Sister of Lana Wood and Olga Wood.
Mother of Natasha Gregson
Wagner.
Named after director
Sam Wood.
Favorite actress
was Vivien Leigh.
In the 1950s
she was known as a "Hollywood Badgirl" along with Janet Leigh & Debbie Reynolds.
Suffering from
a deep fear of drowning after having barely survived an accident during the filming of The Green Promise (1949), her fear was so great that Elia Kazan had to lie -- promising a double -- and trick her into doing the scenes at the water
reservoir in Splendor in the
Grass (1961).
Interred
at Westwood
Memorial Park, Los Angeles, California, USA, Section D, #60.
Was commonly
listed as 5' 3" wearing heels in movie magazines, though her actual height was 5' 0".
On April
23, 1966, she made Harvard history when she became the first performer voted the year's worst by the Harvard Lampoon to show
up and accept her citation.
Reportedly turned
down Warren Beatty's offer to play opposite him in Bonnie and Clyde (1967) because she didn't want to be separated from her analyst while the film
was on location in the Midwest.
Splendor, the
name of the yacht Wood was on the night she died, was named after her 1961 movie Splendor in the
Grass (1961). She co-starred in the film with former love Warren Beatty.
An accident
on a movie set when she was 9 years old left her with a permanently weakened left wrist and a slight bone protrusion, which,
for the rest of her life, she hid with large bracelets. Regardless of the movie role, or anytime that she was out in public,
she always wore a large bracelet on the left wrist.
The rubber
dinghy 'Prince Valiant' she'd been trying to board after falling from husband Robert Wagner's yacht that fateful Thanksgiving
weekend in 1981, was named after Wagner's 1954 movie, a film the actor considered among his worst
Had planned to
produce as well as star in I Never Promised
You a Rose Garden (1977), but the leading role of Deborah went to Kathleen Quinlan by the time the film was made.
Director Sydney Pollack credits her with his big break.
Attended ballet
classes with two time husband Robert Wagner's third wife Jill St. John and Wagner's "Hart to Hart" (1979) co-star Stefanie Powers.
Pallbearers at
her funeral were Rock Hudson, Frank Sinatra, Laurence Olivier, Elia Kazan, Gregory Peck, David Niven, and Fred Astaire.
By the early
1960s, Natalie Wood was considered one of Hollywood's most
valuable and wanted actresses. However, her career lost steam and never recovered from the box office failure of the highly-touted
Inside Daisy Clover (1965) despite the fact that film critics had blamed the production's failure on a poor
script that included stilted dialog written for Wood's character by screenwriter Gavin Lambert.
Daughter with
Robert Wagner: Courtney Brooke (b. 9 March 1974).
Daughter with
Richard Gregson: Natasha (b. 29 September 1970).
Her death
was kismet, as she always cited a fear of water.
Dated Elvis Presley in the 1950s; Elvis wanted to marry her, but his mother did not like Natalie.
Her and co-star
Richard Beymer's singing voices were both dubbed in West Side Story (1961). The woman who dubbed Natalie, Marni Nixon, also dubbed Audrey Hepburn in My Fair Lady (1964) and Deborah Kerr in The King and I (1956).
The daughter
of a Russian architect and a French ballerina could do a proper plié before she could barely walk.
Her mother,
Maria, claimed that the family was closely related to the Romanov dynasty.
Spoke Russian
and English.
Though
some people cite her mother as being French, her mother was Russian. The source of this misconception comes from the studio
that Natalie worked at when she was young -- people noticed her mother's accent and when asked if she was French, Maria replied:
"Oh yes", a white lie that would contribute to this confusion.
Younger sister
Lana Wood made a ABC TV special on Natalie's life, The Mystery of
Natalie Wood (2004) (TV).
Wore dress
size 5.
Measurements:
32-20 1/2-32 (at age 18), 32B-22-33 ("Parade" magazine December 1962), (Source: Celebrity Sleuth magazine).
Portrayed by
Rebecca Budig in James Dean: Race
with Destiny (1997) (TV), by Justine Waddell in The Mystery of
Natalie Wood (2004) (TV) and by Abi Young in Elvis (1979/I) (TV).
Turned down the
role of Judith Anderson in The Devil's Disciple (1959) because she didn't want to work with Kirk Douglas for "personal" reasons.
Turned down the
films Bonnie and Clyde (1967), Barefoot in the
Park (1967), and Goodbye, Columbus (1969).
She was cast
as Maggie in Cat on a Hot Tin
Roof (1976) (TV) quite unexpectedly, without campaigning for the role. Wood explained that
when Laurence Olivier would come to Hollywood,
she would often be seated with him at the table at formal sit-down dinners. When Olivier decided to make a version of the
Tennessee Williams play, he thought of casting Wood, his dinner companion, and her husband, Robert Wagner, in the husband-wife roles of Brick and Maggie. Naturally, they accepted.
Wood knew screenwriter
Gavin Lambert as both were intimates of director Randy Suhr. In the early 1960s, he wrote a novel about a Hollywood
child star in the 1930s, Inside Daisy Clover (1965). After reading the book, Wood telephoned Lambert and said, "I'd kill for that
part." He assured her she was his first choice for the movie, for which he was writing the screenplay. She got the part and
Ruth Gordon got her first Oscar nomination as an actress for portraying Daisy's mother.
Both she and
her sister Lana Wood have played the love interest of Richard Beymer in 2 separate films: she as Maria opposite Richard's Tony in West Side Story (1961), and Lana as Karen opposite Richard's Dean in Scream Free! (1969) (aka Free Grass).
She is
the inspiration of High School Musical star, Vanessa Anne Hudgens.
Biography
in: "The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives." Volume One, 1981-1985, pages 889-890. New
York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1998.
Barbara Rush replaced her in "The Young Philadelphians" (1962) after she had been put on studio
suspension for refusing the role.