This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-22806809
The article has changed 3 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
Esther Williams, actress and swimming star, dies at 91 | |
(35 minutes later) | |
US swimming champion-turned-movie star Esther Williams has died in Los Angeles aged 91. | US swimming champion-turned-movie star Esther Williams has died in Los Angeles aged 91. |
Her spokesman said she died peacefully in her sleep. She had been in declining health due to old age. | Her spokesman said she died peacefully in her sleep. She had been in declining health due to old age. |
A national swimming champion by the time she was 16, her success led to a career in Hollywood "aqua-musicals" designed just for her, in the 1940s. | A national swimming champion by the time she was 16, her success led to a career in Hollywood "aqua-musicals" designed just for her, in the 1940s. |
She became known as Hollywood's Mermaid, starring in films including Dangerous When Wet and Easy to Wed. | She became known as Hollywood's Mermaid, starring in films including Dangerous When Wet and Easy to Wed. |
Williams became one of cinema's biggest box-office stars in the 1940s and 1950s, famously appearing in spectacular swimsuits that capitalised on her physical beauty. | Williams became one of cinema's biggest box-office stars in the 1940s and 1950s, famously appearing in spectacular swimsuits that capitalised on her physical beauty. |
Her films were typically lavish song-and-dance affairs, following the same formula of romance, music and comedy - held together by a lightweight plot that provided infinite excuses for the actress to get into the water. | |
Finales usually featured Williams diving into a pool or lagoon and surfacing to a crescendo of music, with water glistening on her beaming face. | Finales usually featured Williams diving into a pool or lagoon and surfacing to a crescendo of music, with water glistening on her beaming face. |
Her string of successful films included Thrill of a Romance, Fiesta, On an Island With You and Duchess of Idaho. | Her string of successful films included Thrill of a Romance, Fiesta, On an Island With You and Duchess of Idaho. |
Co-stars included Gene Kelly, Frank Sinatra, Red Skelton, Ricardo Montalban and Howard Keel. | Co-stars included Gene Kelly, Frank Sinatra, Red Skelton, Ricardo Montalban and Howard Keel. |
"I look at that girl and I like her," she said on watching her films decades later, Reuters reports. | |
"I can see why she became popular with audiences. There was an unassuming quality about her. She was certainly wholesome," she said. | |
In the 1950s she attempted to branch out into non-swimming roles, but met with little success. | In the 1950s she attempted to branch out into non-swimming roles, but met with little success. |
"I guess what MGM found was that my audience wanted that bathing suit," she said, when her autobiography was released in 1999. | "I guess what MGM found was that my audience wanted that bathing suit," she said, when her autobiography was released in 1999. |
"And you know, when Cinemascope came in and you've got that water all wrapped around you and they'd do big close-ups of me... I think it had too much pleasure connected with it for them to change it." | "And you know, when Cinemascope came in and you've got that water all wrapped around you and they'd do big close-ups of me... I think it had too much pleasure connected with it for them to change it." |
She retired from the movies in 1962, following her marriage to her third husband, Hollywood playboy Fernando Lamas. | |
In her later years she hosted swimming events for ABC-TV's coverage of the 1984 Olympic Games and turned her attention to business, launching her own line of swimwear. | In her later years she hosted swimming events for ABC-TV's coverage of the 1984 Olympic Games and turned her attention to business, launching her own line of swimwear. |
Williams was married to Mr Lamas for 20 years until his death in 1982. She and her last husband Edward Bell lived in Los Angeles' Beverly Hills. | |
Her autobiography also told of many romances, including one with actor Jeff Chandler. | |
According to Williams, she discovered he was a cross-dresser and walked out, explaining: "Jeff, you're too big for polka dots." Several of Mr Chandler's colleagues denied Williams' claims when the book was published. |