#Dean Paul Martin
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theglitterdome ¡ 17 days ago
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Vintage Love
Olivia Hussey and Dean Paul Martin - 1971
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whileiamdying ¡ 1 month ago
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Olivia Hussey, Teen Star of a ‘Romeo and Juliet’ on Film, Dies at 73
Her passionate portrayal of Juliet in Franco Zeffirelli’s 1968 adaptation won enduring acclaim. In 2023, she sued over the circumstances of a nude scene.
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Olivia Hussey as Juliet for the 1968 movie “Romeo and Juliet.” She was only 15 when filming began. Credit...Universal History Archive — Getty Images
By Alex Traub Dec. 30, 2024 Updated 1:20 p.m. ET
Olivia Hussey, whose performance as the female lead in a 1968 film adaptation of “Romeo and Juliet” became its own Shakespearean tale, encompassing glory improbably achieved, helplessness with newfound power and memories that darkened over the years, died on Friday at her home in Los Angeles. She was 73.
The cause was breast cancer, her publicist, Natalie Beita, said.
Ms. Hussey’s lifelong association with Juliet came from how rapturously that movie was received. Much of the reaction concentrated on the decision of its director, Franco Zeffirelli, to cast two unknown teenagers as his leads. Ms. Hussey was 15 when filming began; her co-star, Leonard Whiting, was 17.
It was standard at the time to give the roles of the desperate lovers to established stars. Leslie Howard, for one, was 43 when he made his debut as Romeo in a 1936 adaptation.
What Ms. Hussey and Mr. Whiting lacked in practiced elocution they more than made up for in emotional intensity, suggesting an identification with their characters.
Mr. Whiting sprinted from Juliet’s bedroom with a wild but innocent exuberance. When Juliet’s nursemaid (Pat Heywood) counseled that Juliet go through with a pragmatic marriage to a man other than Romeo, Ms. Hussey responded with an extraordinary facial expression — wide-eyed, horrified, stupefied — suggesting that it was her first encounter with the possibility of betraying love.
In a review for The Chicago Sun-Times, Roger Ebert wrote, “I believe Franco Zeffirelli’s ‘Romeo and Juliet’ is the most exciting film of Shakespeare ever made.” He credited the film with “the passion, the sweat, the violence, the poetry, the love and the tragedy in the most immediate terms I can imagine.”
The movie grossed nearly $39 million at the domestic box office (about $350 million today) and it won Academy Awards for cinematography and costumes.
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The director Franco Zeffirelli, left, with Ms. Hussey and her co-star, Leonard Whiting, at the Parisian premiere of “Romeo and Juliet.”Credit... Eustache Cardenas/Associated Press
A featurette on the making of the film captures the tenor of Ms. Hussey and Mr. Whiting’s stardom. “These are the most talked-about teenagers in the world today,” the narrator says.
Ms. Hussey traveled widely promoting the film. At one point, in Britain, she did so much dancing at a dinner with Prince Charles that she took her shoes off, stretched her legs across his lap and received a royal foot massage.
Yet in the years to come Ms. Hussey did not have another big role that earned both box-office success and critical acclaim. She spent much time commemorating her role as Juliet.
One part of the movie was remembered for something other than artistry: a brief scene in which Romeo and Juliet wake up nude in bed together. The camera lingers on Mr. Whiting’s buttocks and registers a flash of Ms. Hussey’s breasts.
Mr. Ebert castigated those who were scandalized by the scene — “A lot of fuss has been made about the brief, beautiful nude love scene,” he wrote — and Ms. Hussey seemed initially to feel the same way, describing Mr. Zeffirelli as a father figure whom she would have liked to work with on all of her movies.
But in her 2018 memoir, “The Girl on the Balcony,” she was more ambivalent.
With Mr. Zeffirelli’s assurance, she wrote, she had thought that she would be clothed in the scene, until she found herself having makeup applied “head to toe,” prompting what she called a “small panic attack.” One “dirty old man” on the crew, she wrote, had to be removed from the set.
“Nobody my age had done that before,” she told Variety in 2018, referring to the nude scene. Yet she added, “It was needed for the film.”
During her press tour for the book, she told Fox News that the scene “was done very tastefully” and “wasn’t that big of a deal.” Mr. Zeffirelli wrote an adoring foreword to the book.
Ms. Hussey’s attitude took another turn in December 2022, when she and Mr. Whiting sued Paramount Pictures, the film’s distributor, seeking damages of up to $500 million, claiming that they had been forced to appear nude and that the movie constituted “child pornography.” The suit was prompted by a California law that temporarily suspended the statute of limitations on claims of child sexual abuse.
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Ms. Hussey in 2018 promoting her memoir, “The Girl on the Balcony,” in Los Angeles. Credit... Brandon Williams/Getty Images
A judge threw out the suit in May 2023, ruling that the scene was not pornographic.
New York magazine reported that at the time of the suit Ms. Hussey was $22,000 in debt. In an interview with Variety, she said that she and Mr. Whiting had each received only 1,500 British pounds (roughly $35,000 today) for their performances.
“Looking back on all of that, Leonard and I, we felt exploited throughout,” she said.
Olivia Osuna was born on April 17, 1951, in Buenos Aires to Andreas and Joy Hussey. Her father was a tango singer. Her parents divorced when Olivia was 2, and her mother took her and Olivia’s brother, Andrew, to her native England, where she worked as a legal secretary in London. The children used their mother’s surname.
Joy Hussey was an observant Roman Catholic, and Olivia would walk around her home with a towel on her head, pretending to be a nun, she recalled. She realized that what she liked was not the idea of being a nun but the pretending to be one. She started attending drama school as a little girl.
In 1966, Olivia starred in a stage adaptation of Muriel Spark’s novel “The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie” alongside Vanessa Redgrave. She got the role of Juliet after two auditions.
Ms. Hussey played the Virgin Mary in another Zeffirelli film, “Jesus of Nazareth” (1977), and the titular role in “Mother Teresa,” a 2003 television biopic. She also starred in “Black Christmas” (1974), a horror movie that was panned at the time but that later earned Ms. Hussey the reputation as the “prototype” of the last female survivor of a slasher film, as The New York Times reported in 2015.
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Ms. Hussey in 2018 at the TCM Classic Film Festival Opening Night Gala in Hollywood. Credit... Tara Ziemba/WireImage, via Getty Images
In later interviews, she said that the success and hoopla surrounding “Romeo and Juliet” had exhausted her, causing her to turn down movie roles opposite John Wayne and Richard Burton and to focus instead on her personal life. 
Ms. Hussey’s first three marriages ended in divorce. She is survived by her husband, David Eisley; a son, Alexander Martin, from her first marriage, to Dean Paul Martin, the son of the singer Dean Martin; another son, Maximillian Fuse, from her third marriage, to Akira Fuse, a Japanese pop star; a daughter, India Eisley; her brother; and a grandson. She was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2008.
Mr. Whiting, a lifelong friend of Ms. Hussey’s, once sent her a darkly comic screenplay he wrote in which Romeo and Juliet live on after their youth. Ms. Hussey responded that she could not play the part, she told Variety in 2018, for the same reason that she never went out in sweatpants: She wished to keep alive the public image of herself as Shakespeare’s Juliet.
That was how she met Mr. Eisley. He saw her at a delicatessen and introduced himself as someone who had seen her performance in “Romeo and Juliet” 50 times. He turned out to know every line of the play.
“I couldn’t resist him,” Ms. Hussey told the British newspaper The Telegraph in 2002. “I am such a die-hard romantic. I guess a part of me thinks I am Juliet.”
John Yoon contributed reporting. Alex Traub works on the Obituaries desk and occasionally reports on New York City for other sections of the paper. More about Alex Traub
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citizenscreen ¡ 11 months ago
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Dean Paul Martin (November 17, 1951 – March 21, 1987)
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rosen01 ¡ 8 months ago
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Happy Fathers' Day
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romanticprojections ¡ 1 year ago
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Dean Paul Martin and Olivia Hussey
Dean flew from LA to Britain to beg her for a date. She said no. But a year later, Hussey moved to California and eventually said yes.
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jerrylewis-thekid ¡ 2 years ago
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Who knows… maybe it was Jerry's secret dream. A child of their own. He's looking at that kid with so much love…
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motionpicturelover ¡ 1 year ago
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"Backfire" (1987) - Gilbert Cates
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Films I've watched in 2023 (108/119)
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badmovieihave ¡ 2 years ago
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Bad movie I have The Hitchhiker Volume 2 It has 10 episodes O.D.Feelin’ 1986, True Believer 1986, Perfect Order 1987, Cabin Fever 1987,A Whole New You 1991, Dead Heat 1987, The Cures 1986, Out of the Night 1985, Secret Ingredient 1987,and  Man of Her Dreams 1986
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cinemaastimegoesby ¡ 11 months ago
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In 1963 photographer Bert Stern photographed some of the top actors/actresses at the height of their fame playing their dream roles for a photo series in LIFE magazine's December 20, 1963 issue.
Cary Grant as Charlie Chaplin's Tramp / Audrey Hepburn as Pearl White in 'Perils of Pauline' / Tony Curtis & Natalie Wood as Rudolph Valentino and Vilma Bånky in 'The Sheik' / Paul Newman as a Douglas Fairbanks Sr. swashbuckler / Frank Sinatra & Dean Martin as Judah Ben-Hur and Messala from 'Ben-Hur' / Bing Crosby & Bob Hope as 1930s gangsters / Jack Lemmon as a war pilot / Shirley MacLaine as one of Busby Berkeley's showgirls / Rock Hudson as Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
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tea4nis ¡ 2 days ago
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Doodles
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fredandginger64 ¡ 3 months ago
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Good morning Tumblr friends
Hope they make your day as bright and wonderful as they do mine!
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theglitterdome ¡ 9 months ago
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Dean Paul Martin, Jerry Lewis, Dean Martin, and Jeanne Martin - 1952
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elfoscuro ¡ 10 months ago
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The Last Temptation Of Christ (1988) by Martin Scorsese
Cinematography by Michael Ballhaus
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citizenscreen ¡ 2 years ago
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Dean Paul Martin (November 17, 1951 – March 21, 1987)
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rosen01 ¡ 1 month ago
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Rest in Peace to the first former Mrs. Dean Paul Martin, Jr., Olivia Hussey (17 April 1951 – 27 December 2024)
From  the Wedding of Dean Paul Martin and Olivia Hussey on April 17, 1971 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Photo Credit: (Photo by Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images)
From oliviahussey.com: Olivia Hussey first captured the fascination and hearts of global film audiences in 1968 (Zeffirelli’s Romeo and Juliet) with her sublime performance as Juliet.  ... Over a half a century later, Hussey (still one of the world’s favorite sweethearts), along with her Romeo, Leonard Whiting remain the universal symbol of Eternal Love.  ​
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nostalgia-eh52 ¡ 3 months ago
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1979 December 29th
Sinatra The First 40 Years
It's black-tie birthday time at Caesar's Palace! Join the Superstars and remember the legend-40 years of movies, specials and songs. Highlighted by Sinatra in concert!
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