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Elizabeth Taylor, Legendary Actress, Dead At 79

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One of Hollywood's most legendary beauties, Elizabeth Taylor, died on Wednesday (March 23) at the age of 79 after spending two months in a Los Angeles hospital for treatment of congestive heart failure. One of the brightest stars in the history of the American movie business, Taylor starred in a string of hit movies in the 1950s and 60s, including "Giant," "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" and "Cleopatra," while becoming an international sex symbol and object of tabloid fascination for her string of love affairs with leading men.

In addition to being a fashion icon, perfume mogul and movie legend, later in life Taylor also became one of the leading advocates for victims of AIDS, raising millions for research and treatment of the disease in the wake of the 1985 death of her good friend the actor Rock Hudson, who died from the illness.

According to reports, Taylor died in the early morning on Wednesday surrounded by her four children — Michael Wilding, Christopher Wilding, Liza Todd and Maria Burton — at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles.

"My mother was an extraordinary woman who lived life to the fullest with great passion, humor and love," said Michael Wilding in a statement read on "Good Morning America." "Though her loss is devastating to those of us who held her so close and so dear, we will always be inspired by her enduring contributions to our world."

Born Elizabeth Rosemond Taylor in London, England, on February 27, 1932, to American parents, Taylor left England with her family on the eve of World War II and relocated to Los Angeles. Already turning heads for her beauty, Taylor took a screen test as a child and was cast in her first film at age 10, 1942's "There's One Born Every Minute."

She followed with movies such as "Lassie Come Home," "Jane Eyre" and 1944's hit film "National Velvet." She continued working steadily throughout the late 1940s and '50s, emerging as one of the world's great beauties thanks to her piercing violet-colored eyes and alluring come-hither gaze.

Playing opposite James Dean in 1956's "Giant," Taylor emerged as a star in her own right, and she was nominated for an Academy Award for her role in 1957's "Raintree County." She was nominated again the next year for "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof," losing again, but earned yet another nomination in 1959 for "Suddenly, Last Summer."

After three straight losses, Taylor finally got her award in 1960 for her peerless performance in "Butterfield 8," in which she played Gloria Wandrous, a call girl who gets entangled with a married man.

One of her most famous films was the 1963 epic "Cleopatra," one of the most expensive movies of all time when it was filmed. She met her future husband Richard Burton on the set and the two began a torrid affair that scandalized Hollywood because of Burton's married status. Burton would later become her fifth (and sixth) husband after the couple divorced in 1974 after 10 years of marriage and then remarried in 1975 only to divorce again the next year.

She won a second Oscar in 1966 for her role in "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" That would mark the end of her star status in Hollywood. Although she continued to sporadically make movie and TV appearances in the 1970s and '80s, Taylor would never again reach such pinnacles of fame.

The actress, who married eight times in total and became a confidant of late singer Michael Jackson, supporting him during his child molestation cases in the late 1990s and early 2000s, suffered a brain tumor in 1997 and would continue to battle a variety of ailments throughout the next decade and a half.
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Elizabeth Taylor - a child actress from England who went on to become one of the most beautiful women in the world and the embodiment of Hollywood stardom, and a sometimes formidable actress whose personal life and offscreen causes often overwhelmed her screen achievements - died on Tuesday of congestive heart failure. She was 79.

Vulnerable yet seemingly indestructible, Taylor was plagued by illness throughout her life. She survived a brain tumor, an appendectomy, a fall from a horse, tuberculosis and skin cancer and was even pronounced dead some six decades prematurely of double pneumonia in 1960.

Yet ironically, these scrapes with death only made her seem not quite mortal, emphasizing her status as a living Hollywood legend.

Her heyday was in the 1950s and '60s. She made a transition into adult roles with "Father of the Bride" in 1950 - when she was 18 - then found her place as a screen siren in "A Place in the Sun," memorably cast as the beautiful heiress who takes an interest in the working-class Montgomery Clift.

In the years she went from light and lilting to voluptuous, and she cut a fine figure as Maggie in the screen adaptation of "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" (1958), though the play was sanitized beyond recognition from the stage to the screen. Her performance as a model/call-girl was hot stuff in 1960 - it's still not cold stuff - but it was not until "Cleopatra" (1963) that the legend and the actress fused into the myth that would endure for the rest of her career and beyond.

Though Richard Burton, twice her husband, insisted that Taylor was a great screen actress, she wasn't always. But she was, certainly, a great actress co-starring with him in "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf." Though only 34 years old and an actress known for her beauty, she uglied up to play the overweight, middle-aged slatternly Martha - and somehow found the ideal expression of herself as actress. She won the Academy Award for the performance and deserved it.


*Her never ending love for life is evident in all the years that she lived and married different personalities from diverse backgrounds, ranging from the socialite Conrad Hilton (yup, that great grand uncle of Paris Hilton), to actor Michael Wilding, to singer Eddie Fisher, to politician John Warner, to a construction worker Larry Fortensky. Few people can fit in the shoes of this personality that in spite of her overburdening fame, was able to carry on with what she deemed fit.

I understand this is a defence forum, but my deep admiration for this personality forced me to share this news with everyone here.
 
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I was About to post This

May Her Soul R.I.P.

One Of Hollywood's Greatest Actress .

Films Of her I watched - 1. Cleopetra
2. Giant
 
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I was About to post This

May Her Soul R.I.P.

One Of Hollywood's Greatest Actress .

Films Of her I watched - 1. Cleopetra
2. Giant

Yeah, she has worked really well in Cleopatra. However, I would highly recommend you to watch Cat On A Hot Tin Roof. A frustrated housewife, originally from a poor family, married into a rich one, fighting with her greed for money, instead settles for the love of her husband. Word to watch out for: Mendacity.
 
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Yeah, she has worked really well in Cleopatra. However, I would highly recommend you to watch Cat On A Hot Tin Roof. A frustrated housewife, originally from a poor family, married into a rich one, fighting with her greed for money, instead settles for the love of her husband. Word to watch out for: Mendacity.

Will surely Download It - Thanks for recommending .
She Would be truely Missed. Loved her In cleopetra . The Film was one of The most expensive film made. Though highly criticized - nearly bankrupted 20th century Fox.
 
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