American actress and sex symbol Raquel Welch died in Los
Angeles, California after a short illness on February 15, 2023. She was 82. Jo
Raquel Tejada was born in Chicago, Illinois on September 5, 1940 to a mother
who could trace her ancestry to the Mayflower and a father from Bolivia. The
family moved to San Diego, where the young girl took ballet and acting lessons;
as a teen she won beauty contests and did some professional modeling. She came
onto the movie scene in 1966 with the sci-fi film “Fantastic Voyage” and the
prehistoric adventure “One Million Years B.C.,” the latter of which established
Welch as a sex symbol. The actor went on to appear in the controversial
adaptation of Gore Vidal’s “Myra Beckrinridge,” “Kansas City Bomber” and
Richard Lester’s delightful romps “The Three Musketeers” (1973), for which she
won a Golden Globe, and “The Four Musketeers: Milady’s Revenge” (1974). She was
one of the first women to play the lead role — not the romantic interest — in a
Western, 1971 revenge tale “Hannie Caulder” — an inspiration for Quentin
Tarantino’s “Kill Bill” (2003), according to the director. Welch was married
four times, the first to publicist and agent James Welch, her high school
sweetheart, from 1959-64; the second to director-producer Patrick Curtis from
1967-72; the third to producer, director and journalist André Weinfeld from
1980-90; and the fourth to Richard Palmer. She is survived by a son, Damon
Welch, and a daughter, actress Tahnee Welch. Welch starred in two Spaghetti
westerns, the previously mentioned “Hannie Caulder” (1970) as Hannie
co-starring with Robert Culp and Ernest Borgnine and 1969’s “100 Rifles” with
Burt Reynolds and Jim Brown.
RIP Hannie Caulder. We all loved ya.
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