Filmed with Elvis and Sinatra: US actress Raquel Welch is dead

A fur bikini in the film "A Million Years Before Time" made her a sex symbol of the 1960s: Hollywood actress Raquel Welch died at the age of 82 after a "brief illness".

Filmed with Elvis and Sinatra: US actress Raquel Welch is dead

A fur bikini in the film "A Million Years Before Time" made her a sex symbol of the 1960s: Hollywood actress Raquel Welch died at the age of 82 after a "brief illness". She remained faithful to the camera into old age.

The US actress Raquel Welch is dead. Welch, who celebrated cinema successes in the 60s and 70s and became one of the most photographed Hollywood beauties, died on Wednesday at the age of 82 after a "brief illness". informed her management.

Welch, born Jo Raquel Tejada, celebrated her breakthrough in 1966 in the Stone Age hit "A Million Years Before Our Time" - mainly thanks to her tight fur bikini. As cave girl Loana, the then 26-year-old became a sex symbol overnight.

With small roles, Welch worked his way up the film business in the early 1960s. In the drama "Madame P. and her girls" the dark-haired beauty played a call girl. She was briefly seen as a college student opposite Elvis Presley in the musical film King of Hot Rhythms. Welch didn't have much to say in the Stone Age hit "A Million Years Before Time" (1966). But her tiny costume - a prehistoric bikini made of strategically placed fur flaps - was all the more important. In the role of the cave girl Loana, the then 26-year-old became a sex symbol. Magazine titles celebrated her curves, and Life magazine declared her the most photographed woman of the year.

This performance lingered on her into old age. But Welch made the best of it. "I'm often asked if I'm tired of talking about this bikini, but to be honest, no," she told The Sunday Post in 2018. "It was a big event in my life, so why not talk about it?" Welch said she received the bikini photo as fan mail almost every day, asking for an autograph.

If there is a sequel, she hopes for more dialogue than in the first part, she once joked. At the time, she was only allowed to say three sentences. "This movie wasn't about words. No wonder people thought I couldn't act," she told The Sunday Post. She was glad that things had changed in the course of her career. "I would hate to be famous as an iconic actress who never said anything."

She was born in Chicago in 1940. The Latina daughter of an American mother and a Bolivian father kept her first husband's surname even though the relationship quickly fell apart. At the time of the divorce she was only 24 years old and the mother of two small children. Three more marriages followed. In 1999 she said yes to a much younger restaurateur, and that only went well for a few years.

Professionally, the former curve star continued into old age. In the 2017 comedy How to Be a Latin Lover, Welch played a widowed millionaire who is being ensnared by younger men. She later posted a scene photo on Twitter in a skin-tight white dress with a plunging neckline, flanked by Rob Lowe and Eugenio Derbez. The age of the former ballet dancer could hardly be seen. By her own admission, she didn't have to do much for it. She just pays attention to good nutrition and a healthy lifestyle, do a little exercise and take care of her skin, Welch said in the 2018 "Sunday Post" interview.

The actress worked with Hollywood greats such as James Stewart ("Bandolero"), Frank Sinatra ("Lady in Cement"), John Huston ("Myra Breckinridge") and Burt Reynolds ("Death Comes Softly"). She proved her comedic talent in the strip "The Three Musketeers" (1973). She received the Golden Globe for Best Comedy Actress for this performance.