Raquel Welch
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Raquel Welch | |
Raquel Welch at the 39th Emmy Awards Sept. 1987 |
|
Birth name | Jo Raquel Tejada |
Born | September 5, 1940 (age 66) Chicago, Illinois, United States |
Spouse(s) | Andre Weinfeld (1980-90) Richard Palmer |
Notable roles | Loana in One Million Years B.C. |
Raquel Welch (born September 5, 1940) is an American actress.
Contents |
[edit] Early life
Welch was born Jo Raquel Tejada in Chicago, Illinois, the oldest of three children born to Armando Carlos Tejada and Josephine Sarah Hall. Her father was a Bolivian immigrant who was an aerospace engineer, and her mother was an Irish-American.[1]
In 1942, Armando Tejada was transferred to San Diego, California. The family moved to the suburb of La Jolla, where Raquel grew up. She took dancing lessons as a child, and was winning beauty pageants by the time she was a teenager. Among her titles were "Miss Photogenic," "Miss La Jolla," "Miss Contour," and "Miss San Diego." In 1957, she was named "Miss Fairest of the Fair" at the San Diego County Fair. After high school she entered San Diego State College on a theater arts scholarship. The following year she married a high school sweetheart, James Welch.
[edit] Career
In 1959, Raquel Welch played the title role in the famous Ramona Pageant, a yearly outdoor play at Hemet, California, which is based on the novel Ramona by Helen Hunt Jackson.
She became a weather forecaster at a local San Diego television station. Because of her heavy schedule, she decided to leave college. Her marriage broke up and she moved with her two children to Dallas, Texas, where she modeled for Neiman Marcus and worked as a cocktail hostess, intending to move on to New York City from there.
Instead, she moved back to California. She found a place in Los Angeles and started making the rounds of the movie studios. She was cast in bit parts in two films and television shows, Bewitched, McHale's Navy, The Hollywood Palace, and The Virginian. She actually auditioned for the part of "Mary Ann" on Gilligan's Island but lost out to Dawn Wells. Welch's first featured role was in A Swingin' Summer, which led to a contract with 20th Century Fox. She was then cast in the Sci-fi hit Fantastic Voyage, which finally made her a star.
On loan out to Hammer Studios in Britain, she starred in the remake of One Million Years B.C.. After her appearance as Lust incarnate in Bedazzled, she returned to the United States and appeared in a Western with James Stewart and Dean Martin titled Bandolero!, which was followed by Lady in Cement with Frank Sinatra. Her first real starring role was in Myra Breckinridge with Mae West. She took the role as the film's transsexual heroine in an attempt to be taken seriously as an actress, but the movie turned out to be a dismal failure.
Despite box office disappointments, Welch became one of the leading sex symbols of the 1960s and 1970s. Her most memorable publicity still, where she was clad in a furry animal-skin bikini for One Million Years B.C., became a bestselling poster. Playboy called her the "Most Desired Woman" of the 1970s.
Welch was due to star in the 1982 adaptation of Cannery Row, but was fired by the producers in favour of Debra Winger. She successfully sued, collecting a multi-million dollar award, but this effectively ended her film acting career until the mid-90's. Her television appearances include the series The Hollywood Palace, the made for TV movies The Legend of Walks Far Woman and Right to Die, in which she turned in a stirring performance as a woman with Lou Gehrig's disease, and in the PBS series American Family, about a Mexican American family in East Los Angeles. She has also appeared in the night time soap opera CPW and made infomercials and exercise videos. While she never appeared on the show, her name was frequently used as an all-purpose answer on the game show Match Game. In 1987, she flirted with a pop singing career, releasing the dance single This Girl's Back In Town.
She has also performed in a nightclub act in Las Vegas and has starred on Broadway in Woman of the Year and in Victor/Victoria, replacing Julie Andrews.
In a 1997 episode of the comedy series Seinfeld entitled "The Summer of George" Welch played a highly temperamental version of herself, assaulting series stars Kramer and Elaine, the former because he fired her from an acting job and the latter because Welch mistakenly thought that Elaine was mocking her.
As a businesswoman Welch has experienced great success with her signature line of wigs. She also began a jewelry and skincare line although neither of those ventures compared to the success of her wig collection.
In January 2007 she was revealed as the newest face of MAC Cosmetics Beauty Icon series. Her line features several limited edition makeup shades in glossy black and tiger print packaging.
[edit] Personal life
- She has been married to James Welch (1959-1962), publicist and agent; Patrick Curtis (who makes a living claiming to have played the baby of Olivia de Havilland in Gone with the Wind) (1967-1972), director/producer Andre Weinfeld (1980-1990); and Richard Palmer (1999).
- She is the mother of Damon Welch and actress Tahnee Welch.
- She is (or was in the 1970s) a fan of Chelsea FC. [1]
[edit] Achievements and awards
In 1974, Raquel Welch won a Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture Actress in a Musical or Comedy for The Three Musketeers. She was also nominated for a Golden Globe for her performance in the TV drama Right to Die (1987).
She was also the recipient of the Golden Turkey Award for worst actress.
She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 7021 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood.
[edit] Trivia
- Raquel Welch is a relative of the only female president of Bolivia, Lydia Gueiler Tejada.
- Raquel Welch's son, Damon Welch, married Rebecca Trueman, the daughter of cricketing legend Fred Trueman, a union of the acting and sporting worlds but the marriage was short-lived. Raquel Welch arrived at the wedding after the bride, completely upstaging her. She claimed at the time that her lateness was because she had been giving an interview and lost track of the time, but later she admitted that she had done it on purpose, knowing that the press would write about her, so she planned to give them something to write about. When the couple announced they were splitting up in Hello Magazine, they emphatically denied that the split was anything to do with Ms Welch.
- Raquel Welch's daughter, Tahnee Welch followed her mother's December 1979 example and appeared on the cover of Playboy, the November 1995 issue.
[edit] Filmography
- A House Is Not a Home (1964)
- Roustabout (1964)
- A Swingin' Summer (1965)
- The Queens (1966)
- Fantastic Voyage (1966)
- One Million Years B.C. (1966)
- Shoot Loud, Louder... I Don't Understand (1966)
- Think Twentieth (1967) (short subject)
- The Oldest Profession (1967)
- Fathom (1967)
- Bedazzled (1967)
- The Biggest Bundle of Them All (1968)
- Bandolero! (1968)
- Lady in Cement (1968)
- 100 Rifles (1969)
- Flareup (1969)
- The Magic Christian (1969)
- The Beloved (1970)
- Myra Breckinridge (1970)
- Hannie Caulder (1971)
- Bluebeard (1972)
- Fuzz (1972)
- Kansas City Bomber (1972)
- The Last of Sheila (1973)
- The Three Musketeers (1973)
- The Four Musketeers (1974)
- The Wild Party (1975)
- Mother, Jugs & Speed (1976)
- The Animal (1977)
- Crossed Swords (1978)
- Trouble in Paradise (1989)
- Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult (1994) (Cameo)
- Chairman of the Board (1998)
- What I Did for Love (1998)
- Tortilla Soup (2001)
- Legally Blonde (2001)
- Jim Brown: All American (2002) (documentary)
- Forget About It (2005)
Upcoming:
- Staar (2006)
[edit] Television work
- The Hollywood Palace (regular performer in 1964)
- Raquel! (1970)
- The Muppet Show 25 April 1978 (Season 3, Episode 11)
- The Legend of Walks Far Woman (1982)
- Right to Die (1987)
- Scandal in a Small Town (1988)
- Trouble in Paradise (1989)
- Tainted Blood (1993)
- Torch Song (1993)
- Hollyrock-a-Bye Baby (1994) (voice)
- Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman (guest star in 1995)
- Central Park West (cast member in 1996)
- American Family (2002-2004)
- Sabrina, the Teenage Witch Third Aunt From The Sun (1996)
- Seinfeld "The Summer of George" 1997
[edit] Pop culture
- A Johnny Carson "Carnac" joke:
- Answer: "Divine Right."
- Question: "Describe half of Raquel Welch."
- In episode 13 of Monty Python's Flying Circus, (first airing January 11, 1970) a reporter is interviewing two boys:
- Interviewer: Would you like to have a sixteen-ton weight dropped on top of you, Eric?
- Boy: I want to have... I want to have Raquel Welch dropped on top of me.
- In episode 15 of "Monty Python's Flying Circus", various people are being interviewed about a new thing to be taxed:
- ""It's Man":" I would tax Racquel Welch. I've a feeling she'd tax me.
- In the film Kansas City Bomber, she wore a number 11 on her jersey. The running gag at the time was that it meant "1 for each one".[citation needed]
- She has often been called "Rocky", a nickname more typical of male athletes, such as boxers. It carries the double meaning of being short for "Raquel" as well as saying that she's a "knockout".
- A starting hand of 8-3 in Texas hold 'em is named after her.
- In the 1994 film The Shawshank Redemption, the main character keeps Welch's iconic pin-up from One Million Years B.C. on the wall of his prison cell.
- She is considered one of Maxim magazine's hottest GILFs[2]--a play on the term MILF, referring to grandmother instead of mother.
[edit] References
- ^ Hispaniconline's article abt Welch
- ^ Hollywood's Hottest GILFs, retrieved on February 23, 2007.
[edit] External links
- Raquel Welch at the Internet Movie Database
- Raquel Welch Video Clips
- Additional Info. via Greater Talent Network Speakers Bureau
- Hollywood's Hottest GILFs, retrieved on February 23, 2007
- Raquel Welch at TV.com
Categories: Articles with large trivia sections | Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | American film actors | Actresses appearing in Hammer films | American models | Hollywood Walk of Fame | Actors from Chicago | People from Illinois | Hispanic American actors | Irish-American actors | Bolivian Americans | 1940 births | Living people