Publicado el 28 de mayo de 2020
Mae West vuelve a las pantallas de todo el mundo
El icono Hollywood Hollywood es el tema de un próximo documental de la PBS titulado "Mae West: Dirty Blonde", que arrojará luz sobre su vida personal y su carrera, informó el jueves la revista People.
The actress, who reigned as a sex symbol in Hollywood during the ‘30s and continued acting well into her 70s, passed away in 1980 at age 87.
“Mae West crafted this image, she was a sexual gangster,” a voiceover can be heard in the trailer.
"Mae West fue una pionera para todas las mujeres que se atreven a ser sexys: Cher, Madonna, Rihanna, Beyonce", dijo el icono de la moda Andre Leon Talley.
West first made her mark at age 14 as a vaudeville dancer, the outlet shared. She would go on to star in films like “She Done Him Wrong,” “I’m No Angel,” “Sextette” and “My Little Chickadee.” She was considered one of the most controversial performers of her time and the highest-paid actress in America by the 1930s.
Bette Midler actuó como productora ejecutiva en el documental.
“I used to sing a Mae West song when I first started working solo,” the actress told People. “I actually did not know she was still alive; there was no Internet… She sent me a cease-and-desist letter telling me to stop imitating her. Of course, I did, and I still have the letter!”
“But truly, there will never be anyone like her,” the 74-year-old continued. “Her diamonds and feathers, her strict adherence to the clothes of the 1890s… were all part of the package. How could you not love her? She believed in her creation, and she lived it every day of her life. Now, that’s commitment!”
En octubre de 2019, Tim Malachosky, asistente y secretario de West durante muchos años, dijo a Fox News que la estrella siempre estuvo decidida a seguir siendo glamurosa para sus fans hasta el final.
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La actriz estadounidense Mae West en el plató de "She Done Him Wrong", dirigida por Lowell Sherman. (Foto de Paramount Pictures/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis vía Getty Images)
“Even when cameras weren’t rolling, Mae was always made up and glamorous,” he said at the time. “She was very old school and felt if you were a celebrity, you had to maintain that image for your fans. But her life at home was much quieter. We would sit and watch TV or she would read the paper. She spent her time visiting family, giving interviews or writing. She was always writing and staying busy. Working was her passion. She was actually in the process of writing a book when she passed away.”
“She was probably the first woman to go into movies when she was 30 and pretty much demanded what she wanted and got it,” he continued. “She wrote her own scripts, her own dialogue. She was the highest-paid woman in the United States in 1938. But the thing that really impressed me about her was her loyalty to her fans. She would go out of her way to sign autographs and meet everyone. She once told me, ‘If it weren’t for my fans, I wouldn’t be who I am today.’ She never forgot that.”
“Mae West: Dirty Blonde” airs Tuesday, June 16 at 8 p.m. EST on PBS.
https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/pbs-documentary-mae-west