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Natacha Rambova(1897-1966)

  • Costume Designer
  • Actress
  • Writer
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Natasha Rambova c 1922 Wife of Rudolph Valentino
Primarily famous as the wife of screen idol Rudolph Valentino, Natacha Rambova was also a talented dancer and an innovative set designer, bringing the Art Deco style to Hollywood for the first time. At the age of 17 she became a protégé and lover of Russian ballet Svengali Theodore Kosloff, a brilliant but manipulative dancer who shot her in the leg when she finally escaped from his dance company. She was engaged as an art director by Alla Nazimova, the exotic, histrionic bisexual actress. Rumours abounded that Rambova herself was sexually involved with Nazimova, but none have ever been proven, and Rambova professed to dislike the lesbian subculture.

Rambova's set designs and costumes were enormously innovative, influenced by Art Nouveau and Art Deco. Legendary French artist Erté professed himself a fan of her work. Her dramatic set and costume designs for Nazimova's Salomé (1922) were based on Aubrey Beardsley's famous illustrations for Oscar Wilde's play.

She met Rudolph Valentino when he was working with Nazimova on La dame aux camélias (1921). At the time he was relatively unknown, Les Quatre Cavaliers de l'Apocalypse (1921) (made the same year) being the hit that propelled him into the stratosphere. Soon, the shy Valentino began wooing the exotic former ballerina, and they eloped in May 22nd 1922. This event was to produce a scandal, as it was revealed that Valentino was not legally divorced from his former wife Jean Acker. After being charged and fined for bigamy, the couple quietly re-married the following year.

Valentino's association with Rambova was to prove both his greatest pleasure and his greatest pain. She immediately took over the management of his career, rejecting his usual stereotypical roles as a grunting Italian Stallion in favor of highbrow pictures such as the disastrous Monsieur Beaucaire (1924), a powdered-wig drama which did nothing to allay rumors that theirs was a 'lavender marriage' - a union of convenience between two homosexuals. Despite Natacha's admirable aim to free her husband from the constraints of the studio and eventually begin a production company of their own, his career was in tatters. Anxious to get his career back on track, he signed contracts with producers, who expressly forbid Rambova from being present on his film sets.

The painful end to their marriage in 1926 came though, because Valentino wanted to have children, while Rambova didn't. His career was back on track, but little more than six months later, he was hospitalized. On his death bed, he asked for Rambova wanting her by his side, but she was in Europe. When she heard of his dire condition, she too reached out to him, and she and Valentino exchanged loving telegrams. She believed that a reconciliation had taken place. But his condition worsened and he soon died of a ruptured stomach ulcer. Rambova was reportedly devastated.

After her marriage to Alvaro de Urzaiz in the 1930s, Rambova left America for Spain. Reporters remarked that her second husband physically resembled Valentino, suggesting that Rambova never got over her first husband. She lived through the Spanish Civil War with de Urzaiz, but the marriage ended in divorce, for the same reason that her first marriage ended, because her husband wanted children, while she didn't.

Her interest in mysticism evolved into scholarly study of ancient cultures and Jungian psychology. Her collection of Far Eastern and Egyptian art was of museum quality.

She died at 69 of scleroderma, a painful stomach condition which, to the modern eye, was clearly brought on by the anorexia nervosa from which she suffered all her life.
BornJanuary 19, 1897
DiedJune 5, 1966(69)
BornJanuary 19, 1897
DiedJune 5, 1966(69)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
  • Awards
    • 1 win total

Photos4

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Known for

Clive Brook and Natacha Rambova in When Love Grows Cold (1926)
When Love Grows Cold
  • Margaret Benson
  • 1926
Myrna Loy in What Price Beauty? (1925)
What Price Beauty?
6.2
  • Actress
  • 1925
Rudolph Valentino in The Hooded Falcon (1924)
The Hooded Falcon
4.9
  • Costume Designer
  • 1924
The Woman in Chains
  • Undetermined Role
  • 1923

Credits

Edit
IMDbPro

Costume Designer



  • Rudolph Valentino in The Hooded Falcon (1924)
    The Hooded Falcon
    4.9
    • Costume Designer
    • 1924
  • Doris Kenyon and Rudolph Valentino in Monsieur Beaucaire (1924)
    Monsieur Beaucaire
    6.0
    • Costume Designer
    • 1924
  • Alla Nazimova in Salomé (1922)
    Salomé
    6.6
    • Costume Designer
    • 1922
  • Rudolph Valentino in Le jeune rajah (1922)
    Le jeune rajah
    6.1
    • Costume Designer (uncredited)
    • 1922
  • A Doll's House (1922)
    A Doll's House
    5.8
    • Costume Designer
    • 1922
  • Alla Nazimova and Rudolph Valentino in La dame aux camélias (1921)
    La dame aux camélias
    6.5
    • Costume Designer (uncredited)
    • 1921
  • Le fruit défendu (1921)
    Le fruit défendu
    6.5
    • Costume Designer
    • 1921
  • Alla Nazimova in Billions (1920)
    Billions
    5.9
    • Costume Designer
    • 1920
  • Elliott Dexter and Gloria Swanson in L'amour a-t-il un maître ? (1920)
    L'amour a-t-il un maître ?
    5.7
    • Costume Designer
    • 1920
  • L'Échange (1920)
    L'Échange
    6.7
    • Costume Designer (uncredited)
    • 1920
  • Les conquérants (1917)
    Les conquérants
    5.8
    • Costume Designer
    • 1917

Actress



  • Clive Brook and Natacha Rambova in When Love Grows Cold (1926)
    When Love Grows Cold
    • Margaret Benson
    • 1926
  • Myrna Loy in What Price Beauty? (1925)
    What Price Beauty?
    6.2
    • 1925
  • Rudolph Valentino in Cobra (1925)
    Cobra
    6.4
    • Dancer (uncredited)
    • 1925
  • The Woman in Chains
    • Undetermined Role
    • 1923
  • Rudolph Valentino in Le Cheik (1921)
    Le Cheik
    6.2
    • Arab Dancer (uncredited)
    • 1921

Writer



  • Myrna Loy in What Price Beauty? (1925)
    What Price Beauty?
    6.2
    • screenplay
    • story
    • 1925
  • Rudolph Valentino in Cobra (1925)
    Cobra
    6.4
    • Writer (uncredited)
    • 1925
  • Rudolph Valentino in The Hooded Falcon (1924)
    The Hooded Falcon
    4.9
    • Writer
    • 1924
  • Alla Nazimova in Salomé (1922)
    Salomé
    6.6
    • scenario (as Peter M. Winters)
    • 1922

Personal details

Edit
  • Alternative names
    • Natasha Rambova
  • Height
    • 1.73 m
  • Born
    • January 19, 1897
    • Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
  • Died
    • June 5, 1966
    • Pasadena, California, USA(heart attack)
  • Spouses
      Alvaro de UrzaizAugust 1934 - 1939 (divorced)
  • Publicity listings
    • 2 Print Biographies
    • 6 Portrayals
    • 6 Articles
    • 3 Magazine Cover Photos

Did you know

Edit
  • Trivia
    Greta Garbo once expressed a desire to meet her. Garbo called her Mata Hari (1931) costar, Ramon Novarro, asking for an introduction. The actor asked Natacha to his apartment but made the mistake of inviting a number of other people, thereby transforming the rendezvous into a reception. When Garbo arrived at Novarro's door and saw the crowd inside, she turned and fled. Thus the two women, who had similar faces, never met, but they did have a mutual acquaintance in the screenwriter Mercedes de Acosta.
  • Quotes
    I always told my mother that I would see to it that I would never have any children.
  • Trademark
      Turbans and hair in ballerina braided side buns
  • Nickname
    • Wink

FAQ

Powered by Alexa
  • When did Natacha Rambova die?
    June 5, 1966
  • How did Natacha Rambova die?
    Heart attack
  • How old was Natacha Rambova when she died?
    69 years old
  • Where did Natacha Rambova die?
    Pasadena, California, USA
  • When was Natacha Rambova born?
    January 19, 1897

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