Anita Ekberg, the
Swedish actress whose onscreen persona was best encapsulated by a scene of her
wading sensually into the Trevi Fountain in “La Dolce Vita,” died Sunday in
Rocca di Papa, near Rome .
She was 83.
Ekberg, who had
long been living in Italy ,
had been hospitalized recently due to several unspecified illnesses, her lawyer
Patrizia Ubaldi said, confirming her death. She had been in a wheelchair for
several years after breaking a hip.
Ekberg was one of
cinema’s most famous “sex goddesses,” as renowned for her performances as she
was for her alleged list of romances with major stars such as Frank Sinatra and
Gary Cooper. In addition to “La Dolce Vita,” which made her an international
film icon, Ekberg starred in “War and Peace” with Audrey Hepburn, “Artists and
Models” with Jerry Lewis and Dean Martin and “Paris Holiday” with Bob Hope.
She auditioned for,
but lost out on, the part of Honey Ryder in the first James Bond film, “Dr.
No.” Along with Marilyn Monroe, Ekberg was one of the most popular pinups of
the 1950s.
A former Miss Sweden , Ekberg snagged a Golden Globe for Most
Promising Newcomer for one of her initial Hollywood
forays, the 1955 thriller “Blood Alley” with John Wayne and Lauren Bacall.
Ekberg was born in Malmo , Sweden ,
the sixth of eight children. After doing some modeling in her teens she started
her showbiz career in 1951 when she won the Miss Sweden title and then traveled
to the U.S.
to compete for the Miss Universe crown, which she didn’t win. She was put under
contract by Universal instead.
As a Universal
starlet during the 1950s Ekberg landed small roles in pics including “Abbott
and Costello Go to Mars,” in which she played a voluptuous guard on Venus, and
“The Golden Blade.” She also appeared on several Bob Hope TV specials, where
her bombshell curves were fodder for Hope’s jokes.
Federico Fellini’s
1960 “La Dolce Vita,” in which Ekberg played Sylvia, a movie star pestered by
paparazzi who dips into the Trevi fountain in a strapless black dress and calls
out “Marcello,” shot her to super-stardom.
Hosting Swedish
radio show “Sommar” in 2005, Ekberg recalled shooting the Trevi Fountain scene
in February, when the water in the fountain was cold and Mastroianni was drunk
on vodka.
“And there I was. I
was freezing,” she said. “They had to lift me out of the water because I
couldn't feel my legs anymore,” she said.
In 1963 Ekberg
co-starred with Ursula Andress, Frank Sinatra, and Dean Martin in the western-comedy
“4 for Texas ,”
directed by Robert Aldrich.
Ekberg was married
twice; first to actor Anthony Steel from 1956 to 1959 and then to actor Rik Van
Nutter from 1963 to 1975. She had no children.
Though she made
more than 50 films over five decades, by the late 1970s Ekberg’s career had
taken a dive and she nearly stopped working. Her most recent role was playing a
character named Ingrid in Italian TV series “Il Bello Delle Donne,” produced by
Silvio Berlusconi’s Mediaset.
According to
Italian press reports, Ekberg died almost penniless.
In December 2011,
Italian newspapers reported that the then 80-year-old Ekberg was “destitute”
after spending more than three months in a Rimini hospital with a broken thigh. During
this time her home had been robbed and also damaged in a fire. Ekberg then
applied for financial help from the Fellini Foundation.
Her lawyer, Ubaldi,
said a ceremony would be held in coming days at a Lutheran church in Rome .
No comments:
Post a Comment