Martine Carol
Martine Carol was born on May 16, 1920 in France. Martine Carol's big-screen debut came with Le dernier des six directed by Georges Lacombe in 1941. Martine Carol is known for Lola Montès directed by Max Ophüls, Martine Carol stars as Lola Montes and Peter Ustinov as Circus Master. The upcoming new movie Martine Carol plays is Hell Is Empty which will be released on Jun 01, 1969.
France's major sex siren of the early 50s, this lesser-remembered post-war French dish pre-dated bombshell Brigitte Bardot by a few years. Martine was born Marie-Louise (Maryse) Jeanne Nicholle Mourer on May 16, 1920, but little is known of her childhood. A chance meeting with comedian André Luguet steered her towards a career in the theatre. Trained by René Simon, she made her 1940 stage debut with "Phedre" billed as Maryse Arley.In unbilled film parts from 1941, she subsequently caught the eye of Henri-Georges Clouzot who hired her for an upcoming film with the working title of "The Cat," based on the novel by Colette, but the project was scrapped. Nevertheless, she did attract attention in the movie La ferme aux loups (1943) (Wolf Farm), which takes advantage of her photogenic beauty and ease in front of the camera despite a limited acting ability.A pin-up goddess and support actress throughout the 40s, Martine also appeared on the stage of the Theater of the Renaissance. A torrid affair with actor Georges Marchal, who was married to actress Dany Robin at the time, ended disastrously and she attempted suicide by taking an alcohol/drug overdose and throwing herself into the Seine River. She was saved by a taxi driver who accompanied her there. Ironically, the unhappy details surrounding her suicide attempt renewed the fascination audiences had with Martine up until that time. In 1949, she married her first husband, former American actor-turned-restaurateur Stephen Crane, who was once married to Lana Turner.Continuing on with post-war French filming, she co-starred in such movies as Bifur 3 (1945), L'extravagante mission (1945), Trente et quarante (1946), Voyage surprise (1947), Les souvenirs ne sont pas à vendre (1948), Je n'aime que toi... (1949), Une nuit de noces (1950), the title role in Caroline chérie (1951) and Adorables créatures (1952). She scored her first box office blockbuster hit with the French Revolution epic Un caprice de Caroline chérie (1953). Without a doubt, the success was prompted by her semi-nude scenes and taunting, kittenish sexuality.From there she was off and running. Her film romps were done tastefully with an erotic twinge of innocence and gentle sexuality plus an occasional bubble bath thrown in as male bait. Her array of costumed teasers included the title role in Lucrèce Borgia (1953), as Lysistrata Destinées (1954), La pensionnaire (1954), the title role in Madame du Barry (1954), the title role in Nana (1955), Les carnets du Major Thompson (1955), the title role in Lola Montès (1955) and Scandale à Milan (1956). Several of the above-mentioned films were guided and directed by her second husband Christian-Jaque, her husband from 1954 to 1959. They later divorced due to professional conflicts and long separations.A true feast for the eyes and one of the most beautiful actresses of her time, Martine tried to branch out internationally in films in the late 1950s. Unfortunately, Bardot had already taken over the top French sex goddess pedestal and Martine's fan base diminished. She co-starred with Van Johnson in the crime drama Au bord du volcan (1957), but it was met with indifference. She immediately returned to French/Italian films Nathalie (1957), Le passager clandestin (1958), Les noces vénitiennes (1959), Tout près de Satan (1959) and Nathalie, agent secret (1959).Problems with substance abuse and a severe accident severely curtailed her career in the 1960's. She continued with such films as Austerlitz (1960) (as Empress Josephine), plus Un soir sur la plage (1961), Le cave se rebiffe (1961) and Les Don Juan de la Côte d'Azur (1962). She made her last film in 1963, which was released four years later as Jugement à Prague (1967).Depressed, Martine turned alarmingly reclusive as a third marriage to French doctor Andre Rouveix also soured by 1962. One last marriage to fourth husband Mike Eland, an English businessman and friend of first hubby Steve Crane, seemed hopeful, but on February 6, 1967, Martine died of cardiac arrest at age 46 in the bathroom of a hotel in Monaco. Her husband discovered her. Newspapers hinted at a possible drug overdose but nothing was ever proven. She was buried in the cemetery of Cannes.
Birthday
May 16, 1920Place of Birth
Saint-Mandé, Seine [now Val-de-Marne], France
Known For
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