Bella Darvi biography, high resolution photos and videos by Americola
Bella Darvi
[edit] Americola's celebrity biographies are provided by AmericolaWiki, a celebrity wiki. You can help contribute to Americola and edit this article.
Bella Darvi (October 23, 1928 – September 11, 1971) was an actress of Jewish parentage, although promotional materials refer to her as French.
She was born Bajla Zigelbaum (later known as Bayla Wenger) in Sosnowiec, Poland. Her parents were Polish Jews who had moved to France. Jailed by the Nazis during World War II, she was released in 1943. She married a successful businessman, Alban Cavalcade (1949–1950) and traveled with him to Monaco. There she became habituated to alcohol, gambling and the "high life". Discovered in Paris by Darryl Zanuck, who believed she had an interesting natural beauty like Ingrid Bergman's, she was taken to Hollywood and groomed for stardom, moving into the Zanuck home and possibly becoming his mistress in the process although she reportedly had several affairs or at least dated other men during this time, including Robert Stack. The stage name Darvi is a combination of the first names of Darryl Zanuck and his wife, Virginia.
She is
Richard Widmark's love interest in
Sam Fuller's 1954 film
Hell and High Water, but is probably best known for the role of Nefer, the seductive Babylonian courtesan, in Zanuck's spectacular film
The Egyptian. She was often criticized or passed over for parts, because of her thick accent compounded by a lisp, and worked hard to speak clearly as Nefer.
Her career was unsuccessful despite Zanuck's best efforts; she had a reputation as a compulsive gambler and as being hard to work with. Constantly badmouthed by Zanuck's daughter Susan, who hated her, she was eventually thrown out of the Zanuck home.
Zanuck subsequently left his wife thinking to make a more permanent relationship with Bella, but discovered that she was a lesbian, or at least bisexual, unthinkable at the time. (She later very publicly dated women, as well as men.) Despite liaisons with extremely wealthy men, she was unable to establish a permanent relationship or to curb her gambling habit. Zanuck was still paying off her debts as late as 1970.
She committed suicide in
Monte Carlo by
gas in September, 1971, aged 42. Her body was not found for more than a week.