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Raquel Welch dead and obituary, American actress cause of death

Daughter of Armando Carlos Tejada Urquizo (Armando Carlos Tejada Urquizo, 1911-1976), a Fassi Bolivian-born aeronautical engineer who immigrated to the United States in the 1930s. Her mother was Josephine Sarah Hall (1909-2000), of Anglo-Scottish descent. She has a brother and a sister. Her parents divorced after they moved to California.

She studied ballet from the age of 7 to 17, but dropped out after her instructor told her she was failing.

At the age of fourteen, she won the titles of Miss Photogenic and Miss Contour. When she attended La Jolla High School, she was named Miss Most Beautiful at the San Diego County Fair. Welch repeatedly regretted not speaking Spanish, a language her father had forbidden him to use. “What my dad did was, on the one hand, a very brutal rejection of his roots, but at the same time he was very smart, because she couldn’t possibly be in America (as an actress).”

She graduated from high school in 1958 and married her high school sweetheart, James Welch, on May 8, 1959 after becoming pregnant. They have two children, Damon, born November 6, 1959, and La Tanne, born December 26, 1961. They separated in 1962 and divorced in 1964.

She has modeled in lingerie and swimwear, appeared on the covers of American magazines, and landed her a spot in several TV series.

She taught classical dance and theater arts in San Diego but didn’t try her luck in Hollywood until 1963, where she met Patrick Curtis, a news agent who sold Raquel Welch’s products to Fox, TV , and the European market. They married and divorced in 1972.

She is one of the most important sex symbols in British and Hollywood cinema. In 1966, the American “Life” magazine named her “the most photographed woman of the year”. Later, she tried unsuccessfully to shed her porn queen image.

In 1964, he landed his first modest role in the Elvis Presley film “Roustabout.” Two of her films made her a world star, Richard Fleischer’s Dream Voyage (1966) and Don Chaffey’s A Million Years Ago (1966) Hollywood Body.

He collaborated with Marcello Mastroianni on Eduardo De Filippo’s “Loud, Loud…I Can’t Understand” (1966). It later appeared in Stanley Donen’s “Bedazzled” (1967), Leslie H. Martinson’s “Beautiful, intrepid and spy” (1967), Andrew V. McLaglen’s “Bandolero” (1968), “The cement woman” (1968) by Gordon Douglas in “100 Rifles” (1969) and Joseph McGrath (Tom Gries) in “If You Want to Be a Millionaire, Don’t Wasted Time Working” (1969). His talent for comedy was evident in The Three Musketeers, which won him a Golden Globe in 1973.

In the 1960s, he began charging up to $1 million for his contracts, which he invested in his own production company.

In 1986, Metro Goldwyn-Mayer was awarded $11 million by a Los Angeles jury for her exclusion from the cast of the 1980 film Cannery Row.

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