Natalie Wood
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Born: | July 20, 1938 San Francisco, California, USA |
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Died: | November 29, 1981 Catalina Island, California, USA |
Occupation: | Actress |
Spouse: | Robert Wagner |
Natalie Wood (July 20, 1938 – November 29, 1981) was an American film actress.
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[edit] Early life and acting career
Wood was born Natalia Nikolaevna Zakharenko in San Francisco, California, to Russian Orthodox immigrants, Nikolai and Maria Zakharenko. Her parents changed their surname to the less cumbersome "Gurdin", and by the age of 4 she was billed as Natasha Gurdin. As a child actor, her mother tightly managed and controlled the young girl's career and personal life from her start in films at the age of five. She starred in multiple films as a child including Miracle on 34th Street in 1947. Her father is described by Wood biographers as a passive alcoholic who went along with his wife's demands. Her sister, Lana Wood, is also an actress, notably a Bond girl, and was a Playboy playmate.
At the age of 16 Natalie celebrated her release from child-star status by winning the role of Judy in Nicholas Ray's Rebel Without a Cause, co-starring James Dean, Sal Mineo, and Dennis Hopper, and, as most biographers claim, by sleeping with Ray and Hopper. Indeed, she was one of the relative few child-stars to make a successful transition to adult stardom. By the time she was 28, she was already a three-time Oscar nominee, with nominations for Rebel Without a Cause, Splendor in the Grass and Love With the Proper Stranger.
Another of her widely noted films was the Leonard Bernstein musical West Side Story, in which she played Maria. Wood was initially signed to do her own singing but in the end she was dubbed by professional singer Marni Nixon, which is said to have disappointed her. Nonetheless she enjoyed worldwide celebrity, comparable to that of Elizabeth Taylor. As a restless on-screen companion of James Dean and an off-screen date of Elvis Presley, she was much admired and envied by the young girls of the day. One of her judgments of Elvis was, "He can sing but he can’t do much else."
[edit] Relationships
Among the men Wood frequently dated were singer Elvis Presley and actors Raymond Burr, Dennis Hopper, Warren Beatty, Nick Adams, Tab Hunter, Michael Caine and Scott Marlowe.
According to Mary F. Pols, Wood went on studio-arranged dates throughout her early years as a starlet, often with closeted gay actors. Tab Hunter said he was a frequent companion of Natalie Wood at the request of Warner Brothers, which had both stars under contract. They would attend parties to promote films like The Burning Hills even though he was gay - not publicly at the time - and she was still in her teens. Wood biographer and Hollywood screenwriter Gavin Lambert also confirms that Wood had studio-arranged dates with homo- or bisexual actors, the first of which was with Nick Adams.
According to Lambert and his reviewer David Ehrenstein, Wood later even did her part for gay history by supporting homosexual playwright Mart Crowley in a manner that made it possible for him to write his play, The Boys in the Band.
Concerning a possible relationship between Wood and young homosexual actor Raymond Burr, Wood biographer Suzanne Finstad cites Dennis Hopper as saying, "I just can't wrap my mind around that one. But you know, I saw them together. They were definitely a couple. Who knows what was going on there." However, no romantic relationship has ever been proved between Burr and Wood.
Contrary to popular notions, Gavin Lambert wrote that Wood's casting in Rebel Without a Cause did not lead to a romance with co-star James Dean: "Like many people, she was fascinated by his charm. He had this magnetic quality on the screen and in life... They got on very well, they liked each other a lot." He added that both Dean and Rebel director Nicholas Ray (with whom Wood reportedly had an affair) helped renew her passion for acting after a diet of lackluster movies like Chicken Every Sunday, Dear Brat and Father Was a Fullback.
[edit] Drowning at Catalina Island
Wood's two marriages to actor Robert Wagner were publicized and stormy, but they were reconciled at the time of her death. In 1981, at the age of forty-three, Wood drowned while their yacht The Splendor was anchored at Catalina Island. An investigation by Los Angeles coroner Thomas Noguchi resulted in an official verdict of accidental drowning, although speculation about the circumstances continued.
Wood was on board the yacht with Wagner and actor Christopher Walken. There were reports Wagner and Walken had a loud argument and Wood apparently tried to either leave the yacht or to secure a dinghy that was banging against the hull when she accidentally slipped and fell overboard. A woman on shore said she heard cries for help from the water that night, along with voices replying "we're coming." Wagner, Walken, and the pilot of the Splendor said they heard nothing. Noguchi revealed that Wood was legally intoxicated when she died and there were marks and bruises on her body, which could have been received as a result of her fall.
At the time of her death Wood was filming Brainstorm and preparing to make her stage debut in a Los Angeles production of Anastasia, opposite Dame Wendy Hiller.
She is buried in Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery. She was survived by her husband Robert Wagner and two daughters Natasha Gregson Wagner (from her marriage to Richard Gregson), and Courtney Wagner, her daughter with Robert Wagner. Other survivors included her stepdaughter Katie Wagner (from Robert Wagner's previous marriage to Marion Marshall), her sister, Lana Wood, and her mother. Lana Wood later published a biography of Natalie.
[edit] Trivia
- Height: 5'1"
- When she was nine she had an accident on a movie set which left a slight but permanent bone protrusion on her left wrist. For the rest of her life, on camera or in public, she wore a bracelet to cover it.
- Wood is reported to have had a lifelong fear of dark water and drowning. During the filming of This Property is Condemned, she was so scared of performing a skinny-dipping scene that co-star Robert Redford held her feet underwater to help steady her while shooting it.
- Along with Tatum O'Neal, Haley Joel Osment, Elizabeth Taylor, Judy Garland, Anna Paquin, Quinn Cummings, Dean Stockwell, Justin Henry and Jodie Foster she is one of only ten child actors to have been nominated for an Oscar.
[edit] Awards and nominations
Successful nominations in bold.
1956:
- Academy Award: Rebel Without a Cause (1955) — Best Actress in a Supporting Role
1957:
- Golden Globe Award — Most Promising Newcomer
1958:
- Golden Laurel Awards: Marjorie Morningstar (1958) — Top Female Dramatic Performance
- Golden Laurel Awards — Top Female Star (thirteenth place)
1959:
- Golden Laurel Awards — Top Female Star (seventh place)
1960:
- Golden Laurel Awards — Top Female Star (ninth place)
1961:
- Golden Apple Awards: Sour Apple — Least Cooperative Actress
- Golden Laurel Awards — Top Female Star (fourteenth place)
1962:
- Academy Award: Splendor in the Grass (1961) — Best Actress in a Leading Role
- Golden Laurel Awards — Top Female Star (fifth place)
- Golden Laurel Awards: Splendor in the Grass (1961) — Top Female Dramatic Performance (third place)
1963:
- British Academy of Film and Television Arts: Splendor in the Grass (1961) — Best Foreign Actress
- Golden Globes Awards: Gypsy (1962) — Best Motion Picture Actress: Musical/Comedy
- Golden Laurel Awards: Gypsy (1962) — Top Female Musical Performance (second place)
1964:
- Academy Award: Love with the Proper Stranger (1963) — Best Actress in a Leading Role
- Golden Globe Award: Love with the Proper Stranger (1963) — Best Motion Picture Actress: Drama
- Golden Laurel Awards — Top Female Star (third place)
- Golden Laurel Awards: Love with the Proper Stranger (1963) (second place)
- Mar del Plata Film Festival: Love with the Proper Stranger (1963) — Best Actress
1965:
- Golden Laurel Awards — Female Star (sixth place)
- Golden Laurel Awards: Sex and the Single Girl (1964) — Comedy Performance (fifth place)
1966:
- Golden Apple Awards: Sour Apple — Least Cooperative Actress
- Golden Globe Award: Inside Daisy Clover (1965) — Best Motion Picture Actress: Musical/Comedy
- Golden Globe Award — World Film Favorite: Female
- Golden Laurel Awards — Female Star (eighth place)
1967:
- Golden Globe Award: This Property Is Condemned (1966) — Best Motion Picture Actress: Drama
- Golden Laurel Awards — Female Star (third place)
- Golden Laurel Awards: This Property is Condemned (1966) — Female Dramatic Performance (third place)
1968:
- Golden Laurel Awards — Female Star (twelfth place)
1970:
- Golden Laurel Awards — Female Star (ninth place)
1971:
- Golden Laurel Awards — Female Star (ninth place)
1980:
- Golden Globe Award: From Here to Eternity (1979) (mini) — Best TV Actress: Drama
[edit] Filmography
- Happy Land (1943)
- Tomorrow Is Forever (1946)
- The Bride Wore Boots (1946)
- Miracle on 34th Street (1947)
- The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947)
- Driftwood (1947)
- Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hay! (1948)
- Chicken Every Sunday (1949)
- The Green Promise (1949)
- Father Was a Fullback (1949)
- No Sad Songs for Me (1950)
- Our Very Own (1950)
- The Jackpot (1950)
- Never a Dull Moment (1950)
- Dear Brat (1951)
- The Blue Veil (1951)
- The Rose Bowl Story (1952)
- Just for You (1952)
- The Star (1952)
- The Silver Chalice (1954)
- One Desire (1955)
- Rebel Without a Cause (1955)
- The Searchers (1956)
- A Cry in the Night (1956)
- The Burning Hills (1956)
- The Girl He Left Behind (1956)
- Bombers B-52 (1957)
- Marjorie Morningstar (1958)
- Kings Go Forth (1958)
- Cash McCall (1960)
- All the Fine Young Cannibals (1960)
- Splendor in the Grass (1961)
- West Side Story (1961)
- Gypsy (1962)
- Love with the Proper Stranger (1963)
- Sex and the Single Girl (1964)
- The Great Race (1965)
- Inside Daisy Clover (1965)
- Penelope's Fashion Show (1966) (short subject)
- This Property Is Condemned (1966)
- Penelope (1966)
- Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (1969)
- The Candidate (1972) (Cameo)
- I'm a Stranger Here Myself (1974) (documentary)
- Peeper (1975)
- Meteor (1979)
- The Last Married Couple in America (1980)
- Willie and Phil (1980) (Cameo)
- Brainstorm (1983) (released after Wood's death)
[edit] Television work
The Affair (1973)
- Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1976)
- From Here to Eternity (1979) (miniseries)
- The Cracker Factory (1979)
- Hart to Hart (1979) (Cameo) (pilot for series)
- The Memory of Eva Ryker (1980)
[edit] Bibliography
- Gavin Lambert, Natalie Wood: A Life. London: Faber and Faber, 2004. ISBN 0-571-22197-1
- Suzanne Finstad, Natasha: The Biography of Natalie Wood. Three Rivers Press, 2001. ISBN 0-609-80957-1
- Warren G. Harris, Hollywood's Star-Crossed Lovers "Natalie and R.J.". Doubleday, 1988. ISBN 0-385-23691-3
- Christopher Nickens, Natalie Wood: A Biography in Photographs. Doubleday, 1986. ISBN 0-385-23307-8
- Lana Wood, Natalie: A Memoir by Her Sister. Putnam Pub Group, 1984. ISBN 0-399-12903-0
- Frascella, Lawrence and Weisel, Al : Live Fast, Die Young: The Wild Ride of Making Rebel Without a Cause. Touchstone, 2005. ISBN 0-7432-6082-1
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Natalie Wood at the Internet Movie Database
- Foul Play on Catalina Island? The Mysterious Death of Natalie Wood
- Natalie Wood at Find a Grave
- Natalie Wood Style and Beauty Page
Categories: Articles lacking sources from August 2006 | All articles lacking sources | 1938 births | 1981 deaths | Accidental deaths | Deaths by drowning | American film actors | American actors | Best Actress Academy Award nominees | Best Supporting Actress Academy Award nominees | Child actors | Eastern Orthodox Christians | Russian-Americans | People from San Francisco | Hollywood Walk of Fame | American child actors