Belinda Lee: Difference between revisions

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While still under contract to Rank, Lee went to France to play the female lead in ''[[This Desired Body]]'' (1959), a romantic melodrama. The ''Monthly Film Bulletin'' later said "Lee gives an uninhibited but sympathetic performance in a part she was to make her own, the prostitute reformed."<ref>{{cite news|title=WAY OF THE WICKED "(Ce Corps tant désiré)"|work=Monthly Film Bulletin|location=London|volume=28|issue=324|date=Jan 1, 1961|page=169. }}</ref> Also in France she did ''[[Les Dragueurs]]'' (1959) starring [[Charles Aznavour]], later released in the US as ''The Chasers''.
While still under contract to Rank, Lee went to France to play the female lead in ''[[This Desired Body]]'' (1959), a romantic melodrama. The ''Monthly Film Bulletin'' later said "Lee gives an uninhibited but sympathetic performance in a part she was to make her own, the prostitute reformed."<ref>{{cite news|title=WAY OF THE WICKED "(Ce Corps tant désiré)"|work=Monthly Film Bulletin|location=London|volume=28|issue=324|date=Jan 1, 1961|page=169. }}</ref> Also in France she did ''[[Les Dragueurs]]'' (1959) starring [[Charles Aznavour]], later released in the US as ''The Chasers''.


Lee's contract with Rank was terminated and she relocated to continental Europe.(Rank subsequently puts its efforts into promoting [[Anne Heywood]].<ref>{{cite magazine|magazine=Variety|first=Dick|last=richards|url=https://archive.org/details/variety214-1959-04/page/n211/mode/1up?q=%22belinda+lee%22|title=Depressingly Few Shine at BO|page=60|date=15 April 1959}}</ref>)
In October 1958 Rank announced they would not pick up its option on Lee's contract. "This will give me more time to make pictures in Italy and France," she said.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/574972599/?terms=%22belinda%2Blee%22%2B%22arthur%2Brank%22|newspaper=Birmingham News|date=30 October 1958|page=49|title=MM Has Shakes|first=Sheilah|last=Graham}}</ref> She relocated to continental Europe and Rank subsequently puts its efforts into promoting [[Anne Heywood]].<ref>{{cite magazine|magazine=Variety|first=Dick|last=richards|url=https://archive.org/details/variety214-1959-04/page/n211/mode/1up?q=%22belinda+lee%22|title=Depressingly Few Shine at BO|page=60|date=15 April 1959}}</ref>)


==European Star==
==European Star==

Revision as of 09:26, 16 August 2020

Belinda Lee
Belinda Lee in Long Night in 1943 (1960)
Born(1935-06-15)15 June 1935
Budleigh Salterton, Devon, England
Died12 March 1961(1961-03-12) (aged 25)
OccupationActress
Years active1954–1961
Spouse
(m. 1954; div. 1959)

Belinda Lee (15 June 1935 – 12 March 1961) was an English actress.

A profile for the British Film Institute's Screenonline website asserts: "of all the Rank Organisation's starlets, Belinda Lee stands out as the most notorious, yet paradoxically anonymous, British actress of the 1950s."[1]

Often cast in demure roles in her early career, she was able to demonstrate her dramatic abilities, but she found more constant employment when she began to play "sexpot" roles. Typecast as one of several "sexy blondes", she was often compared, unfavourably, to the popular Diana Dors. Typical of these roles was a supporting part in the Benny Hill film Who Done It? (1956).

Early Life and Career

Lee was born in Budleigh Salterton, Devon, Great Britain, to Robert Lee, a former army captain and owner of the Rosemullion Hotel, and Stella Mary Graham, a florist. She studied at St. Margaret's, a boarding school at Exeter, Devon and then the Tudor Arts Academy in Surrey.

Lee joined the Nottingham Playhouse repertory company for a year, then won a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London. In 1953 Lee made her stage debut in a production of Point of Departure.

Early film roles

While at RADA she was seen by Val Guest in a production of Lady Windemere's Fan; Guest was looking for a girl to play in support of comedian Frankie Howerd in The Runaway Bus (1954).[2] According to the New York Times she was the "seventy-seventh" girl to audition for the role and her casting was announced in September 1953.[3]

For a time she shared a flat with Anna Kashfi. Guest arranged to have publicity photographs for The Runaway Bus taken by Rank's still photographer Cornel Lucas, who Lee would marry in June 1954.

She had another small part in Meet Mr. Callaghan (1954), a B-picture crime drama for director Charles Saunders at Eros. Then Guest used her a second time in a small role in Life with the Lyons (1954), for Hammer Films.

Lee was cast her as a lead in only her fourth film, Hammer Pictures' Murder by Proxy (1954), with Dane Clark, shot in late 1953, and released in the US by Lippert Pictures.[4][5][6] She was in The Belles of St Trinian's (1954), a hugely popular comedy from Frank Launder, at British Lion.

In December 1954 Lee was cast as the second female lead in a thriller Footsteps in the Fog (1955), supporting Stewart Granger and Jean Simmons, directed by Arthur Lubin for Columbia.[7]

Rank Organisation

In 1955 Lee signed a contract with the Rank Organisation. They put her in a comedy Man of the Moment (1955), with Norman Wisdom, the biggest comedy star in British cinema at the time. She then made No Smoking (1955), for Tempean Films, with Reg Dixon.

Lee replaced Diana Dors in The Big Money with Ian Carmichael, a film which Sir John Davis of Rank disliked so much they delayed showing it for two years.[8]

Stardom

Rank cast Lee as a nurse in a medical drama The Feminine Touch (1956), produced through Ealing under the direction of Pat Jackson, shot in mmid 1955.[9] She was the leading lady in a comedy, Who Done It? (1956), for Ealing with Benny Hill. During the filming of this she said she would prefer to be in romantic parts like Footsteps in the Fog.[10] These two films were among the last made at Ealing Studios.

Lee was a nurse again in a thriller with Donald Sinden, Eyewitness (1956), directed by Muriel Box foe Rank.

In June 1956 she played Rosalind in a production of As You Like It in an open-air theatre at Regent's Park.[11] The Spectator said "she combines eloquence of voice and gesture with a pleasantly un-leading-lady-like approach."[12]

Lee was top billed in a crime drama The Secret Place (1957), directed by Clive Donner; she also had the female lead in Miracle in Soho (1957) with John Gregson, filmed in early 1957, and in the period drama Dangerous Exile (1957), opposite Louis Jourdan; during the filming of the latter she was injured when her hair caught fire.[13] Miracle in Soho was a flop but British exhibitors voted her the 10th-most popular British film star at the box office in 1957 (ranked in front of her were Dirk Bogarde, Kenneth More, Peter Finch, John Gregson, Norman Wisdom, John Mills, Stanley Baker, Ian Carmichael and Jack Hawkins – Lee was the only woman on the list.[14]

Italy

Towards the end of 1957 Lee went to Italy to play a model in the Ancient World in The Goddess of Love (1957). During the course of the shoot she had a highly publicised romance with a married noble, Prince Filippo Orsini, head of the Orsini family. This resulted in Lee leaving her husband Lucas in September.[15]

Lee returned to Rank to make Nor the Moon by Night (1957) which was shot in London and on location in South Africa. During filming, Lee left to go to Italy to visit her married lover. Italian newspapers reported that Lee had taken an overdose of sleeping pills. Three days later, papal prince Filippo Orsini was reported to have been hospitalised after slashing his wrists. Police refused to comment on the newspaper reports linking the two romantically. Orsini, whose injuries were light, refused to tell the police why he had done it. Lee said that she had been suffering from insomnia and had taken an overdose by mistake. Both were married to others at the time. The Vatican said that Orsini would lose his title if it were proven that he had attempted suicide, and indeed the Pope did remove Orsini and the Orsini family from their hereditary title of Prince Assistant to the Papal Throne.[16][17]

Lee returned to Africa in February to complete Nor the Moon by Night.[18] During the shoot she told a reporter she liked to play "passionate exotic parts. I don't want to be the girl next door or somebody's sister. I don't really like being a simple outdoor girl either- good at heart, even when she's swept off her feet."[19]

In July 1958 she was announced for Love is My Business with Raymond Pelligin directed by Ralph Habib.[20] In December 1958 it was reported she and Orsini had moved in together in Paris.[21]

While still under contract to Rank, Lee went to France to play the female lead in This Desired Body (1959), a romantic melodrama. The Monthly Film Bulletin later said "Lee gives an uninhibited but sympathetic performance in a part she was to make her own, the prostitute reformed."[22] Also in France she did Les Dragueurs (1959) starring Charles Aznavour, later released in the US as The Chasers.

In October 1958 Rank announced they would not pick up its option on Lee's contract. "This will give me more time to make pictures in Italy and France," she said.[23] She relocated to continental Europe and Rank subsequently puts its efforts into promoting Anne Heywood.[24])

European Star

Lee's first film post-Rank was The Nights of Lucretia Borgia (1959), shot in Italy, playing the title role. In early 1959 she made The Magliari (1959), an Italian film shot in Germany directed by Francesco Rosi.[25] She stayed in Germany to make a local movie, Love Now, Pay Later (1959), playing Rosemarie Nitribitt, a prostitute who was murdered. Orsini later wrote that when Lee went to Germany to make a movie "she felt would be important to her career" he refused to come, which ended their relationship.[26]

In June 1959 she said “Now all the time I make films One after the other. It won’t last but now I am in demand. I might as well cash in on it. For the first time I make money. Always am I asked now to play wicked women... On the Continent I’m thought of always in connection with parts like that. Bit of a change from the old Rank Orgy. But I’m not ambitions anymore. I don’t care any more to be a big star. I used to be so ambitious - now it means nothing to me. Now I just wanted to make some money. So I can live the way I want to.”[27]

In August 1959 Lee was in Marie of the Isles (1959), a French-Italian adventure tale where she played the real life Marie Bonnard du Parquet. This was followed by Vacations in Majorca (1959), an Italian comedy; Messalina (1960), an Italian Ancient history epic where Lee played the title role, shot in December; Satan Tempts with Love (1960) in Germany; Long Night in 1943 (1960) an Italian war movie; and Love, the Italian Way (1960), a comedy with Walter Chiari, shot in mid 1960.[28]

She appeared opposite Cornel Wilde in Constantine and the Cross (1961), playing Fausta, and had leading roles in Blood Feud (1961) and Ghosts of Rome (1961), the latter with Marcello Mastroianni.

Lee's last film was the Biblical epic The Story of Joseph and His Brethren (1961).

Death

In 1961, Belinda Lee died in a car accident near San Bernardino, California, on her way to Los Angeles from Las Vegas, along Highway 91, nine miles east of Baker. The car was going at 100 miles an hour (Lee was not the driver) when a tire blew, causing the car to skid. Lee was thrown from the car and found lying 63 feet away; she was pronounced dead at Barstow Community Hospital.[29] The three Italian men with her were injured.[30][31]

Her ashes are interred in the Non-Catholic Cemetery (Cimitero acattolico) in Rome, Italy.[32]

After she died the Monthly Film Bulletin called her "an actress who will now always be remembered with affection as a star in the Crawford and Mercouri class."[33]

Legacy

The 1963 semidocumentary Italian film The Women of the World was dedicated to Lee with a written announcement at the start of the film (which interrupts the title music): "To Belinda Lee, who throughout this long journey accompanied and helped us with love."[34]

Selected filmography

Grave of Belinda Lee at the Cimitero acattolico in Rome

References

  1. ^ "Lee, Belinda (1935–1961)". BFI Screenonline. 2003–14. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
  2. ^ "The Life Story of BELINDA LEE". Picture Show. Vol. 66, no. 1728. London. 12 May 1956. p. 12.
  3. ^ Watts, Stephen (21 June 1953). "Motion Picture Activities Along the Thames – Peter Brook Clicks As a Movie Director With 'Beggar's Opera' – Other Matters". The New York Times. p. X5. Retrieved 12 June 2020.
  4. ^ Nepean, Edith (2 January 1954). "Round the British Studios". Picture Show. Vol. 62, no. 1605. London. p. 11.
  5. ^ "Hospital Story Has Them in Stitches". The Mail. Vol. 43, no. 2, 185. Adelaide. 24 April 1954. p. 6 (Sunday Magazine). Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  6. ^ "To star in new film". The Daily Telegraph. Vol. XVIII, no. 163. New South Wales, Australia. 29 September 1953. p. 5. Retrieved 8 August 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  7. ^ Schallert, Edwin (27 November 1954). "Japan Setting for 'Fire in East'; Australia Due to Double for Old 'West'". Los Angeles Times. p. 13.
  8. ^ "Star Dust". The Mirror. Vol. 37, no. 1836. Western Australia. 4 August 1956. p. 12. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  9. ^ "Film Fan— Fare". The Australian Women's Weekly. Vol. 24, no. 24. 14 November 1956. p. 35. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  10. ^ Nepean, Edith (4 February 1956). "Round the British Studios". Picture Show. Vol. 66, no. 1715. London. p. 11.
  11. ^ "Mirror World Pictures". Mirror. Vol. 37, no. 1829. Western Australia. 16 June 1956. p. 11. Retrieved 8 August 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  12. ^ A. V. C. (8 June 1956). "AS YOU LIKE IT. By William Shakespeare (Book Review)". The Spectator. Vol. 196, no. 6676. London. p. 796.
  13. ^ "Star's Hair Ablaze From Candle". The Canberra Times. Vol. 31, no. 9, 154. 27 April 1957. p. 3. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  14. ^ "British Actors Head Film Poll: Box-Office Survey" (27 Dec 1957) The Manchester Guardian p.3, Manchester (UK)
  15. ^ "Belinda Lee victim of sleeping tablets". The Irish Times. Dublin, Ireland. 28 January 1958. p. 3.
  16. ^ "Papal Prince's Title in Jeopardy". The Independent. Long Beach, California. 29 January 1958 – via Access Newspaper Archive.
  17. ^ "Papal Prince Faces Title Loss in Scandal". The Washington Post and Times Herald. 29 January 1958. p. A8.
  18. ^ "Belinda Lee leaves Rome". The Irish Times. Dublin, Ireland. 3 February 1958. p. 7.
  19. ^ Packer, Joy (1963). Home from Sea. Eyre & Spotswoode.
  20. ^ "Paris". Variety. 16 July 1958. p. 62.
  21. ^ "Has Success Spoiled Rock Hudson?". The Washington Post and Times Herald. 11 December 1958. p. C26.
  22. ^ "WAY OF THE WICKED "(Ce Corps tant désiré)"". Monthly Film Bulletin. Vol. 28, no. 324. London. 1 January 1961. p. 169.
  23. ^ Graham, Sheilah (30 October 1958). "MM Has Shakes". Birmingham News. p. 49.
  24. ^ richards, Dick (15 April 1959). "Depressingly Few Shine at BO". Variety. p. 60.
  25. ^ ROBERT F. HAWKINSROME (3 May 1959). "MOVIE ACTIVITIES ALONG THE TIBER: Fellini Works as Rome Watches -- Dossier on Various Directors". New York Times. p. X9.
  26. ^ PRINCE FILIPPO ORSINI (21 August 1960). "The Prince and the Actress". The Washington Post, Times Herald. p. AW7.
  27. ^ Wiseman, Thomas (28 June 1959). "Belinda and the prince". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 81.
  28. ^ "Maria Callas Gets Offer of Film Role". Chicago Daily Tribune. 8 June 1960. p. b2.
  29. ^ "Actress Belinda Lee Killed in Auto Crash: British Star Hurled Out of Speeding Car in Desert Wreck; Three Others Hurt". Los Angeles Times. 14 March 1961. p. 2.
  30. ^ "BELINDA LEE DIES IN CAR CRASH: Three men injured". The Guardian. 15 March 1961. p. 13.
  31. ^ "Actress Belinda Lee Funeral Set Monday". Los Angeles Times. 18 March 1961. p. B8.
  32. ^ "Belinda Lee Dies in Desert Crash". The Bakersfield Californian. 14 March 1961. pp. 1, 4 – via Newspaper Archive.
  33. ^ "YOUNG HAVE NO MORALS, The "(Les Dragueurs)"". Monthly Film Bulletin. Vol. 28, no. 324. London. 1 January 1961. p. 42.
  34. ^ La donna nel mondo at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata

External links