Revision as of 15:32, 6 April 2012 editGeorge Ponderevo (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers22,899 edits →Physical appearance: ce← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 04:24, 24 January 2025 edit undoMoxtoby (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users687 editsNo edit summaryTags: Visual edit Mobile edit Mobile web edit | ||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|American actress, dancer, pin-up girl (1918–1987)}} | |||
{{Use American English|date=January 2021}} | |||
{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2021}} | |||
{{Infobox person | {{Infobox person | ||
| name = Rita Hayworth | | name = Rita Hayworth<!-- use common name/article title --> | ||
| image = Rita Hayworth |
| image = Rita Hayworth 1940s.jpg | ||
| caption |
| caption = Hayworth by Bob Coburn, 1948 | ||
| birth_name = Margarita Carmen Cansino | | birth_name = Margarita Carmen Cansino | ||
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1918|10|17|mf=y}} | | birth_date = {{Birth date|1918|10|17|mf=y}} | ||
| birth_place |
| birth_place = New York City, U.S.<!--No boroughs/neighborhoods, just cities per format.--> | ||
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1987|05|14|1918|10|17|mf=y}} | | death_date = {{Death date and age|1987|05|14|1918|10|17|mf=y}} | ||
| death_place = |
| death_place = New York City, U.S.<!--No boroughs/neighborhoods, just cities per format.--> | ||
| death_cause = <!-- should only be included when the cause of death has significance for the subject's notability --> | |||
| occupation = Actress, dancer | |||
| resting_place = ] | |||
| years_active = 1934–1972 | |||
| awards = ] | |||
| spouse = Edward C. Judson (1937–1942)<br>] (1943–1948)<br>] (1949–1953)<br>] (1953–1955)<br>] (1958–1961) | |||
| height = | |||
| children = Rebecca Welles (b. December 17, 1944)<br>] (b. December 28, 1949) | |||
| occupation = {{hlist|Actress|dancer|pin-up girl}} | |||
| parents = ]<br>] | |||
| years active = 1931–1972 | |||
| relatives = ]<br>(brother, deceased) | |||
| party = ] | |||
| nationality = ] | |||
| father = ] | |||
| signature = Rita Hayworth signature.svg | |||
| mother = ] | |||
| spouse = {{plainlist| | |||
* {{marriage|Edward C. Judson|1937|1942|end=divorced}} | |||
* {{marriage|]|1943|1947|end=divorced}} | |||
* {{marriage|]|1949|1953|end=divorced}} | |||
* {{marriage|]|1953|1955|end=divorced}} | |||
* {{marriage|]|1958|1961|end=divorced}} | |||
}} | |||
| children = 2, including ] <!-- notable people only --> | |||
| relatives = {{plainlist| | |||
* ] (nephew) | |||
* ] (uncle) | |||
}} | |||
| signature = Rita Hayworth signature.svg | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''Rita Hayworth''' (born '''Margarita Carmen Cansino'''; October 17, 1918{{spaced ndash}}May 14, 1987) was an American actress, dancer, and ].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1987/05/16/obituaries/rita-hayworth-movie-legend-dies.html|access-date=April 21, 2024|first=Albin|last=Krebs|title=RITA HAYWORTH, MOVIES LEGEND, DIES|date=May 16, 1987|work=New York Times}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.life.com/arts-entertainment/rita-hayworth-photos-of-a-movie-legend-and-all-american-pinup-girl/|access-date=April 21, 2024|first=Ben|last=Cosgrove|title=Rita Hayworth: Hollywood Legend, Pinup Icon - LIFE|date=October 2014 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.time.com/3881042/rita-hayworth-photos-of-a-movie-legend-and-all-american-pinup-girl/|access-date=April 21, 2024|first=Ben|last=Cosgrove|title=LIFE With Rita Hayworth: Hollywood Legend, Pinup Icon|publisher=TIME|date=October 1, 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Rita-Hayworth|access-date=April 21, 2024|title=Rita Hayworth - Biography, Movies, & Facts|date=April 9, 2024 |publisher=Britannica}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.biography.com/actors/rita-hayworth|access-date=April 21, 2024|title=Rita Hayworth - Spouse, Gilda & Movies|date=April 8, 2021 |publisher=Biography}}</ref><ref name=la>{{cite web|url=https://projects.latimes.com/hollywood/star-walk/rita-hayworth/|access-date=April 21, 2024|first=Gerald|last=Faris|title=Rita Hayworth - Hollywood Star Walk|date=May 16, 1987|work=Los Angeles Times}}</ref> She achieved fame in the 1940s as one of the top stars of the ], and appeared in 61 films in total over 37 years. The press coined the term "The Love Goddess" to describe Hayworth, after she had become the most glamorous screen idol of the 1940s. She was the top ] for ] during ].<ref name=chitribobt>{{cite news |url=http://archives.chicagotribune.com/1987/05/16/page/8/ |newspaper=Chicago Tribune |agency=Associated Press |title=Rita Hayworth, 68, films' 'Love Goddess' |date=May 16, 1987 |page=8 }}</ref> | |||
'''Rita Hayworth''' (born '''Margarita Carmen Cansino'''; October 17, 1918{{spaced ndash}}May 14, 1987) was an American dancer and film actress who garnered fame during the 1940s as one of the era's top stars. Appearing first as Rita Cansino, she agreed to change her name to Rita Hayworth and her hair color to dark red to attract a greater range in roles. Her appeal led to her being featured on the cover of '']'' magazine five times, beginning in 1940.<ref name="Geerhart"/> | |||
Hayworth is widely known for her performance in the 1946 ] '']'', opposite ], in which she played the '']'' in her first major dramatic role. She is also known for her performances in '']'' (1939), '']'' (1941), '']'' (1941), '']'' (1947), '']'' (1957), and '']'' (1958). ], with whom she made two films, '']'' (1941) and '']'' (1942), once called her his favorite dance partner. She also starred in the ] musical '']'' (1944), with ]. She is listed as one of the top 25 female motion picture stars of all time in the ]'s survey, ]. | |||
For her contribution to the motion picture industry, Hayworth received a star on the ] at 1645 Vine Street in 1960.<ref name=la /> | |||
In 1980, Hayworth was diagnosed with ], which contributed to her death in 1987 at age 68. The public disclosure and discussion of her illness drew attention to Alzheimer's, and helped to increase public and ] funding for research into the disease. | |||
The first dancer featured on film as a partner of both the stars ] and ], Hayworth appeared in a total of 61 films over 37 years.<ref name="news.google.com">{{Cite web|author=Gerald Faris|url=http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=q3wQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=dJIDAAAAIBAJ&dq=rita%20hayworth%20hollywood&pg=3397%2C4986759|title=A Screen Goddess and Hollywood Rebel Loses The Battle Against Disease|publisher=The Age|date=May 18, 1987|accessdate=June 7, 2009}}</ref> She is listed by the ] as one of the ]. | |||
==Early life== | ==Early life== | ||
{{multiple image | |||
Hayworth was born in ], ] in 1918 as '''Margarita Carmen Cansino''', the oldest child of two dancers, ], from ], a little town near of ], ],<ref>{{cite web|http://hemeroteca.abc.es/nav/Navigate.exe/hemeroteca/sevilla/abc.sevilla/1984/03/24/003.html|title=Del firmamento al limbo|last=Márquez Reviriego|first=Víctor|date=24 March 1984|publisher=]|accessdate=5 April 2012}}</ref> and ], an American of Irish-English descent who had performed with the ].<ref Name="Note">''Notable American Women: A Biographical Dictionary,'' Volume 5, Susan Ware, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University Press, p281 2004 ISBN 978-0-674-01488-6</ref> The Catholic couple had married in 1917. They also had two sons: Eduardo, Jr. and Vernon.<ref>, Associated Press, December 28, 1949. Accessed June 13, 2009.</ref><ref Name="Note"/> | |||
<!-- Essential parameters --> | |||
| align = left | |||
| direction = vertical | |||
| width = 170 | |||
<!-- Image 1 --> | |||
| image1 = Hayworth-American-c1931.jpg | |||
| alt1 = | |||
| caption1 = At age 12, Margarita (later Rita) was dancing professionally as her father's partner in "The Dancing Cansinos", 1931. | |||
<!-- Image 2 --> | |||
| image2 =Dancing-Cansinos-1933.jpg | |||
| alt2 = | |||
| caption2 = Margarita, at age 14, with her father and dancing partner, 1933 | |||
<!-- Image 3 --> | |||
| image3 =Rita-Eduardo-Cansino-1935.jpg | |||
| alt3 = | |||
| caption3 = Rita and her father, 1935 | |||
}} | |||
Hayworth was born as Margarita Carmen Cansino in ], ], the oldest child of two dancers. Her father, ], was of Spanish ] descent<ref>{{cite book|last= Hancock|first= Ian|author-link= Ian Hancock|title= We are the Romani People|location= Hatfield|publisher= ]|year= 2002|page= 129|isbn= 978-1902806198|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=MG0ahVw-kdwC&pg=PA129}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last= Kendrick|first= Donald|title= Historical Dictionary of the Gypsies (Romanies)|year= 2007|location= United States|publisher= Scarecrow Press (])|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=tQKyAAAAQBAJ&q=rita+hayworth&pg=PA108|page= 108|isbn= 978-0810864405}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last= Nericcio|first= William Anthony|author-link= William Nericcio|title= Tex-Mex: Seductive Hallucinations of the "Mexican" in America|year= 2007|location= Austin|publisher= ]|page= 97|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=OEAQYpxv4T0C&pg=PA97|isbn= 9780292714571}}</ref> from ], a little town near ], Spain.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://hemeroteca.abc.es/nav/Navigate.exe/hemeroteca/sevilla/abc.sevilla/1984/03/24/003.html|title=Del firmamento al limbo|last=Márquez Reviriego|first=Víctor|date=March 24, 1984|newspaper=]|access-date=April 5, 2012}}</ref> | |||
Margarita's father wanted her to become a professional dancer, while her mother hoped she would become an actress.<ref> ''Ellensburg Daily Record'', July 13, 1944. Accessed June 7, 2009.</ref> Her paternal grandfather Antonio Cansino was renowned as a Spanish classical dancer; he popularized the ] and his dancing school in ] was world famous.<ref>"Actress Rita Hayworth's Grandfather Dies at 89." ''Los Angeles Times,'' 22 June 1954</ref> Rita later recalled, | |||
<blockquote>"From the time I was three and a half,... as soon as I could stand on my own feet, I was given dance lessons."<ref>Patrick Agan, ''The Decline and Fall of the Love Goddesses'', Indiana University: Pinnacle Books, 1979, p67</ref> "I didn't like it very much,... but I didn't have the courage to tell my father, so I began taking the lessons. Rehearse, rehearse, rehearse, that was my girlhood."<ref>Joe Morella and Edward Z. Epstein, ''Rita: The Life of Rita Hayworth'', New York: Dell, 1983, p 16</ref></blockquote>She attended dance classes every day for a few years in a ] complex, where she was taught by her uncle Angel Cansino. She performed publicly from the age of six.<ref Name="Note"/> In 1926 at the age of eight, she was featured in ''La Fiesta'', a short film for ].<ref Name="Note"/> | |||
Her mother, ], was an American of Irish and English descent who had performed with the ].<ref name="Ware">{{cite book|editor1-last=Ware|editor1-first=Susan|editor1-link=Susan Ware|editor2-last=Braukman|editor2-first=Stacy|title=Notable American Women: A Biographical Dictionary|volume=5: Completing the Twentieth Century|location=Cambridge, Mass.|publisher=]|page=281|date=2005|isbn=978-0674014886}}</ref>{{Rp|281}} The couple married in 1917. They also had two sons: Eduardo Jr. and Vernon.<ref name="Ware"/><ref>, Associated Press, December 28, 1949; accessed June 13, 2009.</ref> Her maternal uncle ] was also an actor.<ref name=BS510129>{{cite news|title=TV's Vincent Hayworth Has Two Beauties Saying 'Uncle' |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/9077876/?terms=%22Vincent%2BHayworth%22 |newspaper=The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Texas) |date=January 29, 1951 |page=6 |via = ]|access-date = August 9, 2015}} {{Open access}}</ref> | |||
In 1927, her father took the family to Hollywood. He believed that dancing could be featured in the movies and that his family could be part of it. He established his own dance studio<ref Name="Note"/>, where he taught such Hollywood luminaries as ] and ]. {{Citation needed|date=October 2011}} During the ], he lost all his investments, as musicals were no longer in vogue and commercial interest in his dancing classes waned. He partnered with his daughter to form "The Dancing Cansinos". Since under California law, Margarita was too young to work in nightclubs and bars, her father took her with him to work across the border in ], ]. In the early 1930s, it was a popular tourist spot for people from Los Angeles.<ref Name="Note"/> Due to her working, Cansino never graduated from high school; she completed ninth grade at Hamilton High in Los Angeles. | |||
Margarita's father wanted her to become a professional dancer, while her mother hoped that she would become an actress.<ref> ''Ellensburg Daily Record'', July 13, 1944. Accessed June 7, 2009.</ref> Her paternal grandfather, ], was renowned as a classical Spanish dancer. He popularized the ], and his dancing school in ] was world-famous.<ref>"Actress Rita Hayworth's Grandfather Dies at 89." ''Los Angeles Times'', June 22, 1954.</ref> Antonio Cansino instructed Rita Hayworth in her first dance lesson.<ref>{{Cite news |date=1954-06-22 |title=Antonio Cansino RIP (Rita Hayworth's grandfather) |pages=37 |work=Los Angeles Times |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/82663635/antonio-cansino-rip-rita-hayworths/ |access-date=2022-03-23}}</ref> Hayworth later recalled, "From the time I was three and a half... as soon as I could stand on my own feet, I was given dance lessons."<ref name="Agan"> | |||
At the age of 16, Cansino took a bit part in the film '']'' (1934), which led to another in '']'' (1935) with the Mexican actress ].<ref Name="Note"/> Cansino danced with her father in such nightspots as the Foreign and the Caliente clubs. ], the head of the ], saw her dancing at the Caliente Club and quickly arranged for Hayworth to do a screen test a week later. Impressed by her screen persona, Sheehan signed her for a short-term six-month contract at Fox, under the name Rita Cansino, the first of name changes for her film career. | |||
{{cite book|last=Agan|first=Patrick|date=1979|title=The Decline and Fall of the Love Goddesses|location=Los Angeles|publisher=Pinnacle Books|isbn=978-0523406237|url=https://archive.org/details/declinefalloflov00agan}}</ref>{{Rp|67}} She noted "I didn't like it very much... but I didn't have the courage to tell my father, so I began taking the lessons. Rehearse, rehearse, rehearse, that was my girlhood."<ref name="Morella">{{cite book|last1=Morella|first1=Joe|last2=Epstein|first2=Edward Z.|date=1983|title=Rita: The Life of Rita Hayworth|location=New York|publisher=Delacourte Press|isbn=0-385-29265-1|url=https://archive.org/details/ritalifeofritah00more}}</ref>{{Rp|16}} | |||
She attended dance classes every day for a few years in a ] complex, where she was taught by her uncle Angel Cansino.<ref name="Ware"/> Before her fifth birthday she was one of the Four Cansinos featured in the Broadway production of ''The Greenwich Village Follies'' at the ].<ref>{{cite web| url=https://www.ibdb.com/broadway-organization/the-cansinos-34440 |title=The Cansinos |publisher=] |access-date=April 25, 2018 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |date=September 21, 1923 |title='Greenwich Follies' Anew |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1923/09/21/archives/dodduwood.html |work=The New York Times |access-date=April 25, 2018 }}</ref> In 1926, at the age of eight, she was featured in ''La Fiesta'', a short film for ]<ref name="Ware"/> | |||
==Film career== | |||
] | |||
During her time at Fox, Cansino appeared in five pictures, in non-notable roles. By the end of her six-month contract, Fox had merged into ], with ] serving as the executive producer. Dismissing Sheehan's interest in Cansino, Zanuck did not renew her contract. Feeling that Cansino had screen potential, the salesman and promoter ], whom she would marry in 1936, got her the lead roles in several independent films and arranged a screen test with ]. The studio head ] signed Cansino to a long-term contract, and cast her in small roles in Columbia features. | |||
In 1927, her father took the family to ]. He believed that dancing could be featured in the movies and that his family could be part of it. He established his own dance studio,<ref name="Ware"/> where he taught such stars as ] and ].<ref name="Burroughs">{{cite book|last=Burroughs Hannasberry|first=Karen|date=2010|title=Femme Noir: Bad Girls of Film|location=Jefferson, North Carolina|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-786-44682-7}}</ref>{{Rp|253}} | |||
Often cast as the exotic foreigner, Cansino appeared in several roles in 1935: in '']'', with ]; and ''Paddy O'Day,'' in which she played a Russian dancer. She was an Argentinian in ''Under the Pampas Moon'' and an Egyptian beauty in ''].'' In 1936 she took her first starring role as a "Latin type" in ''Human Cargo.''<ref Name="Note"/> | |||
] evening dress designed by ].]] | |||
Cohn argued that Cansino's image was too Mediterranean, which reduced her opportunities to being cast in "exotic" roles, more limited in number. With Cohn and Judson's encouragement, Hayworth changed her hair color to dark red and her name to Rita Hayworth. She had electrolysis to raise her hairline and broaden the appearance of her forehead. By using her mother's maiden name, she led people to see her British-American ancestry and became a classic "American" pin-up.<ref Name="Note"/> | |||
In 1931, Eduardo Cansino partnered with his 12-year-old daughter to form an act called the Dancing Cansinos.<ref name="Leaming Hayworth">{{cite book|last=Leaming|first=Barbara|date=1989|title=If This Was Happiness: A Biography of Rita Hayworth|location=New York|publisher=]|isbn=0-670-81978-6|url=https://archive.org/details/ifthiswashappine00leam}}</ref>{{Rp|14}} Her hair was dyed from brown to black to give her a more mature and "Latin" appearance.<ref name=":0">{{Cite magazine|last=Meares|first=Hadley Hall|title=The Love Goddess: Rita Hayworth's Tragic Quest|url=https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2020/09/rita-hayworth-biography-trauma|access-date=2021-05-08|magazine=Vanity Fair|date=September 23, 2020|language=en-US}}</ref> Since under California law Margarita was too young to work in nightclubs and bars, her father took her with him to work across the border in ], Mexico. In the early 1930s, it was a popular tourist spot for people from ].<ref name="Ware"/><ref name="Braudy">{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1989/11/19/books/what-we-have-here-is-a-very-sad-story.html|title=What We Have Here Is a Very Sad Story|last=Braudy|first=Susan|date=November 19, 1989|work=The New York Times|access-date=January 11, 2019|language=en-US|issn=0362-4331}}</ref> Because she was working, Cansino never graduated from high school, but she completed the ninth grade at ] in Los Angeles. | |||
In 1937, Hayworth appeared in five minor Columbia pictures and three minor independent movies. The following year, she appeared in five Columbia ]. In 1939, Cohn pressured director ] to use Hayworth for a small but important role as a man-trap in the aviation drama ''],'' in which she played opposite ] and ].<ref Name="Note"/> With this film's box-office success, fan mail for Hayworth began pouring into Columbia's publicity department. Cohn began to see Hayworth as his first and official new star. The studio never officially had stars under contract, except for Jean Arthur, who was trying to break with it. | |||
Cansino took a bit part in the film '']'' (1934) at age 16, which led to another bit part in the film '']'' (1935) with the Mexican actress ].<ref name="Ware"/> She danced with her father in such nightspots as the Foreign and the Caliente clubs. ], the head of the ], saw her dancing at the Caliente Club and quickly arranged for Hayworth to do a screen test a week later. Impressed by her screen persona, Sheehan signed her to a six-month contract at Fox under the name Rita Cansino, the first of two name changes during her film career. | |||
Cohn began to build Hayworth up in 1940, in features such as ''Music in My Heart,'' ''],'' and ''].'' That year she was first featured in a '']'' magazine photo.<ref name="Geerhart"/> He loaned Hayworth to ] to appear in ''],'' opposite ]. While on loan to ], Hayworth appeared as the second female lead in '']'' (1941), opposite ] and ].<ref Name="Note"/> As the film was a big box-office success, Hayworth's popularity rose; she immediately became one of Hollywood's hottest properties. So impressed was Warner Brothers that they tried to buy Hayworth's contract from Columbia, but Cohn refused to release her. | |||
] | |||
Her success led to a supporting role in '']'' (1941), opposite ] and ], with Fox, the studio that had dropped her six years before. In one of her most notable screen roles, Hayworth played Doña Sol des Muire, the first of many screen sirens. This was another box-office hit. | |||
==Career== | |||
She returned in triumph to Columbia Pictures and was cast in the musical '']'' (1941) opposite ], in one of the highest-budgeted films Columbia had ever made.<ref Name="Note"/> So successful was the picture that the following year, the studio produced and released another Astaire-Hayworth picture, ''].''<ref Name="Note"/> In 1942, Hayworth also appeared in two other pictures, '']'' and '']''. | |||
===Early career=== | |||
] publicity photograph of Rita Cansino, 1935]] | |||
During her time at Fox, Hayworth was billed as Rita Cansino and appeared in unremarkable roles, often cast as the exotic foreigner. In late 1934, aged 16, she performed a dance sequence in the ] film '']'' (1935), and was put under contract in February 1935.<ref name="Leaming Hayworth"/>{{Rp|27}} She had her first speaking role as an Argentinian girl in '']'' (1935).<ref name="Leaming Hayworth"/>{{Rp|28–30}} She played an Egyptian girl in '']'' (1935), and a Russian dancer in '']'' (1935). Sheehan was grooming her for the lead in the 1936 Technicolor film '']'', hoping to establish her as Fox Film's new ].<ref name="Leaming Hayworth"/>{{Rp|29–31}} | |||
By the end of her six-month contract, Fox had merged into ], with ] serving as the executive producer. Dismissing Sheehan's interest in her and giving ] the lead in ''Ramona'', Zanuck did not renew Cansino's contract.<ref name="Leaming Hayworth"/>{{Rp|32–33}} Sensing her screen potential, salesman and promoter Edward C. Judson, with whom she would elope in 1937,<ref name="Leaming Hayworth"/>{{Rp|36}} got freelance work for her in several small-studio films and a part in the ] feature '']'' (1936). Studio head ] signed her to a seven-year contract and tried her out in small roles.<ref name="Leaming Hayworth"/>{{Rp|34–35}} | |||
During this period, Hayworth was featured in an August 1941 '']'' photo, in which she lounged seductively in a black-lace negligee.<ref name="Geerhart"/> When the U.S. joined World War II in December 1941, the photo made Hayworth one of the top two "pin-up girls" of the war years; the other was the blonde ]. In 2002, the satin nightgown Hayworth wore for the photo sold for $26,888.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.sothebys.com/app/live/lot/LotDetail.jsp?sale_number=N07818&live_lot_id=37|title=Lot 37 Rita Hayworth Nightgown From Her Famous World War II Publicity Photos|publisher=Sotheby's|accessdate=2010-02-07}}</ref> | |||
Cohn argued that her image was too Mediterranean, which limited her to being cast in "exotic" roles that were fewer in number. He was heard to say her last name sounded too Spanish. Judson acted on Cohn's advice: Rita Cansino became Rita Hayworth when she adopted her mother's maiden name, to the consternation of her father.<ref name="Leaming Hayworth"/>{{Rp|36}} With a name that emphasized Irish-American ancestry, people were more likely to regard her as a classic "American".<ref name="Ware"/> | |||
With Cohn and Judson's encouragement, Hayworth changed her hair color to ginger red hair and had electrolysis to raise her hairline and broaden the appearance of her forehead.<ref name="Ware"/> | |||
] in '']'' (1942)|left]]Hayworth appeared in five minor Columbia pictures and three minor independent movies in 1937. The following year, she appeared in five Columbia ]s. In 1939, Cohn pressured director ] to use Hayworth for a small, but important, role as a man-trap in the aviation drama '']'', in which she played opposite ] and ].<ref name="Ware"/> | |||
Cohn began to build up Hayworth in 1940 in features such as '']'', '']'', and '']''. That year, she was first featured in a '']'' magazine cover story.<ref>{{cite magazine|date=July 15, 1940|title=Rita Hayworth Goes on a Bicycle Picnic|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1j8EAAAAMBAJ|magazine=]|volume=9|issue=3|page=58|access-date=March 7, 2015}}</ref> While on loan to Warner Bros., Hayworth appeared as the second female lead in '']'' (1941), opposite James Cagney.<ref name="Ware"/> | |||
She returned in triumph to Columbia Pictures, and was cast in the musical '']'' (1941) opposite ] in one of the highest-budgeted films Columbia had ever made.<ref name="Ware"/> The picture was so successful, the studio produced and released another Astaire-Hayworth picture the following year, '']''.<ref name="Ware"/> Astaire's biographer ] writes that the dancing combination of Astaire and Hayworth was "absolute magnetism on the screen".<ref name=Levinson>Levinson, Peter (2019). ''Puttin' On the Ritz: Fred Astaire and the Fine Art of Panache, A Biography'', St. Martin's Press, pp. 123–124.</ref> Although Astaire made 10 films with ], his other main dancing partner, Hayworth's sensuality surpassed Rogers' cool technical expertise. "Rita's youthful exuberance meshed perfectly with Fred's maturity and elegance", says Levinson.<ref name=Levinson/> | |||
When Astaire was asked who his favorite dance partner was, he tried not answering the question, but later admitted it was Hayworth: "All right, I'll give you a name", he said. "But if you ever let it out, I'll swear I lied. It was Rita Hayworth."<ref name=Levinson/> Astaire commented that "Rita danced with trained perfection and individuality ... She was better when she was 'on' than at rehearsal." Biographer Charlie Reinhart describes the effect she had on Astaire's style: | |||
{{blockquote|There was a kind of reserve about Fred. It was charming. It carried over to his dancing. With Hayworth there was no reserve. She was very explosive. And that's why I think they really complemented each other.<ref name=Levinson/><ref>, fair use clip</ref>}} | |||
]'' magazine]] | |||
In August 1941, Hayworth was featured in an iconic ''Life'' photo in which she posed in a negligee with a black lace bodice.<ref>{{cite magazine|date=August 11, 1941|title=Rita Hayworth Rises from Bit Parts Into a Triple-Threat Song & Dance Star|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YE0EAAAAMBAJ|magazine=Life|volume=11|issue=6|page=33|access-date=March 7, 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine|url=http://life.time.com/icons/rita-hayworth-photos-of-a-movie-legend-and-all-american-pinup-girl/#1|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131017141445/http://life.time.com/icons/rita-hayworth-photos-of-a-movie-legend-and-all-american-pinup-girl/#1|url-status=dead|archive-date=October 17, 2013|title=Life with Rita Hayworth: Hollywood Legend, Pinup Icon|magazine=Life|access-date=March 7, 2015}}</ref> Bob Landry's photo made Hayworth one of the top two pin-up girls of the World War II years; the other was ], in a 1943 photograph. For two years, Hayworth's photograph was the most requested pin-up photograph in circulation.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=1143273|title=Rita Hayworth, Present at the Creation|last=Stamberg|first=Susan|author-link=Susan Stamberg|date=May 13, 2002|website=]|publisher=]|access-date=June 3, 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Osborne|first=Robert|author-link=Robert Osborne|title=Robert Osborne on Pin-Up Girls|journal=Now Playing|publisher=]|issue=June 2015|page=4}}</ref> In 2002, the satin nightgown Hayworth wore for the photo sold for $26,888.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.sothebys.com/en/auctions/ecatalogue/2002/planet-hollywood-selections-from-the-vault-n07818/lot.37.html|title=Rita Hayworth Nightgown From Her Famous World War II Publicity Photos|publisher=Sotheby's|access-date=March 8, 2015}}</ref> | |||
In March 1942, Hayworth visited Brazil as a ] for the ] administration's ], under the auspices of the ].<ref>{{cite book|last=Benamou|first=Catherine L.|date=2007|title=It's All True: Orson Welles's Pan-American Odyssey|url=https://archive.org/details/itsalltrueorsonw0000bena|url-access=registration|location=Berkeley|publisher=University of California Press|pages=|isbn=978-0-520-24247-0}}</ref> During the 1940s Hayworth also contributed to the OCIAA's ] initiatives in support of ] through her broadcasts to South America on the ] "Cadena de las Américas" radio network.<ref> {{ISBN|978-0-8166-7316-2}}<span> Rita Hayworth, OCIAA, CBS radio, Pan-americanism and Cadena de las Americas on google.books.com</span></ref> | |||
] | |||
===Peak years at Columbia=== | ===Peak years at Columbia=== | ||
Hayworth had top billing in one of her best-known films, the ] musical '']'', released in 1944.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.afi.com/members/catalog/AbbrView.aspx?s=&Movie=378&Display=C|title=Cover Girl|website=]|publisher=] |access-date=June 3, 2015 }}</ref> The film established her as Columbia's top star of the 1940s, and it gave her the distinction of being the first of only six women to dance on screen with both Gene Kelly and Fred Astaire.<ref name="news.google.com">{{Cite web|author=Faris, Gerald|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=q3wQAAAAIBAJ&dq=rita%20hayworth%20hollywood&pg=3397%2C4986759|title=A Screen Goddess and Hollywood Rebel Loses The Battle Against Disease|work=The Age|date=May 18, 1987|access-date=June 7, 2009}}</ref> "I guess the only jewels of my life", Hayworth said in 1970, "were the pictures I made with Fred Astaire ... And ''Cover Girl'', too."<ref name="Hallowell">{{cite news|last=Hallowell|first=John|date=October 25, 1970|title=Rita Hayworth: Don't Put the Blame on Me, Boys|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/10/25/archives/rita-hayworth-dont-put-the-blame-on-me-boys-dont-put-the-blame-on.html |newspaper=]|access-date=March 7, 2015|url-access=subscription }}</ref> | |||
]'' (1945)]] | |||
In 1944, Hayworth made one of her best-known films, the ] musical '']'' (1944), with ].<ref Name="Note"/> The film established her as Columbia's top star of the 1940s. For three consecutive years, starting in 1944, Hayworth was named one of the top movie box office attractions in the world. She was adept in ballet, tap, ballroom, and Spanish routines. | |||
] in '']'' (1945)]] | |||
Cohn continued to showcase Hayworth's dance talents; she was the first dancer featured on film to partner with both ] and ]. Columbia featured her in the Technicolor films: '']'' (1945), with ]; and '']'' (1947), with ]. | |||
For three consecutive years, starting in 1944, Hayworth was named one of the top movie box-office attractions in the world. She was adept in ], ], ], and Spanish routines. Cohn continued to showcase Hayworth's dance talents. Columbia featured her in the Technicolor films '']'' (1945) with ] and '']'' (1947) with ].{{citation needed|date=August 2017}} | |||
] | |||
Her erotic appeal was most noted in ]'s black and white ] '']'' (1946), with ], which caused censors some consternation. The role, in which Hayworth in black satin performed a legendary one-glove striptease, made her into a cultural icon as a ''].''<ref Name="Note"/> While her film was still in release, extensive publicity linked her to a widely covered nuclear bomb test in the South Pacific. | |||
]'' (1946)]] | |||
Numerous reporters from hundreds of papers across the country were covering preparations in 1946 at ] in the Pacific Ocean's ] for testing of the first nuclear bomb after World War II. The United States had been the first nation to use nuclear bombs, against the civilian population of Japan. Reporters publicized that young scientists had put the name of "Gilda" and Hayworth's image on the bomb, alluding to her ] status as a film star. Coverage varied widely at the time, but the story stuck that her image had been put on the bomb, and was repeated in her 1987 obituary in ''],'' which readers relied on as fact.<ref name=Geerhart/> Her husband ] issued a public statement at the time, saying they would be pleased only if this were the last bomb test ever.<ref name=Geerhart/> Hayworth was furious to be used in this way. | |||
Her sexy, glamorous appeal was most noted in ]'s ] '']'' (1946) with ], which caused censors some consternation. The role, in which Hayworth wore ] and performed a legendary one-glove striptease, "Put The Blame On Mame", made her into a cultural icon as a '']''.<ref name="Ware"/> | |||
Her biographer Barbara Leaming had a later interview with Welles in which he recalled, | |||
<blockquote>"... the angriest was when she found out that they’d put her on the atom bomb. Rita almost went insane, she was so angry. She was so shocked by it! Rita was the kind of person that kind of thing would hurt more than anybody. She wanted to go to Washington to hold a press conference, but Harry Cohn (president of Columbia Pictures) wouldn’t let her because it would be unpatriotic.”<ref>Barbara Leaming, ''If This Was Happiness: A Biography of Rita Hayworth'' (New York: Viking, 1989), pp. 129-130</ref></blockquote>Recent research documents that only the name "Gilda" was put on the bomb; no image of Hayworth was used.<ref name=Geerhart>, Knol, accessed 21 March 2012</ref><ref Name="Note"/> | |||
] | |||
A year later, Hayworth's performance in '']'' (1947), directed by her husband ], was critically acclaimed.<ref Name="Note"/> The film's failure at the box office was attributed in part to Welles' having had Hayworth's famous red hair cut short and died platinum blonde for the role. Cohn had not been consulted and was furious that Hayworth's image was changed. | |||
] | |||
Also in 1947, Hayworth was featured in a ''Life'' cover story by Winthrop Sargeant, which led to her nickname as "The "Love Goddess".<ref>Winthrop Sargeant, “The Cult of the Love Goddess in America,” ''Life Magazine,'' 10 November 1947</ref> This term was adopted and used later as the title of a biopic and of a biography about her. In a 1980s interview, Hayworth said, "Everybody else does nude scenes, but I don't. I never made nude movies. I didn't have to do that. I danced. I was provocative, I guess, in some things. But I was not completely exposed."<ref>Morella and Epstein (1983), ''Rita,'' p. 234</ref> | |||
While ''Gilda'' was in release, it was widely reported that an atomic bomb that was scheduled to be tested at ] in the Pacific Ocean's ] would bear an image of Hayworth, a reference to her ] status. Although the gesture was undoubtedly meant as a compliment,<ref name="NYT obit"/> Hayworth was deeply offended. Orson Welles, then married to Hayworth, recalled her anger in an interview with biographer ]: "Rita used to fly into terrible rages all the time, but the angriest was when she found out that they'd put her on the atom bomb. Rita almost went insane, she was so angry.... She wanted to go to Washington to hold a press conference, but Harry Cohn wouldn't let her because it would be unpatriotic." Welles tried to persuade Hayworth that the whole business was not a publicity stunt on Cohn's part, that it was simply homage to her from the flight crew.<ref name="Leaming Hayworth"/>{{Rp|129–130}} | |||
Her next film, '']'' (1948), again with Glenn Ford, was the first film co-produced by Columbia and Hayworth's own production company, The Beckworth Corporation (named for her and Orson's daughter Rebecca); it was Columbia's biggest moneymaker for that year. She received a percentage of the profits from this and all her subsequent films until 1955, when she dissolved Beckworth to pay off debts she owed to Columbia. {{Citation needed|date=February 2011}} | |||
On the June 30, 1946, broadcast of '']'', Welles said of the imminent test, "I want my daughter to be able to tell her daughter that grandmother's picture was on the last atom bomb ever to explode."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/1946OrsonWellesCommentaries|title=1946 Orson Welles Commentaries|date=June 30, 1946|publisher=]|access-date=March 11, 2015}}</ref> | |||
===Struggles with Columbia=== | |||
Hayworth had a strained relationship with Columbia Pictures for many years. In 1943, she was suspended without pay for nine weeks because she refused to appear in '']''.<ref>"Screen News Here and in Hollywood," ''New York Times,'' 22 March 1943.</ref> (During this period in Hollywood, actors did not get to choose their films; they were on salary rather than receiving a fixed amount per picture.) | |||
] ever to be detonated was decorated with a photograph of Hayworth cut from the June 1946 issue of '']'' magazine. Above it was stenciled the device's nickname, "Gilda" - the name of the film in which she was starring at the time - in two-inch black letters.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://conelrad.blogspot.com/2013/08/atomic-goddess-revisited-rita-hayworths.html|title=Atomic Goddess Revisited: Rita Hayworth's Bomb Image Found|date=August 13, 2013|publisher=CONELRAD Adjacent (blog)|access-date=March 11, 2015}}</ref> | |||
In 1947, Hayworth's new contract with Columbia provided a salary of US$250,000 plus 50% of film profits.<ref>Hedda Hopper, AP, October 22, 1947. Accessed June 4, 2009</ref> In 1951 Columbia alleged it had $800,000 invested in properties for her, including the film she walked out on that year. She left Hollywood to marry Prince ]. She was suspended for failing to report to work on the film ''].'' | |||
] | |||
Hayworth's performance in Welles' 1947 film '']'' was critically acclaimed.<ref name="Ware"/> The film's failure at the box office was attributed in part to Hayworth's famous red hair being cut short and bleached platinum blonde for the role. Cohn had not been consulted and was furious that Hayworth's image was changed.<ref>{{cite book |last=Thomas |first=Bob |author-link=Bob Thomas (reporter) |title=King Cohn: The Life and Times of Hollywood Mogul Harry Cohn |url=https://archive.org/details/kingcohn00bobt_0/ |year=1990 |publisher=McGraw-Hill |isbn=978-0-070-64261-4 |url-access=registration}}</ref>{{Rp|221}} | |||
Also in 1947, Hayworth was featured in a ''Life'' cover story by ] that resulted in her being nicknamed "The Love Goddess".<ref>{{cite magazine|last=Sargeant|first=Winthrop|author-link=Winthrop Sargeant|date=November 10, 1947|title=The Cult of the Love Goddess in America|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=p1EEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA80|magazine=Life|volume=23|issue=19|pages=80–96|access-date=March 7, 2015}}</ref> The term was adopted and used later as the title of a biopic and of a biography about her. In a 1980s interview, Hayworth said, "Everybody else does nude scenes, but I don't. I never made nude movies. I didn't have to do that. I danced. I was provocative, I guess, in some things. But I was not completely exposed."<ref name="Morella"/>{{Rp|234}} | |||
In 1952 she refused to report for work because "she objected to the script."<ref>"Hayworth, Studio Agree Once Again," New York Times, January 9, 1952</ref> In 1955, she sued to get out of a contract with the studio, but asked for her $150,000 salary, alleging filming failed to start when agreed.<ref>"Rita Hayworth Files Suit to End Film Contract", ''Los Angeles Times'', April 9, 1955</ref> She said, <blockquote>"I was in Switzerland when they sent me the script for ''Affair in Trinidad'' and I threw it across the room. But I did the picture, and '']'' too. I came back to Columbia because I wanted to work and first, see, I had to finish that goddamn contract, which is how ] ''owned'' me!"<ref name="John Hallowell 1970">John Hallowell, "Rita Hayworth: Don't Put the Blame on Me, Boys", ''New York Times'', October 25, 1970</ref> "Harry Cohn thought of me as one of the people he could exploit," said Hayworth, "and make a lot of money. And I did make a lot of money for him, but not much for me."<ref>Nancy Anderson, Copley News Service, 11 February 1972. Accessed June 2, 2009.</ref></blockquote> | |||
Her next film, '']'' (1948) with Glenn Ford, was the first film co-produced by Columbia and Hayworth's production company, The Beckworth Corporation (named for Rebecca, her daughter with Welles). It was Columbia's biggest moneymaker that year. She received a percentage of the profits from this and all her subsequent films until 1954, when she dissolved Beckworth to pay off debts.<ref>{{cite book|last=Dick|first=Bernard F.|date=1993|title=The Merchant Prince of Poverty Row: Harry Cohn of Columbia Pictures|location=Lexington|publisher=University Press of Kentucky|page=130|isbn=978-0813118413}}</ref> | |||
Years after her film career had ended and Cohn was dead, Hayworth still resented her treatment by him and Columbia.<blockquote>"I used to have to punch a time clock at Columbia," noted Hayworth. "Every day of my life. That's what it was like. I was under exclusive contract, like they owned me, ... I think he had my dressing room bugged... He was very possessive of me as a person, he didn't want me to go out with anybody, have any friends. No one can live that way. So I fought him... You want to know what I think of Harry Cohn? He was a monster."<ref name="Hallowell">John Hallowell, "Rita: Hollywood Still Is Her Town But No One Knows She's There", ''St. Petersburg Times,'' 23 June 1968. Accessed June 4, 2009. </ref></blockquote> | |||
===The Hollywood princess=== | |||
]'' (1946)]] | |||
{{more citations needed|section|date=May 2020}} | |||
Hayworth resented that the studio failed to train her to sing or to encourage her to learn how to sing.<ref>] ''Rita Hayworth: Portrait of a Love Goddess'', 1977, p. 103</ref> Although she appeared to sing in many of her films, she was usually dubbed. As the public did not know the secret, she was embarrassed to be asked to sing by troops at USO shows.<ref>Kobal (1977), ''Rita Hayworth'', p. 124</ref> <blockquote>"I wanted to study singing," Hayworth complained, "but Harry Cohn kept saying, 'Who needs it?' and the studio wouldn't pay for it. They had me so intimidated that I couldn't have done it anyway. They always said, 'Oh, no, we can't let you do it. There's no time for that; it has to be done right now!' I was under contract, and that was it."<ref>Kobal (1977), ''Rita Hayworth'', p. 104</ref></blockquote> | |||
] at their wedding reception in the garden of the ] near Cannes, 1949]] | |||
In 1948, at the height of her fame, Hayworth traveled to ] and was introduced to Prince ]. They began a year-long courtship, and were married on May 27, 1949. Hayworth left Hollywood and sailed for France, breaking her contract with Columbia. | |||
Cohn had a reputation as a taskmaster, but he had his own criticisms of Hayworth. He had invested heavily in her before she began a reckless affair with the married Aly Khan, and it could have caused a backlash against her career and Columbia's success. For instance, an article in the British '']'' called for a boycott of Hayworth's films. It said, "Hollywood must be told its already tarnished reputation will sink to rock bottom if it restores this reckless woman to a place among its stars."<ref>, AP, April 30, 1951</ref> Cohn expressed his frustration with Hayworth's judgment in an interview with '']'' magazine. | |||
<blockquote>"Hayworth might be worth ten million dollars today easily! She owned 25% of the profits with her own company and had hit after hit and she had to get married and had to get out of the business and took a suspension because she fell in love again! In five years, at two pictures a year, at 25%! Think of what she could have made! But she didn't make pictures! She took two or three suspensions! She got mixed up with different characters! Unpredictable!"<ref>Kobal (1977), ''Rita Hayworth'', p. 163</ref></blockquote> | |||
Because Hayworth was already one of the best-known celebrities in the world, the courtship and the wedding received enormous press coverage around the world. Because she was still legally married to second husband Orson Welles during the early days of her courtship with the prince, Hayworth also received some negative backlash, causing some American fans to boycott her pictures. On December 28, 1949, Hayworth gave birth to the couple's only child, Princess ]. | |||
===Later career=== | |||
After the collapse of her marriage to Aly Khan in 1951, Hayworth returned to the United States with great fanfare, where she starred in a string of hit films: '']'' (1952) with favorite co-star ]; and in 1953 had two films released: ''],'' with ] and ]; and ''],'' with ] and ]. Her performance in the latter film won critical acclaim. | |||
Though Hayworth was anxious to start a new life abroad, away from Hollywood, Aly Khan's flamboyant lifestyle and duties proved too difficult for Hayworth. She struggled to fit in with his friends, and found it difficult to learn French. Aly Khan was also known in circles as a playboy, and it was suspected that he had been unfaithful to Hayworth during the marriage. | |||
She was off the big screen for another four years, due mainly to a tumultuous marriage to the singer ]. After making '']'' (1957) with ] and ], and her last musical '']'' (1957) with ] and ], Hayworth finally left Columbia. | |||
In 1951, Hayworth set sail with her two daughters for New York. Although the couple did reconcile for a short time, they divorced in 1953. | |||
She received good reviews for her acting in '']'' (1958), with ] and ], and '']'' (1960) with ]. She continued working throughout the 1960s. In 1962, her planned Broadway debut in ''Step on a Crack'' was cancelled for undisclosed health reasons.<ref>, AP, August 24, 1962.</ref> She continued to act in films until the early 1970s. She made a well-publicized 1971 television appearance on '']''. Her last film was '']'' (1972). | |||
===Returning to Columbia=== | |||
==Physical appearance== | |||
{{more citations needed|section|date=January 2018}} | |||
After the collapse of her marriage to Khan, Rita Hayworth was forced{{what?|date=May 2024}} to return to Hollywood to star in her "comeback" picture, '']'' (1952) which again paired her with Glenn Ford. Director ] recalled that Hayworth seemed "rather frightened at the approach of doing another picture". She continued to clash with Columbia boss Harry Cohn and was placed on suspension during filming. Nevertheless, the picture was highly publicized. The picture ended up grossing $1 million more than her previous blockbuster, ''Gilda''. | |||
She continued to star in a string of successful pictures. In 1953, she had two films released: '']'' with ] and ], and '']'' with ] and ]. She was off the big screen for another four years, mainly because of a tumultuous marriage to the singer ]. During her marriage to Haymes, she was involved in much negative publicity, which significantly lessened her appeal {{citation needed|date=May 2024}}. By the time she returned to the screen for '']'' (1957) with ] and ], ] had become Columbia's top female star. Her last musical was '']'' (1957) with ] and Novak (Hayworth had ] in both pictures but actually played a supporting role in ''Pal Joey''). Hayworth then left Columbia for good. | |||
Hayworth was a top glamour girl in the 1940s, a pin-up girl for military servicemen and a beauty icon for women. At 5'6" (168 ]) and 120 lb (55 ])<ref name="meet">Jerry Mason. ''The Spokesman-Review''. January 3, 1942.</ref> she was tall enough for her height to be a concern for dancing partners such as ]. Hayworth got her big motion picture break because she was willing to change her hair color, whereas other actresses were not. She reportedly changed her hair color eight times in eight movies.<ref>John Chapman, "Red Heads", ''Chicago Daily Tribune'', May 25, 1941</ref> | |||
In 1949 Hayworth's lips were voted best in the world by the Artists League of America.<ref> AP, February 17, 1949. Accessed June 13, 2009.</ref> She had a modeling contract with ] to promote its Tru-Color lipsticks and Pan-Stik make-up. | |||
Barbara Leaming writes in her biography of Hayworth, ''If This Was Happiness: A Biography of Rita Hayworth'' (1989) that, due to her fondness for alcohol and the stresses of her life, Hayworth aged before her time. Re-appearing in New York in 1956 to begin work on her first film in three years, Hayworth was described by the following: "despite the artfully applied make-up and shoulder-length red hair, there was no concealing the ravages of drink and stress. Deep lines had crept around her eyes and mouth, and she appeared worn, exhausted, older than her thirty-eight years." <ref>Barbara Leaming (1989),''If This Was Happiness: A biography of Rita Hayworth''</ref> Leaming wrote that during the filming of ''],'' Hayworth heard a comment that she should hurry up as "no amount of time was going to make her look any younger."{{citation needed|date=March 2012}} In ] the following year filming ''],'' she was signing autographs when she heard a fan say, "She looks so old."{{citation needed|date=March 2012}} | |||
She received good reviews for her performances in '']'' (1958), with ] and ], '']'' (1959) with ] and '']'' (1960). She continued working throughout the 1960s. In 1962, her planned Broadway debut in ''Step on a Crack'' was cancelled for undisclosed health reasons.<ref>{{Dead link|date=October 2022 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}, AP, August 24, 1962.</ref> In 1964 ] was released, in which John Wayne was her co-star and for which she received a Golden Globe nomination as Best Actress in a dramatic role. '']'' (1965) paired her, for the last time, with good friend Glenn Ford. She continued to act in films until the early 1970s. She made comedic television appearances on '']'' and '']'' in the 1970s. Her last film was '']'' (1972), a western.{{citation needed|date=January 2018}} | |||
==Personal life== | |||
In 1941 Hayworth said she was the antithesis of the characters she played. "I naturally am very shy... and I suffer from an inferiority complex."<ref>Louella O. Parsons, "Rita, Shy Off Set, Now Groomed for Vamp Role", ''St. Petersburg Times'', May 25, 1941. Accessed June 2, 2009.</ref> She once complained that "en fell in love with Gilda, but they wake up with me." In 1970 she remarked that the only films she could watch without laughing were the dance musicals she made with ]. "I guess the only jewels of my life," Hayworth said, "were the pictures I made with Fred Astaire."<ref name="ReferenceA">John Hallowell. "Rita Hayworth, "Don't Put the Blame on Me, Boys", ''New York Times'', October 25, 1970</ref> | |||
Hayworth's two younger brothers, Vernon and ], both served in ]. Vernon left the U.S. Army in 1946 with several medals, including the ], and later married Susan Vail, a dancer. Eduardo Cansino, Jr. followed Hayworth into acting; he was also under contract with Columbia Pictures. In 1950 he made his screen debut in ''Magic Carpet''. | |||
===Marriage and family=== | |||
Hayworth was married and divorced five times. She said, "Basically, I am a good, gentle person, but I am attracted to mean personalities."<ref>, ''People,'' July 15, 1974. Accessed June 6, 2009.</ref> | |||
*] (1937–1942): When Hayworth was 18, she married Edward Judson in 1937, an oilman turned promoter who was more than twice her age. They eloped in Las Vegas. He had played a major role in launching her acting career. A shrewd businessman, he was domineering and became her manager for months before he proposed. "He helped me with my career," Hayworth conceded after they divorced, "and helped himself to my money." She alleged Judson compelled her to transfer considerable property to him and promise to pay him $12,000 under threats that he would do her "great bodily harm."<ref>"Rita Hayworth Tells of Threats by Ex-Mate", ''Los Angeles Times,'' July 3, 1943, A16</ref> She filed for divorce from him on February 24, 1942, with the complaint of cruelty. She noted to the press that his work took him to Oklahoma and Texas, while she lived and worked in Hollywood. Judson was as old as her father, who was enraged by the marriage, which caused a rift between Hayworth and her parents until the divorce. Judson had failed to tell Hayworth before they married that he had previously been twice married.<ref>John Kobal, ''Rita Hayworth,'' Berkley: 1983, p. 62.</ref> When she left him, she literally had no money. She asked her friend, ], if she could eat at his home. | |||
*] (1943–1948): Hayworth married Orson Welles on September 7, 1943. None of her colleagues knew about the planned marriage (before a judge) until she announced it the day before they got married. For the civil ceremony, she wore a beige suit, ruffled white blouse, and a veil. A few hours after they got married, they returned to work at the studio. They had a daughter, ] (1944–2004). They struggled in their marriage. Hayworth said that Welles did not want to be tied down: | |||
<blockquote>"During the entire period of our marriage", she declared, "he showed no interest in establishing a home. When I suggested purchasing a home, he told me he didn't want the responsibility. Mr. Welles told me he never should have married in the first place; that it interfered with his freedom in his way of life."<ref name="UZ8VAAAAIBAJ 1947"> AP, November 10, 1947; accessed June 6, 2009</ref></blockquote> | |||
*] (1949–1953): In 1948 she left her film career to marry Prince Aly Khan a son of ], the leader of the ] sect of ]. They were married on May 27, 1949. Her bridal trousseau was ]'s ]. | |||
Aly Khan and his family were heavily involved in horse racing, owning and racing horses. Hayworth had no interest in the sport but became a member of the ]. Her filly ] won several races in ] and notably finished second in the 1949 ].<ref>Staff writer, , ''Time'' October 17, 1949. Accessed May 29, 2009.</ref> | |||
In 1951, while still married to Hayworth, Khan was spotted dancing with the actress ] in the nightclub where he and his wife had met. Hayworth threatened to divorce him in ]. In early May she moved to Nevada to establish legal residence to qualify for a divorce. She stayed at ] with their daughter, saying there was a threat that the child would be kidnapped. Hayworth filed for divorce from Khan on September 2, 1951, on the grounds of "extreme cruelty, entirely mental in nature."<ref>"Rita Hayworth Files Divorce Action in Reno," ''Los Angeles Times'', September 2, 1951</ref> | |||
Hayworth once said she might convert to Islam but did not. During the custody fight over their daughter Princess ], the Prince said he wanted her raised as a Muslim; Hayworth (who had been raised a Roman Catholic) wanted the child to be a Christian.<ref>, AP, October 31, 1953. Accessed June 13, 2009.</ref> | |||
Hayworth rejected his offer of $1,000,000 if she would rear Yasmin as a Muslim from age seven and allow her to go to Europe to visit with him for two or three months each year. | |||
<blockquote>"Nothing will make me give up Yasmin's chance to live here in America among our precious freedoms and habits," declared Hayworth. "While I respect the Muslim faith and all other faiths it is my earnest wish that my daughter be raised as a normal, healthy American girl in the Christian faith. There isn't any amount of money in the entire world for which it is worth sacrificing this child's privilege of living as a normal Christian girl here in the United States. There just isn't anything else in the world that can compare with her sacred chance to do that. And I'm going to give it to Yasmin regardless of what it costs."<ref>"Rita Says No to Million", ''Sydney Morning Herald'', September 13, 1953. Accessed June 13, 2009. </ref></blockquote> | |||
*] (1953–1955): When Hayworth and Haymes first met, he was still married and his singing career was waning. When she showed up at the clubs, he got a larger audience. Haymes was desperate for money, as two of his former wives were taking legal action against him for unpaid child support. His financial problems were so bad he could not return to California without being arrested.<ref>"Dick Haymes Faces Arrest Over Alimony", ''Los Angeles Times'', October 5, 1956</ref> On July 7, 1954, his ex-wife ] got a bench warrant for his arrest, because he owed her $3,800 in alimony. Less than a week prior, his other ex-wife, ], also got a bench warrant because she said he owed $4,800 in support payments for their three children.<ref>," AP, July 7, 1954.</ref> Hayworth ended up paying most of Haymes's debts. | |||
Haymes was born in Argentina, and did not have solid proof of American citizenship. Not long after he met Hayworth, US officials initiated proceedings to have him deported to Argentina for being an illegal alien. He hoped Hayworth could influence the government and keep him in the United States. When she assumed responsibility for his citizenship, a bond was formed that led to marriage. The two were married on September 24, 1953 at the ], and their wedding procession went through the casino. | |||
From the start of their marriage, Haymes was deeply indebted to the ] (IRS). When Hayworth took time off from attending his comeback performances in ], the audiences sharply declined. Haymes's $5000 weekly salary was attached by the IRS to pay a $100,000 bill, and he was unable to pay his pianist. Haymes' ex-wives demanded money while Hayworth publicly bemoaned her own lack of alimony from Aly Khan. At one point, the couple was effectively imprisoned in a hotel room for 24 hours in ] at the Hotel Madison as sheriff's deputies waited outside threatening to arrest Haymes for outstanding debts. At the same time, Hayworth was fighting a severe custody battle with Khan, during which she reported death threats against their children. While living in New York, Hayworth sent the children to live with their nanny in ]. They were found and photographed by a reporter from '']'' magazine. | |||
After a tumultuous two years together, Haymes struck Hayworth in the face in 1955 in public at the Coconut Grove nightclub in Los Angeles. Hayworth packed her bags, walked out, and never returned. The assault and crisis shook her, and her doctor ordered her to remain in bed for several days.<ref>, UP, August 30, 1955.</ref> | |||
Hayworth was short of money after her marriage to Haymes. She had failed to gain child support from Aly Khan. She sued ] for back payment of child support which she claimed had never been paid. This effort was unsuccessful and added to her stress. | |||
*] (1958–1961): Hayworth began a relationship with film producer ], whom she went on to marry on February 2, 1958. He put her in one of her last major films, '']''. On September 1, 1961, Hayworth filed for divorce, alleging extreme mental cruelty. He later wrote ''Rita Hayworth: A Memoir,'' in which he suggested their marriage collapsed because he wanted Hayworth to continue making movies, while she wanted them both to retire from Hollywood. | |||
In his book, ''In the Arena'', ] writes about Hayworth's brief marriage to Hill. One night Heston and his wife Lydia joined the couple for dinner at a restaurant in Spain, with the director ] and the actor ], Hayworth's co-star in '']''. Heston wrote that the occasion "turned into the single most embarrassing evening of my life", describing how Hill heaped "obscene abuse" on Hayworth until she was "reduced to a helpless flood of tears, her face buried in her hands". Heston writes how the others sat stunned, witnesses to a "marital massacre" and, though he was "strongly tempted to slug him" (Hill), Heston left with his wife Lydia after she stood up, almost in tears. Heston wrote, "I'm ashamed of walking away from Miss Hayworth's humiliation. I never saw her again."<ref>{{cite book|last=Heston|first=Charlton|title=In the Arena: An Autobiography|edition=1|year=1997|publisher=Berkley Trade|isbn=1-57297-267-X|page=253}}</ref> | |||
===Health problems=== | |||
Hayworth struggled with alcohol throughout her life. Her daughter Yasmin Aga Khan said, | |||
<blockquote>"I remember as a child that she had a drinking problem. She had difficulty coping with the ups and downs of the business... As a child, I thought, 'She has a drinking problem and she's an alcoholic.' That was very clear and I thought, 'Well, there's not much I can do. I can just, sort of, stand by and watch.' It's very difficult, seeing your mother, going through her emotional problems and drinking and then behaving in that manner;... Her condition became quite bad. It worsened and she did have an alcoholic breakdown and landed in the hospital."<ref>Pia Lindstrom, "Alzheimer's Fight in Her Mother's Name", ''New York Times'', February 23, 1997. Accessed June 6, 2009.</ref></blockquote> | |||
In 1972, Hayworth was 54 years old and wanted to retire from acting, but she needed money so signed up for '']''. The experience exposed her poor health and worsening mental state. As she could not remember lines, they filmed her scenes one line at a time. | |||
The following year Hayworth agreed to do one more movie, '']'' (1973). Due to worse health, she abandoned the movie set, and returned to the United States. She never returned to acting.<ref> TCM.com. Accessed June 14, 2009 </ref> | |||
In March 1974, both her brothers died within a week of each other, which caused her great sadness and led to heavy drinking. In 1976 at London's Heathrow Airport, Hayworth was removed from a TWA flight after having an angry outburst while traveling with her agent. "Miss Hayworth had been drinking when she boarded the plane," revealed a TWA flight attendant, "and had several free drinks during the flight." The event attracted much negative publicity; a disturbing photograph was published in newspapers.<ref>, ''St. Petersburg Times'', January 21, 1976.</ref> | |||
Hayworth's alcoholism hid symptoms of what was eventually understood to be ]. "For several years in the 1970s, she had been misdiagnosed as an alcoholic."<ref>, AP, May 16, 1987.</ref> "It was the outbursts," said her daughter, "She'd fly into a rage. I can't tell you. I thought it was alcoholism-alcoholic dementia. We all thought that. The papers picked that up, of course. You can't imagine the relief just in getting a diagnosis. We had a name at last, Alzheimer's! Of course, that didn't really come until the last seven or eight years. She wasn't diagnosed as having Alzheimer's until 1980. There were two decades of hell before that."<ref>Paul Hendrickson, "Alzheimer's: A Daughter's Nightmare", ''Los Angeles Times'', April 11, 1989</ref> | |||
In July 1981, Hayworth's health had deteriorated to the point where a judge in Los Angeles Superior Court ruled that she should be placed under the care of her daughter, Princess Yasmin Khan of New York City.<ref> AP, July 23, 1981</ref> Hayworth lived in an apartment at ] on ] next to her daughter, who arranged for care for her mother through her final years. | |||
===Death=== | |||
], California]] | |||
Rita Hayworth lapsed into a semicoma in February 1987. She died at age 68 from ] a few months later on May 14, 1987. A funeral service was held on May 19, 1987, at the Church of the Good Shepherd in ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/1017.html|title=Rita Hayworth, Movie Legend, Dies|last=Krebs|first=Albin|date=1987-05-16|publisher=nytimes.com|accessdate=26 September 2011}}</ref> Pallbearers included actors ], ], ] and the choreographer ]. She was interred in ]. Her headstone includes the inscription: "To yesterday's companionship and tomorrow's reunion." | |||
"Rita Hayworth was one of our country's most beloved stars", said President ], who had been an actor at the same time as Hayworth. <blockquote>"Glamorous and talented, she gave us many wonderful moments on stage and screen and delighted audiences from the time she was a young girl. In her later years, Rita became known for her struggle with ]. Her courage and candor, and that of her family, were a great public service in bringing worldwide attention to a disease which we all hope will soon be cured. Nancy and I are saddened by Rita's death. She was a friend who we will miss. We extend our deep sympathy to her family."<ref>Krebs, Albin. , '']'', May 16, 1987. Accessed May 29, 2009.</ref></blockquote> | |||
===Struggles with Columbia Pictures=== | |||
==Awards== | |||
] | ] | ||
* Nomination for ] in '']'' (1964) (] title: ''Magnificent Showman''), which also featured ].{{Citation needed|date=March 2010}} | |||
* 1977, National Screen Heritage Award. | |||
* Hayworth is included as one of the ]'s ]. | |||
Hayworth had a strained relationship with Columbia Pictures for many years. In 1943, she was suspended without pay for nine weeks because she refused to appear in '']''.<ref>{{cite news |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |date=March 22, 1943 |title=Screen News Here and in Hollywood |newspaper=The New York Times }}</ref> During this period in Hollywood, contract players could not choose their films; they were on salary rather than receiving a fixed amount per picture. | |||
==Legacy== | |||
* A fund raiser for the ] is named in her honor by her daughter, ], who has been the hostess for these events and a major sponsor of Alzheimer's Disease charities and awareness programs. | |||
* The film '']'' (2009) describes how Hayworth took up painting while struggling with Alzheimer's and produced art.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rosalia-gitau/art-therapy-for-alzheimer_b_495914.html|title=Art Therapy for Alzheimer's|publisher=HuffingtonPost|author=Rosalia Gitau|date=March 11, 2010}}</ref> | |||
In 1947, Hayworth's new contract with Columbia provided a salary of $250,000 plus 50% of films' profits.<ref>{{cite news|last=Hopper|first=Hedda|author-link=Hedda Hopper|date=October 22, 1947|title=Looking at Hollywood|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=1a0LAAAAIBAJ&dq=rita%20hayworth%20250000&pg=3936%2C2915865|newspaper=]|access-date=June 4, 2009}}{{Dead link|date=October 2022 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> In 1951, Columbia alleged it had $800,000 invested in properties for her, including the film that she had walked out on that year. Hayworth left Hollywood to marry Prince Aly Khan and was suspended for failing to report to work on the film ''Affair in Trinidad''. In 1952, Hayworth refused to report for work because she objected to the script.<ref>{{cite news|date=January 9, 1952|title=Hayworth, Studio Agree Once Again|newspaper=The New York Times}}</ref> She said, | |||
==In popular culture== | |||
* ] portrayed Hayworth in the television movie ''Rita Hayworth: The Love Goddess'' (1983). | |||
<blockquote>I was in Switzerland when they sent me the script for ''Affair in Trinidad'' and I threw it across the room. But I did the picture, and ''Pal Joey'', too. I came back to Columbia because I wanted to work and first, see, I had to finish that goddamn contract, which is how Harry Cohn ''owned'' me!"<ref name="Hallowell"/></blockquote> | |||
* Actress Veronica Watt portrayed her in the film '']'' (2006). | |||
In 1955, she sued Columbia Pictures to be released from her contract, but asked for her $150,000 salary, alleging that the filming failed to start on ''Joseph and His Brethren'' (1961) when agreed. The film was later filmed in 1961 by a foreign company as '']'' (film).<ref>{{cite news|date=April 9, 1955|title=Rita Hayworth Files Suit to End Film Contract|newspaper=]}}</ref> Cohn had a reputation as a taskmaster, but he had his own criticisms of Hayworth. He had invested heavily in her before she began an affair with the married Aly Khan, and it could have caused a backlash against her career and Columbia's success. For instance, an article in the British periodical '']'' called for a boycott of Hayworth's films: | |||
<blockquote>Hollywood must be told its already tarnished reputation will sink to rock bottom if it restores this reckless woman to a place among its stars."<ref>{{cite news|date=April 30, 1951|title=Call for Boycott of Rita Hayworth|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=RLEUAAAAIBAJ&dq=rita%20hayworth%20boycott&pg=5716%2C6975581 |newspaper=] (])|access-date=March 8, 2015}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
Cohn expressed his frustration in a 1957 interview with '']'' magazine: | |||
<blockquote>Hayworth might be worth ten million dollars today easily! She owned 25% of the profits with her own company and had hit after hit and she had to get married and had to get out of the business and took a suspension because she fell in love again! In five years, at two pictures a year, at 25%! Think of what she could have made! But she didn't make pictures! She took two or three suspensions! She got mixed up with different characters! Unpredictable!"<ref name="Kobal"/>{{Rp|163}}</blockquote> | |||
Years after her film career had ended and long after Cohn had died, Hayworth still resented her treatment by both him and Columbia. She spoke bluntly in a 1968 interview: | |||
<blockquote>I used to have to punch a time clock at Columbia. Every day of my life. That's what it was like. I was under exclusive contract, like they owned me ... I think he had my dressing room bugged ... He was very possessive of me as a person, he didn't want me to go out with anybody, have any friends. No one can live that way. So I fought him ... You want to know what I think of Harry Cohn? He was a monster.<ref>{{cite news|last=Hallowell |first=John|date=June 23, 1968|title=Rita: Hollywood Still Is Her Town But No One Knows She's There|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ViMMAAAAIBAJ&dq=rita%20hayworth%20said&pg=6610%2C1537036|newspaper=St. Petersburg Times|access-date=June 4, 2009}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
Later on, in 1972 she said : | |||
<blockquote>Harry Cohn thought of me as one of the people he could exploit, and make a lot of money... And I did make a lot of money for him, but not much for me.<ref>{{cite news |last=Anderson|first=Nancy|date=February 11, 1972|title=Rita Hayworth Still Ranks as Beauty|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=kRUHAAAAIBAJ&dq=rita%20hayworth%20harry%20cohn&pg=5564%2C1398073 |newspaper=]|access-date=June 2, 2009}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
Hayworth resented the fact that the studio had failed to train her to sing or even to encourage her to learn how to sing.<ref name="Kobal">{{cite book|last=Kobal|first=John|author-link=John Kobal|date=1982|title=Rita Hayworth: The Time, the Place, and the Woman|location=New York|publisher=Berkley Books|isbn=0-425-05634-1|url=https://archive.org/details/ritahayworthtime00koba}}</ref>{{Rp|103}} Although she appeared to sing in many of her films, she was usually dubbed. Because the public did not know her secret, she was embarrassed to be asked to sing by troops at ] shows.<ref name="Kobal"/>{{Rp|124}} | |||
<blockquote>"I wanted to study singing", Hayworth complained, "but Harry Cohn kept saying, 'Who needs it?' and the studio wouldn't pay for it. They had me so intimidated that I couldn't have done it anyway. They always said, 'Oh, no, we can't let you do it. There's no time for that; it has to be done right now!' I was under contract, and that was it."<ref name="Kobal"/>{{Rp|104}}</blockquote> | |||
===Public image=== | |||
Hayworth was a top glamour girl in the 1940s, a pin-up girl for military servicemen and a beauty icon for women. At {{height|ft=5|in=6}} and {{convert|120|lb|abbr=on}},<ref name="meet">{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=dypWAAAAIBAJ&pg=4691%2C819313 |newspaper=Spokesman-Review |location=Spokane, Washington |agency=(This Week)|last=Mason |first=Jerry |title=Meet Rita Hayworth |date=January 3, 1942 |page=13}}</ref> she was tall enough to be a concern for dancing partners such as Fred Astaire. She reportedly changed her hair color eight times in eight movies.<ref>Chapman, John. "Red Heads", ''Chicago Daily Tribune'', May 25, 1941.</ref> | |||
In 1949, Hayworth's lips were voted best in the world by the Artists League of America.<ref>, AP, February 17, 1949. Accessed June 13, 2009.</ref> She had a modeling contract with ] to promote its Tru-Color lipsticks and Pan-Stik make-up.{{citation needed|date=February 2022}} | |||
==Personal life== | |||
===Marriages, relationships and family=== | |||
] at the ], 1942]] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
Hayworth confided to Orson Welles that her father began to sexually abuse her as a child when they were touring together as the Dancing Cansinos.<ref name=":0" /><ref>{{Cite news|first=Carol |last=Kleiman |title=Behind Glamor are Scars of Incest |url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1989-11-14-8901310071-story.html|access-date=2021-05-08|work=]}}</ref> Her biographer, ], wrote that her mother may have been the only person to know; she slept in the same bed as her daughter to try to protect her. Leaming wrote that the abuse experienced by Hayworth as a young girl contributed to her difficulty in relationships as an adult.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Braudy|first=Susan|date=1989-11-19|title=What We Have Here is a Very Sad Story |language=en-US|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1989/11/19/books/what-we-have-here-is-a-very-sad-story.html|access-date=2021-05-08|issn=0362-4331}}</ref> | |||
In 1941, Hayworth said she was the antithesis of the characters she played: "I naturally am very shy ... and I suffer from an ]."<ref>] "Rita, Shy Off Set, Now Groomed for Vamp Role", ''St. Petersburg Times'', May 25, 1941. Accessed June 2, 2009.</ref> Her provocative role in ''Gilda'', in particular, was responsible for people expecting her to be what she was not. Hayworth once said, with some bitterness, "Men go to bed with Gilda, but wake up with me."<ref name="Leaming Hayworth" />{{Rp|122}} She said, "Basically, I am a good, gentle person, but I am attracted to mean personalities."<ref>, ''People'', July 15, 1974. Accessed June 6, 2009.</ref> | |||
Hayworth's two younger brothers, Eduardo Cansino Jr. and Vernon Cansino, both served in ]. Vernon left the United States Army in 1946 with several medals, including the ], and later married Susan Vail, a dancer. Eduardo Jr. followed Hayworth into acting; he was also under contract with Columbia Pictures. In 1950, he made his screen debut in ''The Great Adventures of Captain Kidd''.<ref>{{cite book|last=Ellenberger|first=Allan R.|year=2001|title=Celebrities in Los Angeles Cemeteries: A Directory|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZraJCgAAQBAJ&q=eduardo+cansino+Jr.+acting+debut|publisher=McFarland|page=117|isbn=978-0-786-45019-0}}</ref> | |||
Hayworth married and divorced five times in twenty four years. She had affairs with several of her leading men, most notably with ] in 1942, during the filming of '']''.<ref>{{cite news |date=August 10, 1999 |title=From the Archives: Victor Mature, Beefcake Star of '40s and '50s, Dies|url=https://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-victor-mature-19990810-story.html |work=] |access-date=October 23, 2019 }}</ref> | |||
She had two daughters and two grandsons, one by each daughter. Her older daughter, Rebecca Welles, (1944-2004)<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/2008/aug/29/documentary.orsonwelles | title=Who's the grandaddy? | newspaper=The Guardian | date=August 28, 2008 | last1=Thompson | first1=David }}</ref> had a son, Marc McKerrow, whom she gave birth to in 1966, and put up for adoption at birth.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Thompson |first=David |date=2008-08-28 |title=Who's the grandaddy? |language=en-GB |work=The Guardian |url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/2008/aug/29/documentary.orsonwelles |access-date=2023-11-24 |issn=0261-3077}}</ref> Marc had three children, and died at age 44 as a result of complications from a nocturnal seizure related to a serious car accident that he had when he was 21 years old.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Marc McKerrow Obituary (2010) - Great Falls, MT - Great Falls Tribune |url=https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/greatfallstribune/name/marc-mckerrow-obituary?id=48757857 |access-date=2023-11-24 |website=Legacy.com}}</ref> Marc is featured in the 2008 documentary '']''. Hayworth's younger daughter, ], had one son, Andrew Ali Aga Khan Embiricos, who died unmarried at age 25.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Rita Hayworth's Grandson, Andrew Embiricos, Dead |url=https://people.com/celebrity/rita-hayworths-grandson-andrew-embiricos-dead/ |access-date=2023-11-24 |website=Peoplemag |language=en}}</ref> | |||
====Edward Charles Judson==== | |||
]'', 1942]] | |||
When Hayworth was 18, she married Edward C. Judson, an oilman turned promoter who was more than twice her age. They married in Las Vegas. Judson, who helped launch her acting career, was a shrewd businessman, but domineering. "He helped me with my career", Hayworth conceded after they divorced, adding "and helped himself to my money." She alleged that Judson compelled her to transfer a considerable amount of her property to him, and she promised to pay him $12,000 under threats that he would do her "great bodily harm".<ref>"Rita Hayworth Tells of Threats by Ex-Mate", ''Los Angeles Times'', July 3, 1943, p. A16.</ref> | |||
Hayworth filed for divorce from him on February 24, 1942, with a complaint of cruelty. She noted to the press that his work took him to ] and ] while she lived and worked in Hollywood. Judson was as old as her father, who was enraged by the marriage, which caused a rift between Hayworth and her parents until the divorce. Judson had failed to tell Hayworth before they married that he had previously been married twice.<ref name="Kobal"/>{{Rp|62}} When she left him, she had no money; she asked her friend ] if she could eat at his home.{{citation needed|date=January 2018}} | |||
====Orson Welles==== | |||
] and Hayworth, with best man ], 1943]] | |||
Hayworth married ] on September 7, 1943, during the run of '']''.<ref>{{cite news |agency=] |title=Actor Orson Welles Weds Rita Hayworth. Couple Married In Superior Court At Santa Monica |url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9C05E4D9103CEE3BBC4053DFBF668388659EDE |quote=Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth were married today by Superior Court Judge Orlando Rhodes. ...|newspaper=The New York Times |date=September 8, 1943 |access-date=December 9, 2014 }}</ref> None of her colleagues knew about the planned wedding (before a judge) until she announced it the day before. For the civil ceremony, she wore a beige suit, a ruffled white blouse, and a veil. A few hours after they got married, they returned to work at the studio. They had a daughter, Rebecca, who was born on December 17, 1944, and died at the age of 59 on October 17, 2004. They struggled in their marriage, with Hayworth saying that Welles did not want to be tied down: | |||
<blockquote>During the entire period of our marriage, he showed no interest in establishing a home. When I suggested purchasing a home, he told me he didn't want the responsibility. Mr. Welles told me he never should have married in the first place; that it interfered with his freedom in his way of life.<ref name="UZ8VAAAAIBAJ 1947">{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=FdpXAAAAIBAJ&pg=3240%2C2754414 |newspaper=Spokane Daily Chronicle |location=Washington |agency=Associated Press |title=Rita Hayworth wins divorce from Orson|date=November 10, 1947 |page=1}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
On November 10, 1947, she was granted a divorce that became final the following year.{{Citation needed|date=April 2023}} The divorce was civil and they remained friendly afterwards.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://honey.nine.com.au/latest/rita-hayworth-love-life-orson-welles-marriage-divorce/8427a05b-c6c6-437e-b884-18457165e3f5 | title=Rita Hayworth's tragic romances and one 'great love' | date=April 9, 2021 }}</ref> | |||
====Relationship with Glenn Ford==== | |||
] | |||
Hayworth also had an intermittent, long-term relationship with ], which started during the filming of ''Gilda'' in 1945, and continued through each other's numerous marriages.<ref>Ford, Peter (2011). ''Glenn Ford: A Life'' (Wisconsin Film Studies). Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 62, 63 {{ISBN|978-0-29928-154-0}}</ref> Their relationship is documented in the 2011 biography ''Glenn Ford: A Life'' by Ford's son, ]. Peter revealed in his book that Hayworth became pregnant during the filming of ''The Loves of Carmen'' and traveled to France to get an abortion.<ref>Ford, Peter (2011). ''Glenn Ford: A Life'' (Wisconsin Film Studies). Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, p. 96. {{ISBN|978-0-29928-154-0}}</ref> Ford later moved next door to her in Beverly Hills in 1960, and they continued their relationship until the early 1980s.<ref>Ford, Peter (2011). ''Glenn Ford: A Life'' (Wisconsin Film Studies). Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 202, 203 {{ISBN|978-0-29928-154-0}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2011-apr-11-la-et-classic-hollywood-20110411-story.html|title=A Ford fiesta|last=King|first=Susan|date=April 11, 2011|website=]|language=en-US|access-date=March 14, 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.glennfordbio.com/Peter-Ford-story-4.jpg |title=Page 73 |website=glennfordbio.com |access-date=March 14, 2021}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=Glenn Ford: A Life – Book Notes|url=http://www.glennfordbio.com/classicimagesarticle.html|website=www.glennfordbio.com|access-date=March 14, 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|date=May 2, 2006|title=Ford celebrates his 90th after 15 years of seclusion|url=https://www.deseret.com/2006/5/2/19951204/ford-celebrates-his-90th-after-15-years-of-seclusion|website=Deseret News|language=en|access-date=March 14, 2021}}</ref> | |||
====Prince Aly Khan==== | |||
] in Paris in 1952, before their divorce]] | |||
In 1948, Hayworth left her film career to marry Prince Aly Khan, a son of ], the leader of the ] community of Shia Islam. They were married on May 27, 1949. Her bridal trousseau was designed by ].{{Citation needed|date=April 2023}} | |||
Aly Khan and his family were heavily involved in ], owning and racing horses. Hayworth had no interest in the sport, but became a member of the ] anyway. Her filly, Double Rose, won several races in France and finished second in the 1949 ].<ref><!--Author Not stated--> , ''Time'' October 17, 1949. Accessed May 29, 2009.</ref> | |||
In 1951, while still married to Hayworth, Khan was spotted dancing with the actress ] in the nightclub where he and Hayworth had met. Hayworth threatened to divorce him in ]. In early May, Hayworth moved to Nevada to establish legal residence to qualify for a divorce. She stayed at ] with their daughter, saying there was a threat the child would be kidnapped. Hayworth filed for divorce from Khan on September 2, 1951, on the grounds of "extreme cruelty, entirely mental in nature".<ref>"Rita Hayworth Files Divorce Action in Reno", ''Los Angeles Times'', September 2, 1951.</ref> | |||
Hayworth once said she might convert to Islam, but did not.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.islamicity.org/5271/brief-history-of-the-islamic-center-of-southern-california-1952-1972/ | title=Brief History of the Islamic Center of Southern California (1952-1972) | last=Yacoob |first=Mohammad | access-date=2022-11-09 | date=2013-05-22 }}</ref> During the custody fight over their daughter, Princess ], born {{birth date |1949|12|28}}, the prince said he wanted her to be raised as a ]; Hayworth wanted the child to be raised as a Christian.<ref>, Associated Press, October 31, 1953. Accessed June 13, 2009.</ref> Hayworth rejected his offer of $1 million if she would rear Yasmin as a Muslim from age seven and allow her to go to Europe to visit with him for two or three months each year, stating: | |||
<blockquote>Nothing will make me give up Yasmin's chance to live here in America among our precious freedoms and habits. While I respect the Moslem faith, and all other faiths, it is my earnest wish that my daughter be raised as a normal, healthy American girl in the Christian faith. There isn't any amount of money in the entire world for which it is worth sacrificing this child's privilege of living as a normal Christian girl here in the United States. There just isn't anything else in the world that can compare with her sacred chance to do that. And I'm going to give it to Yasmin regardless of what it costs.<ref>, ''Sydney Morning Herald'', September 13, 1953. Accessed June 13, 2009.</ref></blockquote> | |||
In January 1953, Hayworth was granted a divorce from Aly Khan on the grounds of extreme mental cruelty. Her daughter Yasmin, only three years old, played about the court while the case was being heard, finally climbing on to the judge's lap.<ref>{{Cite news|title=Rita Hayworth Gets Divorce|date=January 27, 1953|newspaper=The Manchester Guardian}}</ref> | |||
====Dick Haymes==== | |||
] obtaining their marriage license in Las Vegas, 1953]] | |||
When Hayworth and Dick Haymes first met, he was still married and his singing career was waning. When ⁷⁶⁵ I showed up at the clubs, he got a larger audience. Haymes was desperate for money because two of his former wives were taking legal action against him for unpaid child support. His financial problems were so bad that when he tried to return to California, he was arrested.<ref>"Dick Haymes Faces Arrest Over Alimony", ''Los Angeles Times'', October 5, 1956.</ref> | |||
On July 7, 1954, his ex-wife ] got a bench warrant for his arrest, because he owed her $3,800 in alimony. Less than a week earlier, his other ex-wife, ], also got a bench warrant because she said he owed $4,800 in child support payments for their three children.<ref>", AP, July 7, 1954.</ref> Hayworth ended up paying most of Haymes's debts.{{Citation needed|date=April 2023}} | |||
Haymes was born in Argentina and did not have solid proof of American citizenship. Not long after he met Hayworth, U.S. officials initiated proceedings to have him deported to Argentina for being an illegal alien. He hoped Hayworth could influence the government and keep him in the United States. When she assumed responsibility for his citizenship, a bond was formed that led to marriage. The two were married on September 24, 1953, at the ], and their wedding procession went through the casino. | |||
From the start of their marriage, Haymes was deeply in debt to the ] (IRS). When Hayworth took time off from attending his comeback performances in ], audiences sharply declined. Haymes's $5,000 weekly salary was attached by the IRS to pay a $100,000 bill, and he was unable to pay his pianist. Haymes's ex-wives demanded money while Hayworth publicly bemoaned her own lack of alimony from Aly Khan. At one point, the couple was effectively imprisoned in a hotel room for 24 hours in ] at the Hotel Madison while sheriff's deputies waited outside, threatening to arrest Haymes for outstanding debts. | |||
At the same time, Hayworth was fighting a severe custody battle with Khan, during which she reported death threats against their children. While living in New York, Hayworth sent the children to live with their nanny in ]. They were found and photographed by a reporter from '']'' magazine.{{Citation needed|date=April 2023}} | |||
After a tumultuous two years together, Haymes struck Hayworth in the face in 1955 in public at the Cocoanut Grove nightclub in Los Angeles. Hayworth packed her bags, walked out, and never returned. The assault and crisis shook her, and her doctor ordered her to remain in bed for several days.<ref>, UP, August 30, 1955.</ref> | |||
Hayworth was short of money after her marriage to Haymes. She had failed to gain child support from Aly Khan. She sued Orson Welles for back payment of child support, which she claimed had never been paid. This effort was unsuccessful and added to her stress.{{Citation needed|date=April 2023}} | |||
====James Hill==== | |||
] and Hayworth obtaining their marriage license in ], 1958]] | |||
Hayworth began a relationship with film producer ], whom she went on to marry on February 2, 1958. He put her in one of her last major films, '']''. This film was popular and highly praised, although '']'' named her the worst actress of 1958 for her performance.<ref>{{cite news |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=Rita Hayworth Sends Thanks to Lampoon For 'Worst' Prize|url=https://www.thecrimson.com/article/1959/3/19/rita-hayworth-sends-thanks-to-lampoon/ |newspaper=] |date=March 19, 1959 |access-date=August 5, 2015 }}</ref> On September 1, 1961, Hayworth filed for divorce, alleging extreme mental cruelty. Hill later wrote ''Rita Hayworth: A Memoir'', in which he suggested that their marriage collapsed because he wanted Hayworth to continue making movies, while she wanted them both to retire from Hollywood.{{Citation needed|date=April 2023}} | |||
In his autobiography, ] wrote about Hayworth's brief marriage to Hill. One night, Heston and his wife Lydia joined the couple for dinner at a restaurant in Spain with the director ] and the actor ], Hayworth's co-star in '']''. Heston wrote that the occasion "turned into the single most embarrassing evening of my life", describing how Hill heaped "obscene abuse" on Hayworth until she was "reduced to a helpless flood of tears, her face buried in her hands". Heston wrote that the others sat stunned, witnesses to a "marital massacre", and, though he was "strongly tempted to slug him" (Hill), he left with his wife Lydia after she stood up, almost in tears. Heston wrote, "I'm ashamed of walking away from Miss Hayworth's humiliation. I never saw her again."<ref>{{cite book |last=Heston |first=Charlton |author-link=Charlton Heston |date=1997 |title=In the Arena: An Autobiography |location=New York |publisher=Boulevard Books |page=253 |isbn=1-57297-267-X}}</ref> | |||
===Health=== | |||
{{multiple image | |||
<!-- Essential parameters --> | |||
| align = right | |||
| direction = vertical | |||
| width = 170 | |||
<!-- Image 1 --> | |||
| image1 = Rita Hayworth Carol Burnett Carol Burnett Show 1971.JPG | |||
| alt1 = | |||
| caption1 = Hayworth and ] on '']'' (1971) | |||
<!-- Image 2 --> | |||
| image2 = Lilly Tomlin Rita Hayworth Laugh-In 1971.JPG | |||
| alt2 = | |||
| caption2 = ] and Hayworth on '']'' (1971) | |||
<!-- Image 3 --> | |||
| image3 = Rita hayworth laugh in 1971.JPG | |||
| alt3 = | |||
| caption3 = Hayworth reprising the role of ] on '']'' (1971) | |||
}} | |||
Orson Welles noted Hayworth's problem with ] during their marriage, but he never believed that her problem was ]. "It certainly imitated alcoholism in every superficial way", he recalled in 1983. "She'd fly into these rages, never at me, never once, always at Harry Cohn or her father or her mother or her brother. She would break all the furniture and she'd get in a car and I'd have to get in the car and try to control her. She'd drive up in the hills suicidally. Terrible, terrible nights. And I just saw this lovely girl destroying herself. I admire Yasmin so much."<ref name="Tarbox">Tarbox, Todd (2013). ''Orson Welles and Roger Hill: A Friendship in Three Acts''. Albany, Georgia: BearManor Media, {{ISBN|1-59393-260-X}}.</ref>{{Rp|129–130}} | |||
Yasmin Aga Khan spoke of her mother's long struggle with alcohol: | |||
<blockquote>I remember as a child that she had a drinking problem. She had difficulty coping with the ups and downs of the business ... As a child, I thought, 'She has a drinking problem, and she's an alcoholic.' That was very clear, and I thought, 'Well, there's not much I can do. I can just, sort of, stand by and watch.' It's very difficult, seeing your mother, going through her emotional problems and drinking and then behaving in that manner ... Her condition became quite bad. It worsened and she did have an alcoholic breakdown and landed in the hospital.<ref>]. "Alzheimer's Fight in Her Mother's Name", ''New York Times'', February 23, 1997. Accessed June 6, 2009.</ref></blockquote> | |||
In 1972, the 54-year-old Hayworth wanted to retire from acting, but she needed money. At the suggestion of ], she agreed to film '']''. The experience exposed her poor health and her worsening mental state. Because she could not remember her lines, her scenes were shot one line at a time.<ref name="Leaming Hayworth"/>{{Rp|337–338}} In November, she agreed to complete one more movie, the British film '']'',<ref name="Leaming Hayworth"/>{{Rp|343}} but because of her worsening health, she left the set and returned to the United States. She never returned to acting.<ref>Thames, Stephanie. , TCM.com. Accessed June 14, 2009.</ref> | |||
In March 1974, both of her brothers died within a week of each other, which caused her great sadness and led to heavy drinking. In January 1976, at ]'s ], Hayworth was removed from a TWA flight after having an angry outburst while traveling with her agent. The event attracted much negative publicity; an unflattering photograph was published in newspapers the next day.<ref>, ''St. Petersburg Times'', January 21, 1976.</ref> Hayworth's alcoholism hid symptoms of what was eventually understood to be ].<ref name=ocsbapobt>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=XsFPAAAAIBAJ&pg=4992%2C4266 |newspaper=Ocala Star–Banner |location=Florida |agency=Associated Press |title=Love Goddess' Rita Hayworth is dead at 68 |date=May 16, 1987|page=1A <!--"For several years in the 1970s, she had been misdiagnosed as an alcoholic."-->}}</ref> | |||
Yasmin Aga Khan spoke of her mother's disease: | |||
<blockquote> | |||
It was the outbursts. She'd fly into a rage. I can't tell you. I thought it was alcoholism{{snd}}alcoholic dementia. We all thought that. The papers picked that up, of course. You can't imagine the relief just in getting a diagnosis. We had a name at last, Alzheimer's! Of course, that didn't really come until the last seven or eight years. She wasn't diagnosed as having Alzheimer's until 1980. There were two decades of hell before that.<ref>], "Alzheimer's: A Daughter's Nightmare", ''Los Angeles Times'', April 11, 1989.</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
Biographer Barbara Leaming wrote that Hayworth aged prematurely because of her addiction to alcohol and also because of the many ] in her life. "Despite the artfully applied make-up and shoulder-length red hair, there was no concealing the ravages of drink and stress", she wrote of Hayworth's arrival in New York in May 1956 in order to begin work on '']'', her first film in three years. "Deep lines had crept around her eyes and mouth, and she appeared worn, exhausted{{snd}}older than her thirty-eight years."<ref name="Leaming Hayworth"/>{{Rp|322}} | |||
Alzheimer's disease had been largely forgotten by the medical community since its discovery in 1906. Medical historian ] wrote that when Hayworth's diagnosis was made public in 1981, she became "the first public face of Alzheimer's, helping to ensure that future patients did not go undiagnosed ... Unbeknownst to her, Hayworth helped to destigmatize a condition that can still embarrass victims and their families."<ref name="Lerner">{{cite news |last=Lerner |first=Barron H. |author-link=Barron H. Lerner |date=November 20, 2006 |title=Rita Hayworth's misdiagnosed struggle|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2006-nov-20-he-myturn20-story.html |newspaper=] |access-date=August 17, 2015 }}</ref> | |||
In July 1981, Hayworth's health had deteriorated to the point that a judge in Los Angeles Superior Court ruled that she should be placed under the care of her daughter, Princess Yasmin Aga Khan of New York City.<ref> AP, July 23, 1981.</ref> Hayworth lived in an apartment at ] on ] adjoining that of her daughter, who arranged for her mother's care during her final years.<ref name="Leaming Hayworth"/>{{Rp|359}} When asked how her mother was doing, Yasmin replied, "She's still beautiful. But it's a shell." | |||
In 1983, Rebecca Welles arranged to see her mother for the first time in seven years. Speaking to his lifelong friend Roger Hill, Orson Welles expressed his concern about the visit's effect on his daughter. "Rita barely knows me now," Welles said. He recalled seeing Hayworth three years before at an event that the Reagans held for ]. "When it was over, I came over to her table, and I saw that she was very beautiful, very reposed looking, and didn't know me at first. After about four minutes of speaking, I could see that she realized who I was, and she began to cry quietly."<ref name="Tarbox"/>{{Rp|129}} | |||
In an interview that he gave the evening before his death in 1985, Welles called Hayworth "one of the dearest and sweetest women that ever lived".<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YZEWy--VsBQ&list=UUaxAJybXd-1ahQ9OV1J2WaA | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120614154416/http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YZEWy--VsBQ| archive-date=2012-06-14|title=Orson Welles' Last Interview (excerpt) |publisher=], October 10, 1985 |access-date=March 7, 2015}}</ref> | |||
===Political views=== | |||
Hayworth was a lifelong ] who was an active member of the Hollywood Democratic Committee and was active in the campaign of ] during the ].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/fdrdeweyelection0000jord|url-access=registration|page=|quote=Rita Hayworth Hollywood Democratic committee.|title=FDR, Dewey, and the Election of 1944|first=David M.|last=Jordan|date=September 2, 2011|publisher=Indiana University Press|via=Internet Archive}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rVAGAgAAQBAJ&q=Rita+Hayworth+Hollywood+Democratic+committee&pg=PA91|title=Class Struggle in Hollywood, 1930–1950: Moguls, Mobsters, Stars, Reds, and Trade Unionists|first=Gerald|last=Horne|year=2013|publisher=University of Texas Press|isbn=978-0292750135|via=Google Books}}</ref> In 1968, Hayworth was part of a Hollywood committee that endorsed ]'s ].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2008-01-10 |title=Here's What RFK Did in California in 1968 |url=https://www.huffpost.com/entry/heres-what-rfk-did-in-cal_b_80931 |first1=Joseph A. |last1=Palermo |website=HuffPost |language=en |url-status=live |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20240119034547/https://www.huffpost.com/entry/heres-what-rfk-did-in-cal_b_80931 |archive-date= Jan 19, 2024 }}</ref> | |||
===Religion=== | |||
Hayworth was a ] whose marriage to Prince Aly Khan was deemed ] by ].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.emol.org/film/archives/hayworth/index.html|title = The Life of Rita Hayworth |first1=Steve |last1=Starr |work=Entertainment Magazine |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231202055828/http://www.emol.org/film/archives/hayworth/index.html |archive-date= Dec 2, 2023 }}</ref> | |||
===Death=== | |||
], California]] | |||
Hayworth lapsed into a ] in February 1987. She died at age 68, from complications associated with Alzheimer's disease, on May 14, 1987, at her home in Manhattan.<ref name="NYT obit">{{cite news |last=Krebs |first=Albin |title=Rita Hayworth, Movie Legend, Dies |url=https://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/1017.html |newspaper=] |date=May 16, 1987 |access-date=December 9, 2014 }}</ref> President ], who was one of Hayworth's contemporaries in Hollywood (and who went on to also suffer from Alzheimer's in his final years), issued a statement: | |||
<blockquote>Rita Hayworth was one of our country's most beloved stars. Glamorous and talented, she gave us many wonderful moments on stage and screen and delighted audiences from the time she was a young girl. In her later years, Rita became known for her struggle with Alzheimer's disease. Her courage and candor, and that of her family, were a great public service in bringing worldwide attention to a disease which we all hope will soon be cured. ] and I are saddened by Rita's death. She was a friend who we will miss. We extend our deep sympathy to her family.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=34287 |title=Statement on the Death of Rita Hayworth |last=Reagan |first=Ronald |author-link=Ronald Reagan |date=May 15, 1987 |website=The American Presidency Project |publisher=Online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley |access-date=March 12, 2015 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924122134/http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=34287 |archive-date= Sep 24, 2015 }}</ref></blockquote> | |||
A funeral service was held on May 18, 1987, at the ].<ref name="NYT obit"/> Pallbearers included actors ], Glenn Ford, ], ], choreographer ], and a family friend, Phillip Luchenbill.<ref>{{cite news |date=May 19, 1987 |title=500 Rita Hayworth Mourners Told of Her Shyness and 'Gentle' Nature |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-05-19-me-1222-story.html |work=Los Angeles Times |access-date=May 23, 2018 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151023025024/https://articles.latimes.com/1987-05-19/local/me-1222_1_miss-hayworth |archive-date= Oct 23, 2015 }}</ref> She was interred at ]. Her headstone includes Yasmin's sentiment: "To yesterday's companionship and tomorrow's reunion." | |||
==Filmography== | ==Filmography== | ||
{| class="wikitable sortable" | |||
=== As Rita Cansino === | |||
|+Film and television | |||
{{multicol}} | |||
! Year | |||
* '']'' (Short subject, 1926) <ref Name="Note"/> | |||
! Title | |||
* '']'' aka '']'' (Uncredited, 1934) <ref Name="Note"/> | |||
! Role | |||
* '']'' (1935) <ref Name="Note"/> | |||
! class="unsortable" | Notes | |||
* '']'' (1935) | |||
! class="unsortable" | {{Tooltip|Ref.|Reference}} | |||
* '']'' (1935) | |||
|- | |||
* '']'' (1935) | |||
| 1926 | |||
* '']'' (1935) | |||
| ''{{sortname|La|Fiesta|nolink=1}}'' | |||
{{col-break}} | |||
| | |||
* '']'' (1936) | |||
| Short; credited as Rita Cansino | |||
* '']'' (1936) | |||
| <ref name="Ware"/> | |||
* '']'' (1936) | |||
|- | |||
* '']'' (1936) | |||
| 1934 | |||
* '']'' (1937) | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Extra | |||
* '']'' (1937) | |||
| Uncredited | |||
{{col-end}} | |||
| <ref name="Ware"/> | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="7" | 1935 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| | |||
| rowspan="4" | Credited as Rita Cansino | |||
| <ref name="Ware"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Carmen | |||
| <ref name="AFI">{{cite web|url=https://catalog.afi.com/Catalog/persondetails/131048 |title=Rita Hayworth |publisher=] |access-date=March 7, 2015}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Nayda | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Dancer | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Ballerina | |||
| rowspan="2" | Uncredited | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Dolores | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Tamara Petrovitch | |||
| rowspan="3" | Credited as Rita Cansino | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="5" | 1936 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Gypsy Dancer | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Carmen Zoro | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Specialty Dancer | |||
| Uncredited | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Maria Maringola | |||
| Credited as Rita Cansino | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Paula Castillo | |||
| Alternative title: ''Lady from Frisco''<br />Credited as Rita Cansino | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="9" | 1937 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Angela Gonzales | |||
| Alternative title: ''Louisiana Gal''<br />Credited as Rita Cansino | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Rita | |||
| rowspan="2" | Credited as Rita Cansino | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Carmen Serano | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Rita Owens | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Sue Collins | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| ''{{sortname|The|Game That Kills}}'' | |||
| Betty Holland | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Dinner Guest's Girl Friend | |||
| Uncredited | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Betty Morgan | |||
| Alternative title: ''Hard to Hold'' | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| ''{{sortname|The|Shadow|The Shadow (1937 film)}}'' | |||
| Mary Gillespie | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="6" | 1938 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Gail Preston | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Patricia Lane | |||
| Alternative title: ''Across the Border'' | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Mary—Ketterling's Secretary | |||
| Uncredited | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Jerry Wheeler | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Marcia Adams | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| ''{{sortname|The|Renegade Ranger}}'' | |||
| Judith Alvarez | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="3" | 1939 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| J.G. Bliss | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| ''{{sortname|The|Lone Wolf Spy Hunt}}'' | |||
| Karen | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Judy MacPherson | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="4" | 1940 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Patricia O'Malley | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Joan Forrester | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Leonora Stubbs | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| ''{{sortname|The|Lady in Question}}'' | |||
| Natalie Roguin | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| 1940 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Nina Barona | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="4" | 1941 | |||
| ''{{sortname|The|Strawberry Blonde}}'' | |||
| Virginia Brush | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Irene Malcolm | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Doña Sol | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Sheila Winthrop | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="3" | 1942 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Sally Elliott | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Ethel Halloway | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Maria Acuña | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| 1944 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Rusty Parker/Maribelle Hicks | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| 1945 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Rosalind Bruce | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| 1946 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Gilda Mundson Farrell | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="2" | 1947 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| ]/Kitty Pendleton | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| ''{{sortname|The|Lady from Shanghai}}'' | |||
| Elsa Bannister | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| 1948 | |||
| ''{{sortname|The|Loves of Carmen|The Loves of Carmen (1948 film)}}'' | |||
| Carmen | |||
| Also producer (uncredited) | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| 1952 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Chris Emery | |||
| Also producer (uncredited) | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="2" | 1953 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Princess Salome | |||
| Alternative title:<br />''Salome: The Dance of the Seven Veils''<br />Also producer (uncredited) | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Sadie Thompson | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="2" | 1957 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Irena | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Vera Prentice-Simpson | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| 1958 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Ann Shankland | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="2" | 1959 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Adelaide Geary | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| ''{{sortname|The|Story on Page One|The Story on Page One (film)}}'' | |||
| Josephine Brown/Jo Morris | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| 1961 | |||
| ''{{sortname|The|Happy Thieves}}'' | |||
| Eve Lewis | |||
| Also executive producer | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| 1964 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Lili Alfredo | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| 1965 | |||
| ''{{sortname|The|Money Trap}}'' | |||
| Rosalie Kenny | |||
| | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| 1966 | |||
| ''{{sortname|The|Poppy Is Also a Flower}}'' | |||
| Monique Marko | |||
| Television film | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| 1967 | |||
| ''{{sortname|The|Rover|The Rover (1967 film)}}'' | |||
| Aunt Caterina | |||
| Alternative title: ''L'avventuriero'' | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| 1968 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Martha | |||
| Alternative title: ''I bastardi'' | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="2" | 1970 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Mara | |||
| Alternative title: ''La route de Salina'' | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| ''{{sortname|The|Naked Zoo}}'' | |||
| Mrs. Golden | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="2" | 1971 | |||
| ''{{sortname|The|Carol Burnett Show}}'' | |||
| rowspan="2" | Herself | |||
| TV series (Episode #4.20) | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| TV series (Episode #5.3) | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| 1972 | |||
| ''{{sortname|The|Wrath of God}}'' | |||
| Señora De La Plata | |||
| | |||
| <ref name="AFI"/> | |||
|} | |||
==Accolades== | |||
] | |||
Hayworth received a ] nomination for ] for her performance in '']'' (1964). | |||
In 1978, at the ] in Washington, D. C., Hayworth was presented with the inaugural National Screen Heritage Award of the National Film Society,<ref name="American Classic Screen"/>{{Rp|xvi}} a group that published ''American Classic Screen'' magazine (1976–1984).<ref name="American Classic Screen">{{cite book |last1=Tibbetts |first1=John C. |last2=Welsh |first2=James M |date=2010 |title=American Classic Screen Interviews |location=Lanham, Maryland |publisher=] |isbn=978-0810876743 }}</ref>{{Rp|xv, xxi}} | |||
In 1999, Hayworth was acknowledged as one of the top-25 greatest female stars of Classic Hollywood cinema in the ]'s survey, ].<ref>{{cite press release | url = http://www.afi.com/100Years/stars.aspx | title = AFI Recognizes the 50 Greatest American Screen Legends | publisher = ] | date = June 16, 1999 | access-date = March 7, 2015 | archive-date = January 13, 2013 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130113043532/http://www.afi.com/100years/stars.aspx | url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
==Legacy== | |||
The public disclosure and discussion of Hayworth's illness drew international attention to Alzheimer's disease, which was little known at the time,<ref name="NYT obit"/> and it helped to greatly increase federal funding for Alzheimer's research.<ref name="Lerner"/> | |||
The Rita Hayworth Gala, a benefit for the ], is held annually in Chicago and New York City.<ref name="Hayworth Gala"/> The program was founded in 1985<ref>{{cite news |last=Brozan |first=Nadine |date=May 24, 1985 |title=The Evening Hours |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1985/05/24/style/the-evening-hours.html |newspaper=] |access-date=August 18, 2015 }}</ref> by Princess Yasmin Aga Khan, in honor of her mother. She is the hostess for the events and is a major sponsor of Alzheimer's disease charities and awareness programs. {{as of|2017|08}}, a total of more than $72 million had been raised through events in Chicago, New York, and ].<ref name="Hayworth Gala">{{cite web|url=http://www.alz.org/galas/ny/overview.asp |title=New York Rita Hayworth Gala|publisher=Alzheimer's Association |access-date=August 1, 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.alz.org/galas/Rita/overview.asp|title=Chicago Rita Hayworth Gala|publisher=Alzheimer's Association |access-date=August 1, 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.alz.org/galas/palmbeach/|title=Rita Hayworth Luncheon in Palm Beach|publisher=Alzheimer's Association |access-date=August 1, 2017}}</ref> | |||
On October 17, 2016, a press release from the Springer Associates Public Relations Agency announced that Rita Hayworth's former manager and friend, Budd Burton Moss, initiated a campaign to solicit the ] to issue a commemorative stamp featuring Hayworth. Springer Associates also announced that the ] would be lobbied in hopes of having an honorary ] issued in memory of Hayworth.<ref>{{cite web|title=Happy Birthday, Rita Hayworth|website = ]|url=https://www.facebook.com/notes/james-zeruk/happy-birthday-rita-hayworth/1347868101899287?pnref=story |access-date=October 17, 2016}}</ref> The press release added that Hayworth's daughter, Princess Yasmin Aga Khan, the Alzheimer's Association of Greater Los Angeles, and numerous prominent personalities of stage and screen were supporting the Moss campaign. The press release stated the target date for fulfillment of the stamp and Academy Award to be on October 17, 2018, the centennial of Hayworth's birth. | |||
== Cultural references == | |||
<!-- Listing trivial mentions adds no value to the encyclopedic treatment of this subject. Before adding items to this section, please read ]. Additions that appear to be insignificant and/or are not attributed to a reliable source WILL be removed. If an item you have added has been removed and you wish to contest its removal, please start a discussion on this article's talk page proposing that it be restored. --> | |||
The film '']'' (2009) describes how Hayworth took up painting while struggling with Alzheimer's.<ref>{{Cite news |url=https://www.huffingtonpost.com/rosalia-gitau/art-therapy-for-alzheimer_b_495914.html |title=Art Therapy for Alzheimer's |work=] |author=Gitau, Rosalia |date=March 11, 2010}}</ref> In 1983, ], who was of a similar Irish and Hispanic ancestry, played and danced as Hayworth in a TV biopic '']''. | |||
In the '']'' episode "Shell", Baptiste talks to Kim about Hayworth in an attempt to gain information from her about Natalie after noticing that she has several DVDs of Hayworth's films; the Dream Room has a poster of ''Gilda''.<ref> '']''; retrieved April 21, 2020.</ref> | |||
Hayworth's name can be heard in the ] hit from 1990, "]", ("Rita Hayworth gave good face") among other artists from ]. Her name is also mentioned in ]'s song "Invitation to the Blues", from his 1976 album '']''. | |||
In the Sicilian scenes of the film '']'', the bodyguard of Michael Corleone is heard shouting the name "Rita Hayworth" to GI's passing by in jeeps. | |||
Hayworth is the main topic of the song, "Take, Take, Take"<ref>{{Citation|title=The White Stripes – Take, Take, Take|url=https://genius.com/The-white-stripes-take-take-take-lyrics|access-date=2021-09-20}}</ref> by the ] and also referenced in "White Moon<ref>{{Citation|title=The White Stripes – White Moon|url=https://genius.com/The-white-stripes-white-moon-lyrics|access-date=2021-09-20}}</ref>"; both from their '']'' album, released in 2005. In a 2005 interview with '']'', ] said, "Rita Hayworth became an all-encompassing metaphor for everything I was thinking about while making the album.<ref>{{Cite magazine|last=Fricke|first=David|date=2005-09-08|title=The White Stripes: Jack White Comes Clean|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/the-mysterious-case-of-the-white-stripes-75345/|access-date=2021-09-20|magazine=Rolling Stone|language=en-US}}</ref>" | |||
The film '']'' was adapted from a Stephen King novella, "]", from his 1982 collection '']''. A succession of posters, starting with one of Rita Hayworth, hides a hole in a jail cell wall in the novella. In the film, a poster of Rita Hayworth was used for the first third of the film, then changed to a poster of ] for the middle third, then ] for the last third. The film also includes a scene where the prison movie night shows Rita Hayworth's film ''].'' | |||
In the film ] an amnesiac character who cannot remember her real name gives herself the name Rita. She sees the name on a poster for Hayworth’s film '']'' that hangs in the room where she’s standing at the time she’s first asked her name. | |||
===As Rita Hayworth=== | |||
{{multicol}} | |||
* '']'' (1937) | |||
* '']'' (1937) | |||
* '']'' (1937) | |||
* '']'' (1937) | |||
* '']'' (1937) | |||
* '']'' (1938) | |||
* '']'' (1938) | |||
* '']'' (1938) | |||
* '']'' (1938) | |||
* '']'' (1938) | |||
* '']'' (1938) | |||
* '']'' (1939) | |||
* '']'' (1939) | |||
* '']'' (1939) | |||
* '']'' (1940) | |||
* '']'' (1940) | |||
* '']'' (1940) | |||
* '']'' (1940) | |||
* '']'' (1940) | |||
* '']'' (1941) | |||
* '']'' (1941) | |||
* '']'' (1941) | |||
* '']'' (1941) | |||
* '']'' (1942) | |||
* '']'' (1942) | |||
* '']'' (1942) | |||
{{col-break}} | |||
* '']'' (1943) (short subject) | |||
* '']'' (1944) | |||
* '']'' (1945) | |||
* '']'' (1946) | |||
* '']'' (1947) | |||
* '']'' (1947) | |||
* '']'' (1948) | |||
* '']'' (1952) | |||
* '']'' (1952) | |||
* '']'' (1953) | |||
* '']'' (1953) | |||
* '']'' (1957) | |||
* '']'' (1957) | |||
* '']'' (1958) | |||
* '']'' (1959) | |||
* '']'' (1959) | |||
* '']'' (1962) | |||
* '']'' (1964) | |||
* '']'' (1965) | |||
* '']'' (1966) | |||
* '']'' (1967) | |||
* '']'' (1968) | |||
* '']'' (1971) | |||
* '']'' (1971) | |||
* '']'' (1972) | |||
{{col-end}} | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Reflist |
{{Reflist}} | ||
==Sources== | |||
* Kobal, John. ''Rita Hayworth: The Time, the Place, the Woman'' (1977). ISBN 0-393-07526-5 | |||
* Leaming, Barbara. ''If This Was Happiness: A Biography of Rita Hayworth'' (New York: Viking, 1989) | |||
* McLean, Adrienne L. ''Being Rita Hayworth: Labor, Identity, and Hollywood Stardom'' (2004). ISBN 0-8135-3389-9 | |||
* Morella, Joe and Epstein, Edward Z. ''Rita: The Life of Rita Hayworth'' (1983). ISBN 0-385-29265-1 | |||
* Peary, Gerald. ''Rita Hayworth: A Pyramid Illustrated History of the Movies'' (1976). ISBN 0-515-04116-5 | |||
* Ringgold, Gene. ''The Films of Rita Hayworth: The Legend and Career of a Love Goddess'' (1974). ISBN 0-8065-0439-0 | |||
* Roberts-Frenzel, Caren. ''Rita Hayworth: A Photographic Retrospective'' (2001). ISBN 0-8109-1434-4 | |||
==Further reading== | |||
* McLean, Adrienne L (2004). ''Being Rita Hayworth: Labor, Identity, and Hollywood Stardom''. {{ISBN|0-8135-3389-9}}. | |||
* Moss, Budd Burton (2015). ''Hollywood: Sometimes the Reality is Better Than the Dream''. {{ISBN|978-1-943625-33-8}} | |||
* Peary, Gerald (1976). ''Rita Hayworth: A Pyramid Illustrated History of the Movies''. {{ISBN|0-515-04116-5}}. | |||
* Ringgold, Gene (1974). ''The Films of Rita Hayworth: The Legend and Career of a Love Goddess''. {{ISBN|0-8065-0439-0}}. | |||
* Roberts-Frenzel, Caren (2001). ''Rita Hayworth: A Photographic Retrospective''. {{ISBN|0-8109-1434-4}}. | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{Sister project links|d=Q42745|commons=category:Rita Hayworth|n=no|b=no|v=no|voy=no|mw=no|s=no|m=no|species=no|wikt=no}} | |||
{{Commons category}} | |||
<!-- ===========================({{NoMoreLinks}})=============================== | |||
{{Wikiquote|Rita Hayworth}} | |||
<!--===========================({{NoMoreLinks}})=============================== | |||
| DO NOT ADD MORE LINKS TO THIS ARTICLE.[REDACTED] IS NOT A COLLECTION OF | | | DO NOT ADD MORE LINKS TO THIS ARTICLE.[REDACTED] IS NOT A COLLECTION OF | | ||
| LINKS. If you think that your link might be useful, do not add it here, | | | LINKS. If you think that your link might be useful, do not add it here, | | ||
Line 275: | Line 735: | ||
| Links that have not been verified WILL BE DELETED. | | | Links that have not been verified WILL BE DELETED. | | ||
| See ] and ] for details | | | See ] and ] for details | | ||
==============================({{NoMoreLinks}})================================ --> | |||
* {{ |
* {{IBDB name}} | ||
* {{ |
* {{IMDb name}} | ||
* | |||
* {{IBDB name|80374}} | |||
* {{Tcmdb name}} | |||
* by ] | |||
{{ |
{{Authority control}} | ||
<!-- Metadata: see ] --> | |||
{{Persondata | |||
| NAME = Hayworth, Rita | |||
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES = Cansino, Margarita Carmen | |||
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = American actress | |||
| DATE OF BIRTH = 1918-10-17 | |||
| PLACE OF BIRTH = Brooklyn, New York, United States | |||
| DATE OF DEATH = 1987-05-14 | |||
| PLACE OF DEATH = New York, New York, United States | |||
}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hayworth, Rita}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Hayworth, Rita}} | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] |
Latest revision as of 04:24, 24 January 2025
American actress, dancer, pin-up girl (1918–1987)
Rita Hayworth | |
---|---|
Hayworth by Bob Coburn, 1948 | |
Born | Margarita Carmen Cansino (1918-10-17)October 17, 1918 New York City, U.S. |
Died | May 14, 1987(1987-05-14) (aged 68) New York City, U.S. |
Resting place | Holy Cross Cemetery, Culver City |
Occupations |
|
Years active | 1931–1972 |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouses |
|
Children | 2, including Yasmin Aga Khan |
Parents |
|
Relatives |
|
Awards | Hollywood Walk of Fame |
Signature | |
Rita Hayworth (born Margarita Carmen Cansino; October 17, 1918 – May 14, 1987) was an American actress, dancer, and pin-up girl. She achieved fame in the 1940s as one of the top stars of the Golden Age of Hollywood, and appeared in 61 films in total over 37 years. The press coined the term "The Love Goddess" to describe Hayworth, after she had become the most glamorous screen idol of the 1940s. She was the top pin-up girl for GIs during World War II.
Hayworth is widely known for her performance in the 1946 film noir Gilda, opposite Glenn Ford, in which she played the femme fatale in her first major dramatic role. She is also known for her performances in Only Angels Have Wings (1939), The Strawberry Blonde (1941), Blood and Sand (1941), The Lady from Shanghai (1947), Pal Joey (1957), and Separate Tables (1958). Fred Astaire, with whom she made two films, You'll Never Get Rich (1941) and You Were Never Lovelier (1942), once called her his favorite dance partner. She also starred in the Technicolor musical Cover Girl (1944), with Gene Kelly. She is listed as one of the top 25 female motion picture stars of all time in the American Film Institute's survey, AFI's 100 Years...100 Stars.
For her contribution to the motion picture industry, Hayworth received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1645 Vine Street in 1960.
In 1980, Hayworth was diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer's disease, which contributed to her death in 1987 at age 68. The public disclosure and discussion of her illness drew attention to Alzheimer's, and helped to increase public and private funding for research into the disease.
Early life
At age 12, Margarita (later Rita) was dancing professionally as her father's partner in "The Dancing Cansinos", 1931.Margarita, at age 14, with her father and dancing partner, 1933Rita and her father, 1935Hayworth was born as Margarita Carmen Cansino in Brooklyn, New York, the oldest child of two dancers. Her father, Eduardo Cansino, was of Spanish Romani descent from Castilleja de la Cuesta, a little town near Seville, Spain.
Her mother, Volga Hayworth, was an American of Irish and English descent who had performed with the Ziegfeld Follies. The couple married in 1917. They also had two sons: Eduardo Jr. and Vernon. Her maternal uncle Vinton Hayworth was also an actor.
Margarita's father wanted her to become a professional dancer, while her mother hoped that she would become an actress. Her paternal grandfather, Antonio Cansino, was renowned as a classical Spanish dancer. He popularized the bolero, and his dancing school in Madrid was world-famous. Antonio Cansino instructed Rita Hayworth in her first dance lesson. Hayworth later recalled, "From the time I was three and a half... as soon as I could stand on my own feet, I was given dance lessons." She noted "I didn't like it very much... but I didn't have the courage to tell my father, so I began taking the lessons. Rehearse, rehearse, rehearse, that was my girlhood."
She attended dance classes every day for a few years in a Carnegie Hall complex, where she was taught by her uncle Angel Cansino. Before her fifth birthday she was one of the Four Cansinos featured in the Broadway production of The Greenwich Village Follies at the Winter Garden Theatre. In 1926, at the age of eight, she was featured in La Fiesta, a short film for Warner Bros.
In 1927, her father took the family to Hollywood. He believed that dancing could be featured in the movies and that his family could be part of it. He established his own dance studio, where he taught such stars as James Cagney and Jean Harlow.
In 1931, Eduardo Cansino partnered with his 12-year-old daughter to form an act called the Dancing Cansinos. Her hair was dyed from brown to black to give her a more mature and "Latin" appearance. Since under California law Margarita was too young to work in nightclubs and bars, her father took her with him to work across the border in Tijuana, Mexico. In the early 1930s, it was a popular tourist spot for people from Los Angeles. Because she was working, Cansino never graduated from high school, but she completed the ninth grade at Hamilton High in Los Angeles.
Cansino took a bit part in the film Cruz Diablo (1934) at age 16, which led to another bit part in the film In Caliente (1935) with the Mexican actress Dolores del Río. She danced with her father in such nightspots as the Foreign and the Caliente clubs. Winfield Sheehan, the head of the Fox Film Corporation, saw her dancing at the Caliente Club and quickly arranged for Hayworth to do a screen test a week later. Impressed by her screen persona, Sheehan signed her to a six-month contract at Fox under the name Rita Cansino, the first of two name changes during her film career.
Career
Early career
During her time at Fox, Hayworth was billed as Rita Cansino and appeared in unremarkable roles, often cast as the exotic foreigner. In late 1934, aged 16, she performed a dance sequence in the Spencer Tracy film Dante's Inferno (1935), and was put under contract in February 1935. She had her first speaking role as an Argentinian girl in Under the Pampas Moon (1935). She played an Egyptian girl in Charlie Chan in Egypt (1935), and a Russian dancer in Paddy O'Day (1935). Sheehan was grooming her for the lead in the 1936 Technicolor film Ramona, hoping to establish her as Fox Film's new Dolores del Río.
By the end of her six-month contract, Fox had merged into 20th Century Fox, with Darryl F. Zanuck serving as the executive producer. Dismissing Sheehan's interest in her and giving Loretta Young the lead in Ramona, Zanuck did not renew Cansino's contract. Sensing her screen potential, salesman and promoter Edward C. Judson, with whom she would elope in 1937, got freelance work for her in several small-studio films and a part in the Columbia Pictures feature Meet Nero Wolfe (1936). Studio head Harry Cohn signed her to a seven-year contract and tried her out in small roles.
Cohn argued that her image was too Mediterranean, which limited her to being cast in "exotic" roles that were fewer in number. He was heard to say her last name sounded too Spanish. Judson acted on Cohn's advice: Rita Cansino became Rita Hayworth when she adopted her mother's maiden name, to the consternation of her father. With a name that emphasized Irish-American ancestry, people were more likely to regard her as a classic "American".
With Cohn and Judson's encouragement, Hayworth changed her hair color to ginger red hair and had electrolysis to raise her hairline and broaden the appearance of her forehead.
Hayworth appeared in five minor Columbia pictures and three minor independent movies in 1937. The following year, she appeared in five Columbia B movies. In 1939, Cohn pressured director Howard Hawks to use Hayworth for a small, but important, role as a man-trap in the aviation drama Only Angels Have Wings, in which she played opposite Cary Grant and Jean Arthur.
Cohn began to build up Hayworth in 1940 in features such as Music in My Heart, The Lady in Question, and Angels Over Broadway. That year, she was first featured in a Life magazine cover story. While on loan to Warner Bros., Hayworth appeared as the second female lead in The Strawberry Blonde (1941), opposite James Cagney.
She returned in triumph to Columbia Pictures, and was cast in the musical You'll Never Get Rich (1941) opposite Fred Astaire in one of the highest-budgeted films Columbia had ever made. The picture was so successful, the studio produced and released another Astaire-Hayworth picture the following year, You Were Never Lovelier. Astaire's biographer Peter Levinson writes that the dancing combination of Astaire and Hayworth was "absolute magnetism on the screen". Although Astaire made 10 films with Ginger Rogers, his other main dancing partner, Hayworth's sensuality surpassed Rogers' cool technical expertise. "Rita's youthful exuberance meshed perfectly with Fred's maturity and elegance", says Levinson.
When Astaire was asked who his favorite dance partner was, he tried not answering the question, but later admitted it was Hayworth: "All right, I'll give you a name", he said. "But if you ever let it out, I'll swear I lied. It was Rita Hayworth." Astaire commented that "Rita danced with trained perfection and individuality ... She was better when she was 'on' than at rehearsal." Biographer Charlie Reinhart describes the effect she had on Astaire's style:
There was a kind of reserve about Fred. It was charming. It carried over to his dancing. With Hayworth there was no reserve. She was very explosive. And that's why I think they really complemented each other.
In August 1941, Hayworth was featured in an iconic Life photo in which she posed in a negligee with a black lace bodice. Bob Landry's photo made Hayworth one of the top two pin-up girls of the World War II years; the other was Betty Grable, in a 1943 photograph. For two years, Hayworth's photograph was the most requested pin-up photograph in circulation. In 2002, the satin nightgown Hayworth wore for the photo sold for $26,888.
In March 1942, Hayworth visited Brazil as a cultural ambassador for the Roosevelt administration's Good Neighbor policy, under the auspices of the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs. During the 1940s Hayworth also contributed to the OCIAA's cultural diplomacy initiatives in support of Pan-Americanism through her broadcasts to South America on the CBS "Cadena de las Américas" radio network.
Peak years at Columbia
Hayworth had top billing in one of her best-known films, the Technicolor musical Cover Girl, released in 1944. The film established her as Columbia's top star of the 1940s, and it gave her the distinction of being the first of only six women to dance on screen with both Gene Kelly and Fred Astaire. "I guess the only jewels of my life", Hayworth said in 1970, "were the pictures I made with Fred Astaire ... And Cover Girl, too."
For three consecutive years, starting in 1944, Hayworth was named one of the top movie box-office attractions in the world. She was adept in ballet, tap, ballroom, and Spanish routines. Cohn continued to showcase Hayworth's dance talents. Columbia featured her in the Technicolor films Tonight and Every Night (1945) with Lee Bowman and Down to Earth (1947) with Larry Parks.
Her sexy, glamorous appeal was most noted in Charles Vidor's film noir Gilda (1946) with Glenn Ford, which caused censors some consternation. The role, in which Hayworth wore black satin and performed a legendary one-glove striptease, "Put The Blame On Mame", made her into a cultural icon as a femme fatale.
While Gilda was in release, it was widely reported that an atomic bomb that was scheduled to be tested at Bikini Atoll in the Pacific Ocean's Marshall Islands would bear an image of Hayworth, a reference to her bombshell status. Although the gesture was undoubtedly meant as a compliment, Hayworth was deeply offended. Orson Welles, then married to Hayworth, recalled her anger in an interview with biographer Barbara Leaming: "Rita used to fly into terrible rages all the time, but the angriest was when she found out that they'd put her on the atom bomb. Rita almost went insane, she was so angry.... She wanted to go to Washington to hold a press conference, but Harry Cohn wouldn't let her because it would be unpatriotic." Welles tried to persuade Hayworth that the whole business was not a publicity stunt on Cohn's part, that it was simply homage to her from the flight crew.
On the June 30, 1946, broadcast of Orson Welles Commentaries, Welles said of the imminent test, "I want my daughter to be able to tell her daughter that grandmother's picture was on the last atom bomb ever to explode."
The fourth atomic bomb ever to be detonated was decorated with a photograph of Hayworth cut from the June 1946 issue of Esquire magazine. Above it was stenciled the device's nickname, "Gilda" - the name of the film in which she was starring at the time - in two-inch black letters.
Hayworth's performance in Welles' 1947 film The Lady from Shanghai was critically acclaimed. The film's failure at the box office was attributed in part to Hayworth's famous red hair being cut short and bleached platinum blonde for the role. Cohn had not been consulted and was furious that Hayworth's image was changed.
Also in 1947, Hayworth was featured in a Life cover story by Winthrop Sargeant that resulted in her being nicknamed "The Love Goddess". The term was adopted and used later as the title of a biopic and of a biography about her. In a 1980s interview, Hayworth said, "Everybody else does nude scenes, but I don't. I never made nude movies. I didn't have to do that. I danced. I was provocative, I guess, in some things. But I was not completely exposed."
Her next film, The Loves of Carmen (1948) with Glenn Ford, was the first film co-produced by Columbia and Hayworth's production company, The Beckworth Corporation (named for Rebecca, her daughter with Welles). It was Columbia's biggest moneymaker that year. She received a percentage of the profits from this and all her subsequent films until 1954, when she dissolved Beckworth to pay off debts.
The Hollywood princess
This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Rita Hayworth" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (May 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
In 1948, at the height of her fame, Hayworth traveled to Cannes and was introduced to Prince Aly Khan. They began a year-long courtship, and were married on May 27, 1949. Hayworth left Hollywood and sailed for France, breaking her contract with Columbia.
Because Hayworth was already one of the best-known celebrities in the world, the courtship and the wedding received enormous press coverage around the world. Because she was still legally married to second husband Orson Welles during the early days of her courtship with the prince, Hayworth also received some negative backlash, causing some American fans to boycott her pictures. On December 28, 1949, Hayworth gave birth to the couple's only child, Princess Yasmin Aga Khan.
Though Hayworth was anxious to start a new life abroad, away from Hollywood, Aly Khan's flamboyant lifestyle and duties proved too difficult for Hayworth. She struggled to fit in with his friends, and found it difficult to learn French. Aly Khan was also known in circles as a playboy, and it was suspected that he had been unfaithful to Hayworth during the marriage.
In 1951, Hayworth set sail with her two daughters for New York. Although the couple did reconcile for a short time, they divorced in 1953.
Returning to Columbia
This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Rita Hayworth" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
After the collapse of her marriage to Khan, Rita Hayworth was forced to return to Hollywood to star in her "comeback" picture, Affair in Trinidad (1952) which again paired her with Glenn Ford. Director Vincent Sherman recalled that Hayworth seemed "rather frightened at the approach of doing another picture". She continued to clash with Columbia boss Harry Cohn and was placed on suspension during filming. Nevertheless, the picture was highly publicized. The picture ended up grossing $1 million more than her previous blockbuster, Gilda.
She continued to star in a string of successful pictures. In 1953, she had two films released: Salome with Charles Laughton and Stewart Granger, and Miss Sadie Thompson with José Ferrer and Aldo Ray. She was off the big screen for another four years, mainly because of a tumultuous marriage to the singer Dick Haymes. During her marriage to Haymes, she was involved in much negative publicity, which significantly lessened her appeal . By the time she returned to the screen for Fire Down Below (1957) with Robert Mitchum and Jack Lemmon, Kim Novak had become Columbia's top female star. Her last musical was Pal Joey (1957) with Frank Sinatra and Novak (Hayworth had top billing in both pictures but actually played a supporting role in Pal Joey). Hayworth then left Columbia for good.
She received good reviews for her performances in Separate Tables (1958), with Burt Lancaster and David Niven, They Came to Cordura (1959) with Gary Cooper and The Story on Page One (1960). She continued working throughout the 1960s. In 1962, her planned Broadway debut in Step on a Crack was cancelled for undisclosed health reasons. In 1964 Circus World was released, in which John Wayne was her co-star and for which she received a Golden Globe nomination as Best Actress in a dramatic role. The Money Trap (1965) paired her, for the last time, with good friend Glenn Ford. She continued to act in films until the early 1970s. She made comedic television appearances on Laugh In and The Carol Burnett Show in the 1970s. Her last film was The Wrath of God (1972), a western.
Struggles with Columbia Pictures
Hayworth had a strained relationship with Columbia Pictures for many years. In 1943, she was suspended without pay for nine weeks because she refused to appear in Once Upon a Time. During this period in Hollywood, contract players could not choose their films; they were on salary rather than receiving a fixed amount per picture.
In 1947, Hayworth's new contract with Columbia provided a salary of $250,000 plus 50% of films' profits. In 1951, Columbia alleged it had $800,000 invested in properties for her, including the film that she had walked out on that year. Hayworth left Hollywood to marry Prince Aly Khan and was suspended for failing to report to work on the film Affair in Trinidad. In 1952, Hayworth refused to report for work because she objected to the script. She said,
I was in Switzerland when they sent me the script for Affair in Trinidad and I threw it across the room. But I did the picture, and Pal Joey, too. I came back to Columbia because I wanted to work and first, see, I had to finish that goddamn contract, which is how Harry Cohn owned me!"
In 1955, she sued Columbia Pictures to be released from her contract, but asked for her $150,000 salary, alleging that the filming failed to start on Joseph and His Brethren (1961) when agreed. The film was later filmed in 1961 by a foreign company as The Story of Joseph and His Brethren (film). Cohn had a reputation as a taskmaster, but he had his own criticisms of Hayworth. He had invested heavily in her before she began an affair with the married Aly Khan, and it could have caused a backlash against her career and Columbia's success. For instance, an article in the British periodical The People called for a boycott of Hayworth's films:
Hollywood must be told its already tarnished reputation will sink to rock bottom if it restores this reckless woman to a place among its stars."
Cohn expressed his frustration in a 1957 interview with Time magazine:
Hayworth might be worth ten million dollars today easily! She owned 25% of the profits with her own company and had hit after hit and she had to get married and had to get out of the business and took a suspension because she fell in love again! In five years, at two pictures a year, at 25%! Think of what she could have made! But she didn't make pictures! She took two or three suspensions! She got mixed up with different characters! Unpredictable!"
Years after her film career had ended and long after Cohn had died, Hayworth still resented her treatment by both him and Columbia. She spoke bluntly in a 1968 interview:
I used to have to punch a time clock at Columbia. Every day of my life. That's what it was like. I was under exclusive contract, like they owned me ... I think he had my dressing room bugged ... He was very possessive of me as a person, he didn't want me to go out with anybody, have any friends. No one can live that way. So I fought him ... You want to know what I think of Harry Cohn? He was a monster.
Later on, in 1972 she said :
Harry Cohn thought of me as one of the people he could exploit, and make a lot of money... And I did make a lot of money for him, but not much for me.
Hayworth resented the fact that the studio had failed to train her to sing or even to encourage her to learn how to sing. Although she appeared to sing in many of her films, she was usually dubbed. Because the public did not know her secret, she was embarrassed to be asked to sing by troops at USO shows.
"I wanted to study singing", Hayworth complained, "but Harry Cohn kept saying, 'Who needs it?' and the studio wouldn't pay for it. They had me so intimidated that I couldn't have done it anyway. They always said, 'Oh, no, we can't let you do it. There's no time for that; it has to be done right now!' I was under contract, and that was it."
Public image
Hayworth was a top glamour girl in the 1940s, a pin-up girl for military servicemen and a beauty icon for women. At 5 ft 6 in (1.68 m) and 120 lb (54 kg), she was tall enough to be a concern for dancing partners such as Fred Astaire. She reportedly changed her hair color eight times in eight movies.
In 1949, Hayworth's lips were voted best in the world by the Artists League of America. She had a modeling contract with Max Factor to promote its Tru-Color lipsticks and Pan-Stik make-up.
Personal life
Marriages, relationships and family
Hayworth confided to Orson Welles that her father began to sexually abuse her as a child when they were touring together as the Dancing Cansinos. Her biographer, Barbara Leaming, wrote that her mother may have been the only person to know; she slept in the same bed as her daughter to try to protect her. Leaming wrote that the abuse experienced by Hayworth as a young girl contributed to her difficulty in relationships as an adult.
In 1941, Hayworth said she was the antithesis of the characters she played: "I naturally am very shy ... and I suffer from an inferiority complex." Her provocative role in Gilda, in particular, was responsible for people expecting her to be what she was not. Hayworth once said, with some bitterness, "Men go to bed with Gilda, but wake up with me." She said, "Basically, I am a good, gentle person, but I am attracted to mean personalities."
Hayworth's two younger brothers, Eduardo Cansino Jr. and Vernon Cansino, both served in World War II. Vernon left the United States Army in 1946 with several medals, including the Purple Heart, and later married Susan Vail, a dancer. Eduardo Jr. followed Hayworth into acting; he was also under contract with Columbia Pictures. In 1950, he made his screen debut in The Great Adventures of Captain Kidd.
Hayworth married and divorced five times in twenty four years. She had affairs with several of her leading men, most notably with Victor Mature in 1942, during the filming of My Gal Sal.
She had two daughters and two grandsons, one by each daughter. Her older daughter, Rebecca Welles, (1944-2004) had a son, Marc McKerrow, whom she gave birth to in 1966, and put up for adoption at birth. Marc had three children, and died at age 44 as a result of complications from a nocturnal seizure related to a serious car accident that he had when he was 21 years old. Marc is featured in the 2008 documentary Prodigal Sons. Hayworth's younger daughter, Yasmin Aga Khan, had one son, Andrew Ali Aga Khan Embiricos, who died unmarried at age 25.
Edward Charles Judson
When Hayworth was 18, she married Edward C. Judson, an oilman turned promoter who was more than twice her age. They married in Las Vegas. Judson, who helped launch her acting career, was a shrewd businessman, but domineering. "He helped me with my career", Hayworth conceded after they divorced, adding "and helped himself to my money." She alleged that Judson compelled her to transfer a considerable amount of her property to him, and she promised to pay him $12,000 under threats that he would do her "great bodily harm".
Hayworth filed for divorce from him on February 24, 1942, with a complaint of cruelty. She noted to the press that his work took him to Oklahoma and Texas while she lived and worked in Hollywood. Judson was as old as her father, who was enraged by the marriage, which caused a rift between Hayworth and her parents until the divorce. Judson had failed to tell Hayworth before they married that he had previously been married twice. When she left him, she had no money; she asked her friend Hermes Pan if she could eat at his home.
Orson Welles
Hayworth married Orson Welles on September 7, 1943, during the run of The Mercury Wonder Show. None of her colleagues knew about the planned wedding (before a judge) until she announced it the day before. For the civil ceremony, she wore a beige suit, a ruffled white blouse, and a veil. A few hours after they got married, they returned to work at the studio. They had a daughter, Rebecca, who was born on December 17, 1944, and died at the age of 59 on October 17, 2004. They struggled in their marriage, with Hayworth saying that Welles did not want to be tied down:
During the entire period of our marriage, he showed no interest in establishing a home. When I suggested purchasing a home, he told me he didn't want the responsibility. Mr. Welles told me he never should have married in the first place; that it interfered with his freedom in his way of life.
On November 10, 1947, she was granted a divorce that became final the following year. The divorce was civil and they remained friendly afterwards.
Relationship with Glenn Ford
Hayworth also had an intermittent, long-term relationship with Glenn Ford, which started during the filming of Gilda in 1945, and continued through each other's numerous marriages. Their relationship is documented in the 2011 biography Glenn Ford: A Life by Ford's son, Peter Ford. Peter revealed in his book that Hayworth became pregnant during the filming of The Loves of Carmen and traveled to France to get an abortion. Ford later moved next door to her in Beverly Hills in 1960, and they continued their relationship until the early 1980s.
Prince Aly Khan
In 1948, Hayworth left her film career to marry Prince Aly Khan, a son of Sultan Mohammed Shah, Aga Khan III, the leader of the Ismaili community of Shia Islam. They were married on May 27, 1949. Her bridal trousseau was designed by Jacques Fath.
Aly Khan and his family were heavily involved in horse racing, owning and racing horses. Hayworth had no interest in the sport, but became a member of the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club anyway. Her filly, Double Rose, won several races in France and finished second in the 1949 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe.
In 1951, while still married to Hayworth, Khan was spotted dancing with the actress Joan Fontaine in the nightclub where he and Hayworth had met. Hayworth threatened to divorce him in Reno, Nevada. In early May, Hayworth moved to Nevada to establish legal residence to qualify for a divorce. She stayed at Lake Tahoe with their daughter, saying there was a threat the child would be kidnapped. Hayworth filed for divorce from Khan on September 2, 1951, on the grounds of "extreme cruelty, entirely mental in nature".
Hayworth once said she might convert to Islam, but did not. During the custody fight over their daughter, Princess Yasmin Aga Khan, born (1949-12-28)December 28, 1949, the prince said he wanted her to be raised as a Muslim; Hayworth wanted the child to be raised as a Christian. Hayworth rejected his offer of $1 million if she would rear Yasmin as a Muslim from age seven and allow her to go to Europe to visit with him for two or three months each year, stating:
Nothing will make me give up Yasmin's chance to live here in America among our precious freedoms and habits. While I respect the Moslem faith, and all other faiths, it is my earnest wish that my daughter be raised as a normal, healthy American girl in the Christian faith. There isn't any amount of money in the entire world for which it is worth sacrificing this child's privilege of living as a normal Christian girl here in the United States. There just isn't anything else in the world that can compare with her sacred chance to do that. And I'm going to give it to Yasmin regardless of what it costs.
In January 1953, Hayworth was granted a divorce from Aly Khan on the grounds of extreme mental cruelty. Her daughter Yasmin, only three years old, played about the court while the case was being heard, finally climbing on to the judge's lap.
Dick Haymes
When Hayworth and Dick Haymes first met, he was still married and his singing career was waning. When ⁷⁶⁵ I showed up at the clubs, he got a larger audience. Haymes was desperate for money because two of his former wives were taking legal action against him for unpaid child support. His financial problems were so bad that when he tried to return to California, he was arrested.
On July 7, 1954, his ex-wife Nora Eddington got a bench warrant for his arrest, because he owed her $3,800 in alimony. Less than a week earlier, his other ex-wife, Joanne Dru, also got a bench warrant because she said he owed $4,800 in child support payments for their three children. Hayworth ended up paying most of Haymes's debts.
Haymes was born in Argentina and did not have solid proof of American citizenship. Not long after he met Hayworth, U.S. officials initiated proceedings to have him deported to Argentina for being an illegal alien. He hoped Hayworth could influence the government and keep him in the United States. When she assumed responsibility for his citizenship, a bond was formed that led to marriage. The two were married on September 24, 1953, at the Sands Hotel, Las Vegas, and their wedding procession went through the casino.
From the start of their marriage, Haymes was deeply in debt to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). When Hayworth took time off from attending his comeback performances in Philadelphia, audiences sharply declined. Haymes's $5,000 weekly salary was attached by the IRS to pay a $100,000 bill, and he was unable to pay his pianist. Haymes's ex-wives demanded money while Hayworth publicly bemoaned her own lack of alimony from Aly Khan. At one point, the couple was effectively imprisoned in a hotel room for 24 hours in Manhattan at the Hotel Madison while sheriff's deputies waited outside, threatening to arrest Haymes for outstanding debts.
At the same time, Hayworth was fighting a severe custody battle with Khan, during which she reported death threats against their children. While living in New York, Hayworth sent the children to live with their nanny in Westchester County. They were found and photographed by a reporter from Confidential magazine.
After a tumultuous two years together, Haymes struck Hayworth in the face in 1955 in public at the Cocoanut Grove nightclub in Los Angeles. Hayworth packed her bags, walked out, and never returned. The assault and crisis shook her, and her doctor ordered her to remain in bed for several days.
Hayworth was short of money after her marriage to Haymes. She had failed to gain child support from Aly Khan. She sued Orson Welles for back payment of child support, which she claimed had never been paid. This effort was unsuccessful and added to her stress.
James Hill
Hayworth began a relationship with film producer James Hill, whom she went on to marry on February 2, 1958. He put her in one of her last major films, Separate Tables. This film was popular and highly praised, although The Harvard Lampoon named her the worst actress of 1958 for her performance. On September 1, 1961, Hayworth filed for divorce, alleging extreme mental cruelty. Hill later wrote Rita Hayworth: A Memoir, in which he suggested that their marriage collapsed because he wanted Hayworth to continue making movies, while she wanted them both to retire from Hollywood.
In his autobiography, Charlton Heston wrote about Hayworth's brief marriage to Hill. One night, Heston and his wife Lydia joined the couple for dinner at a restaurant in Spain with the director George Marshall and the actor Rex Harrison, Hayworth's co-star in The Happy Thieves. Heston wrote that the occasion "turned into the single most embarrassing evening of my life", describing how Hill heaped "obscene abuse" on Hayworth until she was "reduced to a helpless flood of tears, her face buried in her hands". Heston wrote that the others sat stunned, witnesses to a "marital massacre", and, though he was "strongly tempted to slug him" (Hill), he left with his wife Lydia after she stood up, almost in tears. Heston wrote, "I'm ashamed of walking away from Miss Hayworth's humiliation. I never saw her again."
Health
Hayworth and Carol Burnett on The Carol Burnett Show (1971)Lily Tomlin and Hayworth on Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In (1971)Hayworth reprising the role of Sadie Thompson on Laugh-In (1971)Orson Welles noted Hayworth's problem with alcohol during their marriage, but he never believed that her problem was alcoholism. "It certainly imitated alcoholism in every superficial way", he recalled in 1983. "She'd fly into these rages, never at me, never once, always at Harry Cohn or her father or her mother or her brother. She would break all the furniture and she'd get in a car and I'd have to get in the car and try to control her. She'd drive up in the hills suicidally. Terrible, terrible nights. And I just saw this lovely girl destroying herself. I admire Yasmin so much."
Yasmin Aga Khan spoke of her mother's long struggle with alcohol:
I remember as a child that she had a drinking problem. She had difficulty coping with the ups and downs of the business ... As a child, I thought, 'She has a drinking problem, and she's an alcoholic.' That was very clear, and I thought, 'Well, there's not much I can do. I can just, sort of, stand by and watch.' It's very difficult, seeing your mother, going through her emotional problems and drinking and then behaving in that manner ... Her condition became quite bad. It worsened and she did have an alcoholic breakdown and landed in the hospital.
In 1972, the 54-year-old Hayworth wanted to retire from acting, but she needed money. At the suggestion of Robert Mitchum, she agreed to film The Wrath of God. The experience exposed her poor health and her worsening mental state. Because she could not remember her lines, her scenes were shot one line at a time. In November, she agreed to complete one more movie, the British film Tales That Witness Madness, but because of her worsening health, she left the set and returned to the United States. She never returned to acting.
In March 1974, both of her brothers died within a week of each other, which caused her great sadness and led to heavy drinking. In January 1976, at London's Heathrow Airport, Hayworth was removed from a TWA flight after having an angry outburst while traveling with her agent. The event attracted much negative publicity; an unflattering photograph was published in newspapers the next day. Hayworth's alcoholism hid symptoms of what was eventually understood to be Alzheimer's disease.
Yasmin Aga Khan spoke of her mother's disease:
It was the outbursts. She'd fly into a rage. I can't tell you. I thought it was alcoholism – alcoholic dementia. We all thought that. The papers picked that up, of course. You can't imagine the relief just in getting a diagnosis. We had a name at last, Alzheimer's! Of course, that didn't really come until the last seven or eight years. She wasn't diagnosed as having Alzheimer's until 1980. There were two decades of hell before that.
Biographer Barbara Leaming wrote that Hayworth aged prematurely because of her addiction to alcohol and also because of the many stresses in her life. "Despite the artfully applied make-up and shoulder-length red hair, there was no concealing the ravages of drink and stress", she wrote of Hayworth's arrival in New York in May 1956 in order to begin work on Fire Down Below, her first film in three years. "Deep lines had crept around her eyes and mouth, and she appeared worn, exhausted – older than her thirty-eight years."
Alzheimer's disease had been largely forgotten by the medical community since its discovery in 1906. Medical historian Barron H. Lerner wrote that when Hayworth's diagnosis was made public in 1981, she became "the first public face of Alzheimer's, helping to ensure that future patients did not go undiagnosed ... Unbeknownst to her, Hayworth helped to destigmatize a condition that can still embarrass victims and their families."
In July 1981, Hayworth's health had deteriorated to the point that a judge in Los Angeles Superior Court ruled that she should be placed under the care of her daughter, Princess Yasmin Aga Khan of New York City. Hayworth lived in an apartment at The San Remo on Central Park West adjoining that of her daughter, who arranged for her mother's care during her final years. When asked how her mother was doing, Yasmin replied, "She's still beautiful. But it's a shell."
In 1983, Rebecca Welles arranged to see her mother for the first time in seven years. Speaking to his lifelong friend Roger Hill, Orson Welles expressed his concern about the visit's effect on his daughter. "Rita barely knows me now," Welles said. He recalled seeing Hayworth three years before at an event that the Reagans held for Frank Sinatra. "When it was over, I came over to her table, and I saw that she was very beautiful, very reposed looking, and didn't know me at first. After about four minutes of speaking, I could see that she realized who I was, and she began to cry quietly."
In an interview that he gave the evening before his death in 1985, Welles called Hayworth "one of the dearest and sweetest women that ever lived".
Political views
Hayworth was a lifelong Democrat who was an active member of the Hollywood Democratic Committee and was active in the campaign of Franklin D. Roosevelt during the 1944 presidential election. In 1968, Hayworth was part of a Hollywood committee that endorsed Robert F. Kennedy's presidential campaign.
Religion
Hayworth was a Catholic whose marriage to Prince Aly Khan was deemed illicit by Pope Pius XII.
Death
Hayworth lapsed into a semicoma in February 1987. She died at age 68, from complications associated with Alzheimer's disease, on May 14, 1987, at her home in Manhattan. President Ronald Reagan, who was one of Hayworth's contemporaries in Hollywood (and who went on to also suffer from Alzheimer's in his final years), issued a statement:
Rita Hayworth was one of our country's most beloved stars. Glamorous and talented, she gave us many wonderful moments on stage and screen and delighted audiences from the time she was a young girl. In her later years, Rita became known for her struggle with Alzheimer's disease. Her courage and candor, and that of her family, were a great public service in bringing worldwide attention to a disease which we all hope will soon be cured. Nancy and I are saddened by Rita's death. She was a friend who we will miss. We extend our deep sympathy to her family.
A funeral service was held on May 18, 1987, at the Church of the Good Shepherd. Pallbearers included actors Ricardo Montalbán, Glenn Ford, Cesar Romero, Anthony Franciosa, choreographer Hermes Pan, and a family friend, Phillip Luchenbill. She was interred at Holy Cross Cemetery, Culver City. Her headstone includes Yasmin's sentiment: "To yesterday's companionship and tomorrow's reunion."
Filmography
Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1926 | La Fiesta | Short; credited as Rita Cansino | ||
1934 | Cruz Diablo | Extra | Uncredited | |
1935 | In Caliente | Credited as Rita Cansino | ||
Under the Pampas Moon | Carmen | |||
Charlie Chan in Egypt | Nayda | |||
Dante's Inferno | Dancer | |||
Piernas de seda | Ballerina | Uncredited | ||
Hi, Gaucho! | Dolores | |||
Paddy O'Day | Tamara Petrovitch | Credited as Rita Cansino | ||
1936 | Professional Soldier | Gypsy Dancer | ||
Human Cargo | Carmen Zoro | |||
Dancing Pirate | Specialty Dancer | Uncredited | ||
Meet Nero Wolfe | Maria Maringola | Credited as Rita Cansino | ||
Rebellion | Paula Castillo | Alternative title: Lady from Frisco Credited as Rita Cansino |
||
1937 | Old Louisiana | Angela Gonzales | Alternative title: Louisiana Gal Credited as Rita Cansino |
|
Hit the Saddle | Rita | Credited as Rita Cansino | ||
Trouble in Texas | Carmen Serano | |||
Criminals of the Air | Rita Owens | |||
Girls Can Play | Sue Collins | |||
The Game That Kills | Betty Holland | |||
Life Begins with Love | Dinner Guest's Girl Friend | Uncredited | ||
Paid to Dance | Betty Morgan | Alternative title: Hard to Hold | ||
The Shadow | Mary Gillespie | |||
1938 | Who Killed Gail Preston? | Gail Preston | ||
Special Inspector | Patricia Lane | Alternative title: Across the Border | ||
There's Always a Woman | Mary—Ketterling's Secretary | Uncredited | ||
Convicted | Jerry Wheeler | |||
Juvenile Court | Marcia Adams | |||
The Renegade Ranger | Judith Alvarez | |||
1939 | Homicide Bureau | J.G. Bliss | ||
The Lone Wolf Spy Hunt | Karen | |||
Only Angels Have Wings | Judy MacPherson | |||
1940 | Music in My Heart | Patricia O'Malley | ||
Blondie on a Budget | Joan Forrester | |||
Susan and God | Leonora Stubbs | |||
The Lady in Question | Natalie Roguin | |||
1940 | Angels Over Broadway | Nina Barona | ||
1941 | The Strawberry Blonde | Virginia Brush | ||
Affectionately Yours | Irene Malcolm | |||
Blood and Sand | Doña Sol | |||
You'll Never Get Rich | Sheila Winthrop | |||
1942 | My Gal Sal | Sally Elliott | ||
Tales of Manhattan | Ethel Halloway | |||
You Were Never Lovelier | Maria Acuña | |||
1944 | Cover Girl | Rusty Parker/Maribelle Hicks | ||
1945 | Tonight and Every Night | Rosalind Bruce | ||
1946 | Gilda | Gilda Mundson Farrell | ||
1947 | Down to Earth | Terpsichore/Kitty Pendleton | ||
The Lady from Shanghai | Elsa Bannister | |||
1948 | The Loves of Carmen | Carmen | Also producer (uncredited) | |
1952 | Affair in Trinidad | Chris Emery | Also producer (uncredited) | |
1953 | Salome | Princess Salome | Alternative title: Salome: The Dance of the Seven Veils Also producer (uncredited) |
|
Miss Sadie Thompson | Sadie Thompson | |||
1957 | Fire Down Below | Irena | ||
Pal Joey | Vera Prentice-Simpson | |||
1958 | Separate Tables | Ann Shankland | ||
1959 | They Came to Cordura | Adelaide Geary | ||
The Story on Page One | Josephine Brown/Jo Morris | |||
1961 | The Happy Thieves | Eve Lewis | Also executive producer | |
1964 | Circus World | Lili Alfredo | ||
1965 | The Money Trap | Rosalie Kenny | ||
1966 | The Poppy Is Also a Flower | Monique Marko | Television film | |
1967 | The Rover | Aunt Caterina | Alternative title: L'avventuriero | |
1968 | The Bastard | Martha | Alternative title: I bastardi | |
1970 | Road to Salina | Mara | Alternative title: La route de Salina | |
The Naked Zoo | Mrs. Golden | |||
1971 | The Carol Burnett Show | Herself | TV series (Episode #4.20) | |
Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In | TV series (Episode #5.3) | |||
1972 | The Wrath of God | Señora De La Plata |
Accolades
Hayworth received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama for her performance in Circus World (1964).
In 1978, at the Shoreham Hotel in Washington, D. C., Hayworth was presented with the inaugural National Screen Heritage Award of the National Film Society, a group that published American Classic Screen magazine (1976–1984).
In 1999, Hayworth was acknowledged as one of the top-25 greatest female stars of Classic Hollywood cinema in the American Film Institute's survey, AFI's 100 Years...100 Stars.
Legacy
The public disclosure and discussion of Hayworth's illness drew international attention to Alzheimer's disease, which was little known at the time, and it helped to greatly increase federal funding for Alzheimer's research.
The Rita Hayworth Gala, a benefit for the Alzheimer's Association, is held annually in Chicago and New York City. The program was founded in 1985 by Princess Yasmin Aga Khan, in honor of her mother. She is the hostess for the events and is a major sponsor of Alzheimer's disease charities and awareness programs. As of August 2017, a total of more than $72 million had been raised through events in Chicago, New York, and Palm Beach, Florida.
On October 17, 2016, a press release from the Springer Associates Public Relations Agency announced that Rita Hayworth's former manager and friend, Budd Burton Moss, initiated a campaign to solicit the United States Postal Service to issue a commemorative stamp featuring Hayworth. Springer Associates also announced that the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences would be lobbied in hopes of having an honorary Academy Award issued in memory of Hayworth. The press release added that Hayworth's daughter, Princess Yasmin Aga Khan, the Alzheimer's Association of Greater Los Angeles, and numerous prominent personalities of stage and screen were supporting the Moss campaign. The press release stated the target date for fulfillment of the stamp and Academy Award to be on October 17, 2018, the centennial of Hayworth's birth.
Cultural references
The film I Remember Better When I Paint (2009) describes how Hayworth took up painting while struggling with Alzheimer's. In 1983, Lynda Carter, who was of a similar Irish and Hispanic ancestry, played and danced as Hayworth in a TV biopic Rita Hayworth: The Love Goddess. In the Baptiste episode "Shell", Baptiste talks to Kim about Hayworth in an attempt to gain information from her about Natalie after noticing that she has several DVDs of Hayworth's films; the Dream Room has a poster of Gilda.
Hayworth's name can be heard in the Madonna hit from 1990, "Vogue", ("Rita Hayworth gave good face") among other artists from classical Hollywood cinema. Her name is also mentioned in Tom Waits's song "Invitation to the Blues", from his 1976 album Small Change.
In the Sicilian scenes of the film The Godfather, the bodyguard of Michael Corleone is heard shouting the name "Rita Hayworth" to GI's passing by in jeeps.
Hayworth is the main topic of the song, "Take, Take, Take" by the White Stripes and also referenced in "White Moon"; both from their Get Behind Me Satan album, released in 2005. In a 2005 interview with Rolling Stone, Jack White said, "Rita Hayworth became an all-encompassing metaphor for everything I was thinking about while making the album."
The film The Shawshank Redemption was adapted from a Stephen King novella, "Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption", from his 1982 collection Different Seasons. A succession of posters, starting with one of Rita Hayworth, hides a hole in a jail cell wall in the novella. In the film, a poster of Rita Hayworth was used for the first third of the film, then changed to a poster of Marilyn Monroe for the middle third, then Raquel Welch for the last third. The film also includes a scene where the prison movie night shows Rita Hayworth's film Gilda.
In the film Mulholland Drive an amnesiac character who cannot remember her real name gives herself the name Rita. She sees the name on a poster for Hayworth’s film Gilda that hangs in the room where she’s standing at the time she’s first asked her name.
References
- Krebs, Albin (May 16, 1987). "RITA HAYWORTH, MOVIES LEGEND, DIES". New York Times. Retrieved April 21, 2024.
- Cosgrove, Ben (October 2014). "Rita Hayworth: Hollywood Legend, Pinup Icon - LIFE". Retrieved April 21, 2024.
- Cosgrove, Ben (October 1, 2014). "LIFE With Rita Hayworth: Hollywood Legend, Pinup Icon". TIME. Retrieved April 21, 2024.
- "Rita Hayworth - Biography, Movies, & Facts". Britannica. April 9, 2024. Retrieved April 21, 2024.
- "Rita Hayworth - Spouse, Gilda & Movies". Biography. April 8, 2021. Retrieved April 21, 2024.
- ^ Faris, Gerald (May 16, 1987). "Rita Hayworth - Hollywood Star Walk". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 21, 2024.
- "Rita Hayworth, 68, films' 'Love Goddess'". Chicago Tribune. Associated Press. May 16, 1987. p. 8.
- Hancock, Ian (2002). We are the Romani People. Hatfield: University of Hertfordshire Press. p. 129. ISBN 978-1902806198.
- Kendrick, Donald (2007). Historical Dictionary of the Gypsies (Romanies). United States: Scarecrow Press (Rowman & Littlefield). p. 108. ISBN 978-0810864405.
- Nericcio, William Anthony (2007). Tex[t]-Mex: Seductive Hallucinations of the "Mexican" in America. Austin: University of Texas Press. p. 97. ISBN 9780292714571.
- Márquez Reviriego, Víctor (March 24, 1984). "Del firmamento al limbo". ABC. Retrieved April 5, 2012.
- ^ Ware, Susan; Braukman, Stacy, eds. (2005). Notable American Women: A Biographical Dictionary. Vol. 5: Completing the Twentieth Century. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press. p. 281. ISBN 978-0674014886.
- "Princess Born to Rita After Pre-dawn Dash to Clinic", Associated Press, December 28, 1949; accessed June 13, 2009.
- "TV's Vincent Hayworth Has Two Beauties Saying 'Uncle'". The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Texas). January 29, 1951. p. 6. Retrieved August 9, 2015 – via Newspapers.com. [REDACTED]
- "Rita Hayworth Delights Papa and Mama Cansino." Ellensburg Daily Record, July 13, 1944. Accessed June 7, 2009.
- "Actress Rita Hayworth's Grandfather Dies at 89." Los Angeles Times, June 22, 1954.
- "Antonio Cansino RIP (Rita Hayworth's grandfather)". Los Angeles Times. June 22, 1954. p. 37. Retrieved March 23, 2022.
- Agan, Patrick (1979). The Decline and Fall of the Love Goddesses. Los Angeles: Pinnacle Books. ISBN 978-0523406237.
- ^ Morella, Joe; Epstein, Edward Z. (1983). Rita: The Life of Rita Hayworth. New York: Delacourte Press. ISBN 0-385-29265-1.
- "The Cansinos". Internet Broadway Database. Retrieved April 25, 2018.
- "'Greenwich Follies' Anew". The New York Times. September 21, 1923. Retrieved April 25, 2018.
- Burroughs Hannasberry, Karen (2010). Femme Noir: Bad Girls of Film. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company. ISBN 978-0-786-44682-7.
- ^ Leaming, Barbara (1989). If This Was Happiness: A Biography of Rita Hayworth. New York: Viking. ISBN 0-670-81978-6.
- ^ Meares, Hadley Hall (September 23, 2020). "The Love Goddess: Rita Hayworth's Tragic Quest". Vanity Fair. Retrieved May 8, 2021.
- Braudy, Susan (November 19, 1989). "What We Have Here Is a Very Sad Story". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 11, 2019.
- "Rita Hayworth Goes on a Bicycle Picnic". Life. Vol. 9, no. 3. July 15, 1940. p. 58. Retrieved March 7, 2015.
- ^ Levinson, Peter (2019). Puttin' On the Ritz: Fred Astaire and the Fine Art of Panache, A Biography, St. Martin's Press, pp. 123–124.
- You Were Never Lovelier, fair use clip
- "Rita Hayworth Rises from Bit Parts Into a Triple-Threat Song & Dance Star". Life. Vol. 11, no. 6. August 11, 1941. p. 33. Retrieved March 7, 2015.
- "Life with Rita Hayworth: Hollywood Legend, Pinup Icon". Life. Archived from the original on October 17, 2013. Retrieved March 7, 2015.
- Stamberg, Susan (May 13, 2002). "Rita Hayworth, Present at the Creation". Morning Edition. NPR. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
- Osborne, Robert. "Robert Osborne on Pin-Up Girls". Now Playing (June 2015). Turner Classic Movies: 4.
- "Rita Hayworth Nightgown From Her Famous World War II Publicity Photos". Sotheby's. Retrieved March 8, 2015.
- Benamou, Catherine L. (2007). It's All True: Orson Welles's Pan-American Odyssey. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 244–245. ISBN 978-0-520-24247-0.
- Dissonant Divas in Chicana Music: The Limits of La Onda Deborah R. Vargas. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 2012 pp. 152–153 ISBN 978-0-8166-7316-2 Rita Hayworth, OCIAA, CBS radio, Pan-americanism and Cadena de las Americas on google.books.com
- "Cover Girl". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. American Film Institute. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
- Faris, Gerald (May 18, 1987). "A Screen Goddess and Hollywood Rebel Loses The Battle Against Disease". The Age. Retrieved June 7, 2009.
- ^ Hallowell, John (October 25, 1970). "Rita Hayworth: Don't Put the Blame on Me, Boys". The New York Times. Retrieved March 7, 2015.
- ^ Krebs, Albin (May 16, 1987). "Rita Hayworth, Movie Legend, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved December 9, 2014.
- "1946 Orson Welles Commentaries". Internet Archive. June 30, 1946. Retrieved March 11, 2015.
- "Atomic Goddess Revisited: Rita Hayworth's Bomb Image Found". CONELRAD Adjacent (blog). August 13, 2013. Retrieved March 11, 2015.
- Thomas, Bob (1990). King Cohn: The Life and Times of Hollywood Mogul Harry Cohn. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-070-64261-4.
- Sargeant, Winthrop (November 10, 1947). "The Cult of the Love Goddess in America". Life. Vol. 23, no. 19. pp. 80–96. Retrieved March 7, 2015.
- Dick, Bernard F. (1993). The Merchant Prince of Poverty Row: Harry Cohn of Columbia Pictures. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. p. 130. ISBN 978-0813118413.
- "Rita Hayworth Replaced in Play", AP, August 24, 1962.
- "Screen News Here and in Hollywood". The New York Times. March 22, 1943.
- Hopper, Hedda (October 22, 1947). "Looking at Hollywood". Associated Press. Retrieved June 4, 2009.
- "Hayworth, Studio Agree Once Again". The New York Times. January 9, 1952.
- "Rita Hayworth Files Suit to End Film Contract". Los Angeles Times. April 9, 1955.
- "Call for Boycott of Rita Hayworth". The Age (Australian Associated Press). April 30, 1951. Retrieved March 8, 2015.
- ^ Kobal, John (1982). Rita Hayworth: The Time, the Place, and the Woman. New York: Berkley Books. ISBN 0-425-05634-1.
- Hallowell, John (June 23, 1968). "Rita: Hollywood Still Is Her Town But No One Knows She's There". St. Petersburg Times. Retrieved June 4, 2009.
- Anderson, Nancy (February 11, 1972). "Rita Hayworth Still Ranks as Beauty". Copley News Service. Retrieved June 2, 2009.
- Mason, Jerry (January 3, 1942). "Meet Rita Hayworth". Spokesman-Review. Spokane, Washington. (This Week). p. 13.
- Chapman, John. "Red Heads", Chicago Daily Tribune, May 25, 1941.
- "Presenting: Ten Most Perfect Features in the World", AP, February 17, 1949. Accessed June 13, 2009.
- Kleiman, Carol. "Behind Glamor are Scars of Incest". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved May 8, 2021.
- Braudy, Susan (November 19, 1989). "What We Have Here is a Very Sad Story". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved May 8, 2021.
- Parsons, Louella O. "Rita, Shy Off Set, Now Groomed for Vamp Role", St. Petersburg Times, May 25, 1941. Accessed June 2, 2009.
- "Chatter", People, July 15, 1974. Accessed June 6, 2009.
- Ellenberger, Allan R. (2001). Celebrities in Los Angeles Cemeteries: A Directory. McFarland. p. 117. ISBN 978-0-786-45019-0.
- "From the Archives: Victor Mature, Beefcake Star of '40s and '50s, Dies". Los Angeles Times. August 10, 1999. Retrieved October 23, 2019.
- Thompson, David (August 28, 2008). "Who's the grandaddy?". The Guardian.
- Thompson, David (August 28, 2008). "Who's the grandaddy?". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved November 24, 2023.
- "Marc McKerrow Obituary (2010) - Great Falls, MT - Great Falls Tribune". Legacy.com. Retrieved November 24, 2023.
- "Rita Hayworth's Grandson, Andrew Embiricos, Dead". Peoplemag. Retrieved November 24, 2023.
- "Rita Hayworth Tells of Threats by Ex-Mate", Los Angeles Times, July 3, 1943, p. A16.
- "Actor Orson Welles Weds Rita Hayworth. Couple Married In Superior Court At Santa Monica". The New York Times. Associated Press. September 8, 1943. Retrieved December 9, 2014.
Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth were married today by Superior Court Judge Orlando Rhodes. ...
- "Rita Hayworth wins divorce from Orson". Spokane Daily Chronicle. Washington. Associated Press. November 10, 1947. p. 1.
- "Rita Hayworth's tragic romances and one 'great love'". April 9, 2021.
- Ford, Peter (2011). Glenn Ford: A Life (Wisconsin Film Studies). Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 62, 63 ISBN 978-0-29928-154-0
- Ford, Peter (2011). Glenn Ford: A Life (Wisconsin Film Studies). Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, p. 96. ISBN 978-0-29928-154-0
- Ford, Peter (2011). Glenn Ford: A Life (Wisconsin Film Studies). Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 202, 203 ISBN 978-0-29928-154-0
- King, Susan (April 11, 2011). "A Ford fiesta". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
- "Page 73". glennfordbio.com. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
- "Glenn Ford: A Life – Book Notes". www.glennfordbio.com. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
- "Ford celebrates his 90th after 15 years of seclusion". Deseret News. May 2, 2006. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
- "Love's Long Shot", Time October 17, 1949. Accessed May 29, 2009.
- "Rita Hayworth Files Divorce Action in Reno", Los Angeles Times, September 2, 1951.
- Yacoob, Mohammad (May 22, 2013). "Brief History of the Islamic Center of Southern California (1952-1972)". Retrieved November 9, 2022.
- "Prince Wants Yasmin Back", Associated Press, October 31, 1953. Accessed June 13, 2009.
- "Rita Says No to Million", Sydney Morning Herald, September 13, 1953. Accessed June 13, 2009.
- "Rita Hayworth Gets Divorce". The Manchester Guardian. January 27, 1953.
- "Dick Haymes Faces Arrest Over Alimony", Los Angeles Times, October 5, 1956.
- "Haymes Hears Sour Music", AP, July 7, 1954.
- "Marriage Falls Down and So Does Rita", UP, August 30, 1955.
- "Rita Hayworth Sends Thanks to Lampoon For 'Worst' Prize". The Harvard Crimson. March 19, 1959. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
- Heston, Charlton (1997). In the Arena: An Autobiography. New York: Boulevard Books. p. 253. ISBN 1-57297-267-X.
- ^ Tarbox, Todd (2013). Orson Welles and Roger Hill: A Friendship in Three Acts. Albany, Georgia: BearManor Media, ISBN 1-59393-260-X.
- Lindström, Pia. "Alzheimer's Fight in Her Mother's Name", New York Times, February 23, 1997. Accessed June 6, 2009.
- Thames, Stephanie. "The Wrath of God", TCM.com. Accessed June 14, 2009.
- "Actress Helped from Jet", St. Petersburg Times, January 21, 1976.
- "Love Goddess' Rita Hayworth is dead at 68". Ocala Star–Banner. Florida. Associated Press. May 16, 1987. p. 1A.
- Hendrickson, Paul, "Alzheimer's: A Daughter's Nightmare", Los Angeles Times, April 11, 1989.
- ^ Lerner, Barron H. (November 20, 2006). "Rita Hayworth's misdiagnosed struggle". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 17, 2015.
- "Rita Hayworth Placed in Conservatorship" AP, July 23, 1981.
- "Orson Welles' Last Interview (excerpt)". The Merv Griffin Show, October 10, 1985. Archived from the original on June 14, 2012. Retrieved March 7, 2015.
- Jordan, David M. (September 2, 2011). FDR, Dewey, and the Election of 1944. Indiana University Press. p. 232 – via Internet Archive.
Rita Hayworth Hollywood Democratic committee.
- Horne, Gerald (2013). Class Struggle in Hollywood, 1930–1950: Moguls, Mobsters, Stars, Reds, and Trade Unionists. University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0292750135 – via Google Books.
- Palermo, Joseph A. (January 10, 2008). "Here's What RFK Did in California in 1968". HuffPost. Archived from the original on January 19, 2024.
- Starr, Steve. "The Life of Rita Hayworth". Entertainment Magazine. Archived from the original on December 2, 2023.
- Reagan, Ronald (May 15, 1987). "Statement on the Death of Rita Hayworth". The American Presidency Project. Online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved March 12, 2015.
- "500 Rita Hayworth Mourners Told of Her Shyness and 'Gentle' Nature". Los Angeles Times. May 19, 1987. Archived from the original on October 23, 2015. Retrieved May 23, 2018.
- ^ "Rita Hayworth". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Retrieved March 7, 2015.
- ^ Tibbetts, John C.; Welsh, James M (2010). American Classic Screen Interviews. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0810876743.
- "AFI Recognizes the 50 Greatest American Screen Legends" (Press release). American Film Institute. June 16, 1999. Archived from the original on January 13, 2013. Retrieved March 7, 2015.
- ^ "New York Rita Hayworth Gala". Alzheimer's Association. Retrieved August 1, 2017.
- Brozan, Nadine (May 24, 1985). "The Evening Hours". The New York Times. Retrieved August 18, 2015.
- "Chicago Rita Hayworth Gala". Alzheimer's Association. Retrieved August 1, 2017.
- "Rita Hayworth Luncheon in Palm Beach". Alzheimer's Association. Retrieved August 1, 2017.
- "Happy Birthday, Rita Hayworth". Facebook. Retrieved October 17, 2016.
- Gitau, Rosalia (March 11, 2010). "Art Therapy for Alzheimer's". The Huffington Post.
- Who is the Real Edward Stratton? Baptiste Creators Harry and Jack Williams Discuss the Twists and Turns of Episode One Radio Times; retrieved April 21, 2020.
- The White Stripes – Take, Take, Take, retrieved September 20, 2021
- The White Stripes – White Moon, retrieved September 20, 2021
- Fricke, David (September 8, 2005). "The White Stripes: Jack White Comes Clean". Rolling Stone. Retrieved September 20, 2021.
Further reading
- McLean, Adrienne L (2004). Being Rita Hayworth: Labor, Identity, and Hollywood Stardom. ISBN 0-8135-3389-9.
- Moss, Budd Burton (2015). Hollywood: Sometimes the Reality is Better Than the Dream. ISBN 978-1-943625-33-8
- Peary, Gerald (1976). Rita Hayworth: A Pyramid Illustrated History of the Movies. ISBN 0-515-04116-5.
- Ringgold, Gene (1974). The Films of Rita Hayworth: The Legend and Career of a Love Goddess. ISBN 0-8065-0439-0.
- Roberts-Frenzel, Caren (2001). Rita Hayworth: A Photographic Retrospective. ISBN 0-8109-1434-4.
External links
- Rita Hayworth at the Internet Broadway Database
- Rita Hayworth at IMDb
- Hayworth
- Rita Hayworth at the TCM Movie Database
- Photos of Rita Hayworth in Down to Earth by Ned Scott
- 1918 births
- 1987 deaths
- 20th-century American actresses
- 20th-century Roman Catholics
- 20th Century Studios contract players
- Actresses from Los Angeles
- Actresses from Brooklyn
- Alexander Hamilton High School (Los Angeles) alumni
- American child actresses
- American female dancers
- American film actresses
- Film producers from New York City
- American musical theatre actresses
- American people of English descent
- American people of Irish descent
- American people of Romani descent
- American people of Spanish descent
- American racehorse owners and breeders
- American radio actresses
- American Roman Catholics
- American stage actresses
- American tap dancers
- American television actresses
- American women film producers
- Burials at Holy Cross Cemetery, Culver City
- California Democrats
- Cansino family
- Catholics from California
- Catholics from New York (state)
- Columbia Pictures contract players
- Dancers from California
- Dancers from New York (state)
- Deaths from Alzheimer's disease in New York (state)
- Deaths from dementia in New York (state)
- Hispanic and Latino American actresses
- Musicians from Brooklyn
- New York (state) Democrats
- Princesses by marriage
- Qajar dynasty
- Romani actresses