Maria Montez(1912-1951)
- Actress
- Soundtrack
In a world weary of war and dispirited by the ravages of the Great
Depression, Hollywood at the turn of the 1940s concocted a wildly
popular, effective lot of escapist fare (though often cheaply made) to
regale the sick at heart worldwide. Universal Pictures, more often than
not, led in producing such films. We know about the monster movies:
wolf men, invisible men -- and invisible women too, for that matter. We
know about Sherlock Holmes chasing not killer hounds in 1890 but
chasing killer Nazis a half- century later. Such were among typical
Universal "B" productions. Enter Maria de Santo Silas -- Maria Montez.
This daughter of a Spanish diplomat traveled extensively after being
educated in the Canary Islands and attempted, albeit unsuccessfully, to
establish herself as a stage actress in Europe. In 1940 she found
herself in New York City, a model. Her screen career began in 1941,
with Universal casting her in bit parts. On account of her strikingly
exotic looks and her exotic accent, the studio soon paired her with
other "exotics" (Sabu and Turhan Bey), and usually with a more
"home-style" hero (Jon Hall), in a series of low-budget adventures,
filmed in Technicolor and situated in fantasy lands, with Montez
herself often situated in revealing dress. With Montez threatened by
all manner of nastiness -- from evil caliphs to man-eating sharks to
her own cobra-worshipping twin sister (!) -- her pictures soon became
immensely popular, even though she could not really act, could not
dance and could not sing. Audiences flocked to see her films, just to
witness the trials and endurance of an alluring beauty in distress (as
well, perhaps, as to glimpse some scantily clad, beauteous flesh). The
Depression having long since passed, the end of World War II meant also
the end of flying carpets and sand dunes and deadly reptiles as
potential subjects for attracting moviegoers. That bit of history, plus
a bit of girth added to Montez's frame, led her and her husband, the
actor Jean-Pierre Aumont, to abandon
Hollywood for Europe, where she would appear in a handful of French and
Italian adventure films. On 7 September 1951 Maria Montez was
discovered drowned in her bath, possibly having first suffered a heart
attack.