- Born
- Died
- Birth nameLuisa Cira Castro Netto
- Height1.52 m
- Lovely, buxom, and vivacious blonde bombshell Louisa Moritz was born as Luisa Cira Castro Netto on September 25, 1936 in Havana, Cuba. Many members of Louisa's family which include her father Luis, sister Aurora, and her older brother Rafael all worked in the law profession. Moritz left Cuba and moved to New York City during the upheaval of the 1950s. Louisa was inspired to change her last name from Castro to Moritz after seeing the St. Moritz Hotel in New York City. She arrived in NYC in July 1960, aged 23.
She began her acting career in TV commercials in the late 1960s. She made her debut in a TV commercial for Ultra-Ban spray deodorant and won both a Clio Award and an Andy Award for her work as a student driver in a TV commercial for American Motors. Louisa made her film debut in the lead role of young prostitute Carmela in The Man from O.R.G.Y. (1970). Perhaps best known to general audiences as the hooker Rose in the Oscar-winning classic Vol au-dessus d'un nid de coucou (1975), her most memorable roles included Sylvester Stallone's airhead navigator Myra in the cult science fiction black comedy La Course à la mort de l'an 2000 (1975), cheery prostitute Flora in the delightful Sixpack Annie (1975), Officer Gloria Whitey in Faut trouver le joint (1978), hilarious as the aggressively lascivious Carmela in the uproariously raunchy teen comedy hoot The Last American Virgin (1982), and ditsy kleptomaniac Bubbles in the terrifically trashy babes-behind-bars treat Les Anges du mal (1983). Among the television programs Moritz appeared on are The Leslie Uggams Show (1969), The Joe Namath Show (1969), Love, American Style (1969), L'homme de fer (1967), Happy Days - Les jours heureux (1974), M.A.S.H. (1972), Chico and the Man (1974), Deux cent dollars plus les frais (1974), L'incroyable Hulk (1977) and The Associates (1979).
Outside of acting, Moritz sold real estate, sung a song she specifically wrote about host Jay Leno on "The Tonight Show," and bought a hotel in Beverly Hills which she renamed the Beverly Hills St. Moritz. Although often cast as the generic dumb blonde in many films and TV shows (a part which she always played with great spirit and infectiously sweet good humor), Moritz in real life was the total radical opposite of this particular persona: She not only made the Deans List while studying for her law degree at the University of West Los Angeles, but won the American Jurisprudence Bancroft Whitney Prize for Contracts as well. She went on to become a lawyer in southern California, but was eventually disbarred for failing to provide certain quarterly reports. Louisa Moritz died at age 82 from cardiovascular disease on January 4, 2019 in Los Angeles, California.- IMDb Mini Biography By: woodyanders (updated by Rms125a@hotmail.com)
- SpousesWilliam N Fine(August 19, 1983 - August 15, 1984) (divorced)William N Fine(January 28, 1979 - September 19, 1980) (divorced)
- ParentsLuis Castro
- Often cast as dumb blondes
- Yale University graduate.
- Ms. Moritz acted with one of her former teachers, Charles Nelson Reilly from the Herbert Berghof School of Acting in one of the original Love, American Style (1969) segments entitled "Love and the Detective" (1971).
- Her sister Aurora was the first female lawyer in Cuba.
- Works as an attorney in Southern California.
- Speaks English, French and Spanish fluently.
- [on being cast as dumb blondes] When you go up for acting jobs, and you get acting jobs, you're happy to get acting jobs. There are a lot of people out there trying to get anything, and if you're getting dumb blonde roles, hey, it's okay.
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