gardner, Ava, Ava: My Story, Bantam Publishing, 1990.
Wayne, Jane E., The Golden Girls of MGM, Carroll & Graf Publishers, 2003.
Periodicals
New York Daily News, January 26, 1990.
New York Times, January 26, 1990.
Online
"Ava Gardner," Reel Classics,http://www.reelclassics.com/Actresses/Ava/ava.htm (January 7, 2005).
"Ava Lavinia Gardner," Movie Treasures, http://www.movietreasures.com/main/Ava - Gardner/ava - gardner.html (January 7, 2005).
"Biography for Ava Gardner," The Internet Movie Database,http://www.imdb.com/name/nm001257/bio (January 7, 2005).
"North Carolina and Hollywood, California," Ava Gardner Museum,http://www.avagardner.org (January 7, 2005).
Quotes By:
Ava Gardner |
Quotes:
"Some people say Liz and I are whores, but we are saints. We do not hide our loves hypocritically, and when in love, we are loyal and faithful to our men. [On the subject of her multiple marriages]"
"Deep down, I'm pretty superficial."
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| Ava Gardner | |
|---|---|
a 1953 publicity photo |
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| Born | Ava Lavinia Gardner December 24, 1922 Grabtown, North Carolina, U.S. |
| Died | January 25, 1990 (aged 67) Westminster, London, England, UK |
| Occupation | Actress |
| Years active | 1941–86 |
| Spouse |
Mickey Rooney (m. 1942–1943) |
Ava Lavinia Gardner (December 24, 1922 – January 25, 1990) was an American actress.
She was signed to a contract by MGM Studios in 1941 and appeared mainly in small roles until she drew attention with her performance in The Killers (1946). She became one of Hollywood's leading actresses, considered one of the most beautiful women of her day. She was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress for her work in Mogambo (1953).
She appeared in several high-profile films from the 1950s to 1970s, including The Hucksters (1947), Show Boat (1951), The Snows of Kilimanjaro (1952), The Barefoot Contessa (1954), Bhowani Junction (1956), On the Beach (1959), Seven Days in May (1964), The Night of the Iguana (1964), The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean (1972), Earthquake (1974), and The Cassandra Crossing (1976). Gardner continued to act regularly until 1986, four years before her death from pneumonia, at age 67, in 1990.
She is listed 25th among the American Film Institute's Greatest female stars.[1]
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Gardner was born in the big farming community of Grabtown, Johnston County, North Carolina, the youngest of seven children (she had two brothers, Raymond and Melvin, and four sisters, Beatrice, Elsie Mae, Inez, and Myra). Her parents, Mary Elizabeth "Mollie" (née Baker) and Jonas Bailey Gardner, were poor cotton and tobacco farmers. Her ancestry was said to include Scots-Irish, English, Irish, French Huguenot, and American Indian (Tuscarora).[2][3][4] She was raised a Baptist. While the children still were young, the Gardners lost their property, forcing Jonas Gardner to work at a sawmill and Mollie to begin working as a cook and housekeeper at a dormitory for teachers at the nearby Brogden School.
When Gardner was seven years old, the family decided to try their luck in a larger city, Newport News, Virginia, where Mollie Gardner found work managing a boardinghouse for the city's many shipworkers. While in Newport News, Gardner's father became ill and died from bronchitis in 1938, when Ava was 15 years old. After Jonas Gardner's death, the family moved to Rock Ridge near Wilson, North Carolina, where Mollie Gardner ran another boarding house for teachers. Ava Gardner attended high school in Rock Ridge and she graduated from there in 1939. She then attended secretarial classes at Atlantic Christian College in Wilson for about a year.
Gardner was visiting her sister Beatrice ("Bappie") in New York in 1941 when Beatrice's husband Larry Tarr, a professional photographer, offered to take her portrait. He was so pleased with the results that he displayed the finished product in the front window of his Tarr Photography Studio on 25th Avenue.[citation needed] A Loews Theatres legal clerk, Barnard "Barney" Duhan, spotted Gardner's photo in Tarr's studio. At the time, Duhan often posed as an MGM talent scout to meet girls, using the fact that MGM was a subsidiary of Loews. Duhan entered Tarr's and tried to get Gardner's number, but was rebuffed by the receptionist. Duhan made the offhand comment, "Somebody should send her info to MGM", and the Tarrs did so immediately. Shortly after, Gardner, who at the time was a student at Atlantic Christian College, traveled to New York to be interviewed at MGM's New York office by Al Altman, head of MGM's New York talent department. With cameras rolling, he directed the eighteen-year-old to walk toward the camera, turn and walk away, then rearrange some flowers in a vase. He did not attempt to record her voice because her Southern accent made it almost impossible for him to understand her. Though Al thought Ava the most beautiful woman he'd ever seen, he believed the test was a disaster and was completely surprised by what he saw in the screening room. On screen she was magnetic. The camera loved her. He sent the test to Hollywood. Louis B. Mayer, head of the studio, sent a telegram to Al: "She can't sing, she can't act, she can't talk, She's terrific!" She was offered a standard contract by MGM, and left school for Hollywood in 1941 with her sister Bappie accompanying her. MGM's first order of business was to provide her a speech coach, as her Carolina drawl was nearly incomprehensible to them.[5]
Gardner came to prominence in the Mark Hellinger-produced smash hit film noir The Killers (1946), which introduced Burt Lancaster to the screen in the lead role.
Other films include The Hucksters (1947) with Clark Gable, Show Boat (1951), The Snows of Kilimanjaro (1952) with Gregory Peck, Lone Star (1952) with Clark Gable, Mogambo (1953) with Clark Gable and Grace Kelly, 1954's The Barefoot Contessa with Humphrey Bogart (which some consider to be Gardner's "signature film" since it mirrored her real life custom of going barefoot), Bhowani Junction (1956), The Sun Also Rises with Tyrone Power and Errol Flynn (in which she played party-girl Brett Ashley) (1957), and the film version of Nevil Shute's best-selling On the Beach with Peck and Fred Astaire. Off-camera, she could be witty and pithy, as in her assessment of director John Ford, who directed Mogambo ("The meanest man on earth. Thoroughly evil. Adored him!")[6]
Gardner again appeared with Lancaster, this time paired with Kirk Douglas, in Seven Days in May (1962), a taut thriller about a military takeover of the US government. She found herself billed between Charlton Heston and David Niven in the epic 55 Days at Peking in 1963, a lavish version of the Chinese revolt against foreign control during the Boxer Rebellion in 1900.
The following year, she played her last great leading role in a superlative film, The Night of the Iguana (1964), based upon a Tennessee Williams play and starring Richard Burton as an atheist clergyman and Deborah Kerr as a gentle artist traveling with her aged poet grandfather. John Huston directed the movie in Puerto Vallarta Mexico, insisting on making the film in black and white, a decision he later regretted because of the vivid colors of the flora. Gardner received billing below Burton but above Deborah Kerr. Gardner was nominated for a BAFTA and a Golden Globe award for her hearty performance in this signature role.
Two years later, in 1966, Gardner briefly sought the role of Mrs. Robinson in Mike Nichols' The Graduate (1967). She reportedly called Nichols and said, "I want to see you! I want to talk about this Graduate thing!" Nichols never seriously considered her for the part, preferring to cast a younger woman (Anne Bancroft was 36 while Gardner was 45), but he did visit her hotel, where he later recounted that "she sat at a little French desk with a telephone, she went through every movie star cliché. She said, 'All right, let's talk about your movie. First of all, I strip for nobody.'"[7]
Gardner moved to London, England in 1968, undergoing an elective hysterectomy to allay her worries of contracting the uterine cancer that had claimed the life of her own mother. That year, she made what some consider to be one of her best films, Mayerling, in which she played the supporting role of Austrian Empress Elisabeth of Austria opposite James Mason as Emperor Franz Joseph I.
She appeared in a number of disaster films throughout the 1970s, notably Earthquake (1974) with Charlton Heston, The Cassandra Crossing (1976), and the Canadian movie City on Fire (1979). She also appeared briefly as Lillie Langtry at the end of The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean (1972) with Paul Newman and Jacqueline Bisset, and in The Blue Bird (1976) with Elizabeth Taylor and Jane Fonda.
Her last movie was Regina Roma (1982), a direct-to-video release. In the 1980s she acted primarily on television, including the miniseries remake of The Long Hot Summer (1985) and the prime-time soap opera Knots Landing, also in 1985. In 1986 she appeared in her two final projects, the TV movies Harem and Maggie.
Soon after her arrival in Los Angeles, Gardner met fellow MGM contract player Mickey Rooney; they married on January 10, 1942, in Ballard, California; she was 19 years old and he was 21. They divorced in 1943. He reputedly rhapsodized about their sex life later, but Gardner said, "He may have enjoyed the sex, but [goodness knows] I didn't."[citation needed] She once characterized their marriage as "Love Finds Andy Hardy".
Gardner became a friend of businessman and aviator Howard Hughes in the early to mid-1940s and the relationship lasted into the 1950s.[8] Ava stated in her autobiography Ava: My Story, that she was never in love with Howard Hughes, but he was in and out of her life for about twenty years. Howard's trust in Ava was what kept their relationship alive. She describes him as "painfully shy, completely enigmatic and more eccentric...than anyone [she] had ever met." [9]
Gardner's second marriage was brief and to jazz musician and band leader Artie Shaw, from 1945 to 1946.
Gardner's third and last marriage (1951–1957) was to singer and actor Frank Sinatra. She would later say in her autobiography that he was the love of her life. Sinatra left his wife, Nancy, for Ava and their subsequent marriage made headlines. Sinatra was savaged by gossip columnists Hedda Hopper and Louella Parsons, the Hollywood establishment, the Roman Catholic Church and by his fans for leaving his wife for a noted femme fatale. Gardner used her considerable influence, particularly with Harry Cohn's wife, to get Sinatra cast in his Oscar-winning role in From Here to Eternity (1953). That role and the award revitalized both Sinatra's acting and singing careers.
The Gardner-Sinatra marriage was tumultuous. Gardner confided to Artie Shaw, her second husband, that “With him [Frank] it’s impossible…it’s like being with a woman. He’s so gentle. It’s as though he thinks I’ll break, as though I’m a piece of Dresden china and he’s gonna hurt me.” [10] During their marriage Gardner became pregnant twice, but she had two abortions. "MGM had all sorts of penalty clauses about their stars having babies," she said.[11] She said years later, "We couldn't even take care of ourselves. How were we going to take care of a baby?"[citation needed] Gardner and Sinatra remained good friends for the rest of her life.
Gardner divorced Sinatra in 1957 and headed to Spain where she began a friendship with writer Ernest Hemingway. While staying with Hemingway at his villa in San Francisco de Paula in Havana, Cuba, Gardner once swam alone with no bathing suit in his pool. After watching her, Hemingway ordered his staff: "The water is not to be emptied".[12] Gardner's friendship with Hemingway led to her becoming a fan of bullfighting and bullfighters such as Luis Miguel Dominguín, who became her lover. "It was a sort of madness, honey," she said later of the time.[citation needed]
After a lifetime of smoking, Gardner suffered from emphysema, a terminal disease, in addition to an auto-immune disorder (which may have been lupus).[citation needed] Two strokes in 1986 left her partially paralyzed and bedridden. Although Gardner could afford her medical expenses, Sinatra wanted to pay for her to visit a specialist in the United States, and she allowed him to make the arrangements for a medically-staffed private plane. Her last words (to her housekeeper Carmen), were reportedly, "I'm so tired," before she died of pneumonia at the age of 67. After her death, Sinatra's daughter, Tina, found him slumped in his room, crying, and unable to speak.[13]
Gardner was not only the love of his life, but also was the inspiration for one of his most personal songs, "I'm a Fool to Want You", which Sinatra (who received a co-writing credit for the song) recorded twice, toward the end of his contract with Columbia Records and during his years on Capitol Records. ("It was Ava who taught him how to sing a torch song",[citation needed] Sinatra arranger Nelson Riddle was once quoted as saying.) Because of the presence of a black limousine parked behind the crowd of 500 mourners, it was reported that Sinatra attended her funeral; it turned out to be a hairstylist from Fayetteville, North Carolina, who felt that a limousine was the only appropriate mode of transportation to Gardner's funeral. A floral arrangement at Gardner's graveside simply read: "With My Love, Francis".[citation needed]
Gardner was buried in the Sunset Memorial Park, Smithfield, North Carolina, next to her brothers and their parents, Jonah (1878–1938) and Mollie Gardner (1883–1943). The town of Smithfield now has an Ava Gardner Museum.
Gardner was nominated for an Academy Award for Mogambo (1953); the award was won by Audrey Hepburn for Roman Holiday. Her performance as Maxine Faulk in The Night of the Iguana (1964), was well reviewed, and she was nominated a BAFTA Award and a Golden Globe.
Gardner has been portrayed by Marcia Gay Harden in the TV miniseries Sinatra, Deborah Kara Unger in HBO's The Rat Pack, Kate Beckinsale in the 2004 Howard Hughes biopic, The Aviator and Anna Drijver in the 2012 Italian TV film Walter Chiari - Fino all'ultima risata.[14]
| Year | Film | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1941 | Shadow of the Thin Man | Passerby | |
| H.M. Pulham, Esq. | Young Socialite | ||
| Babes on Broadway | Pitt-Astor Girl | ||
| 1942 | Joe Smith - American | Miss Maynard, Secretary | |
| This Time for Keeps | Girl in car lighting cigarette | ||
| Kid Glove Killer | Car Hop | ||
| Sunday Punch | Ringsider | ||
| Calling Dr. Gillespie | Graduating student at Miss Hope's | ||
| Reunion in France | Marie, a salesgirl | ||
| 1943 | Hitler's Madman | Franciska Pritric a Student | |
| Ghosts on the Loose | Betty | ||
| Young Ideas | Co-ed | ||
| Du Barry Was a Lady | Perfume Girl | ||
| Swing Fever | Receptionist | ||
| Lost Angel | Hat Check Girl | ||
| 1944 | Two Girls and a Sailor | Dream Girl | |
| Three Men in White | Jean Brown | ||
| Maisie Goes to Reno | Gloria Fullerton | ||
| Blonde Fever | Bit Role | ||
| 1945 | She Went to the Races | Hilda Spotts | |
| 1946 | Whistle Stop | Mary | |
| The Killers | Kitty Collins | ||
| 1947 | Singapore | Linda Grahame/Ann Van Leyden | |
| The Hucksters | Jean Ogilvie | ||
| 1948 | One Touch of Venus | Venus | |
| 1949 | The Bribe | Elizabeth Hintten | |
| The Great Sinner | Pauline Ostrovsky | ||
| East Side, West Side | Isabel Lorrison | ||
| 1951 | Pandora and the Flying Dutchman | Pandora Reynolds | |
| My Forbidden Past | Barbara Beaurevel | ||
| Show Boat | Julie LaVerne | ||
| 1952 | Lone Star | Martha Ronda | |
| The Snows of Kilimanjaro | Cynthia Green | ||
| 1953 | Knights of the Round Table | Guinevere | |
| Ride, Vaquero! | Cordelia Cameron | ||
| The Band Wagon | Herself | ||
| Mogambo | Honey Bear Kelly | Nominated — Academy Award for Best Actress | |
| 1954 | The Barefoot Contessa | Maria Vargas | |
| 1956 | Bhowani Junction | Victoria Jones | Nominated — BAFTA for Best Foreign Actress |
| 1957 | The Little Hut | Lady Susan Ashlow | |
| The Sun Also Rises | Lady Brett Ashley | ||
| 1958 | The Naked Maja | Maria Cayetana, Duchess of Alba | |
| 1959 | On the Beach | Moira Davidson | Nominated — BAFTA for Best Foreign Actress |
| 1960 | The Angel Wore Red | Soledad | |
| 1963 | 55 Days at Peking | Baroness Natalie Ivanoff | |
| 1964 | Seven Days in May | Eleanor Holbrook | |
| The Night of the Iguana | Maxine Faulk | Nominated — BAFTA for Best Foreign Actress Nominated — Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture Actress - Drama |
|
| 1966 | The Bible: In The Beginning | Sarah | |
| 1968 | Mayerling | Empress Elizabeth | |
| 1970 | Tam-Lin | Michaela Cazaret | |
| 1972 | The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean | Lily Langtry | |
| 1974 | Earthquake | Remy Royce-Graff | |
| 1975 | Permission to Kill | Katina Petersen | |
| 1976 | The Blue Bird | Luxury | |
| The Cassandra Crossing | Nicole Dressler | ||
| 1977 | The Sentinel | Miss Logan | |
| 1979 | City on Fire | Maggie Grayson | |
| 1980 | The Kidnapping of the President | Beth Richards | |
| 1981 | Priest of Love | Mabel Dodge Luhan | |
| 1982 | Regina Roma | Mama |
| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 1941 | Fancy Answers | Girl at Recital |
| 1942 | We Do It Because- | Lucretia Borgia |
| Mighty Lak a Goat | Girl at the Bijou box office | |
| 1949 | Some of the Best | Herself |
| 1964 | On the Trail of the Iguana | |
| 1968 | Vienna: The Years Remembered | Herself |
| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 1985 | A.D. | Agrippina |
| Knots Landing | Ruth Galveston | |
| The Long Hot Summer | Minnie Littlejohn | |
| 1986 | Harem | Kadin |
| Maggie | Diane Webb |
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