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Yvonne De Carlo, the beautiful star who played Moses' wife in "The
Ten Commandments" but achieved her greatest popularity on TV's "The
Munsters," has died. She was 84.
De Carlo died of natural causes Monday at the Motion Picture &
Television facility in suburban Los Angeles,
longtime friend and television producer Kevin Burns said Wednesday.
De Carlo, whose shapely figure helped launch her career in B-movie desert
adventures and Westerns, rose to more important roles in the 1950s. Later,
she had a key role in a landmark Broadway musical, Stephen Sondheim's
"Follies."
But for TV viewers, she will always be known as Lily Munster in the
1964-1966 slapstick horror-movie spoof "The Munsters." The series
(the name allegedly derived from "fun-monsters") offered a gallery
of Universal Pictures grotesques, including Dracula and Frankenstein's
monster, in a cobwebbed gothic setting.
Lily, vampire-like in a black gown, presided over the faux scary household
and was a rock for her gentle but often bumbling husband, Herman, played by
6-foot-5-inch character actor Fred Gwynne (decked out as the Frankenstein
monster).
While it lasted only two years, the series had a long life in syndication
and resulted in two feature movies, "Munster Go Home!" (1966) and
"The Munsters'
Revenge." (1981, for TV).
At the series' end, De Carlo commented: "It meant security. It gave
me a new, young audience I wouldn't have had otherwise. It made me `hot'
again, which I wasn't for a while."
"I think she will best remembered as the definitive Lily Munster. She
was the vampire mom to millions of baby boomers. In that sense, she's
iconic," Burns said Wednesday.
"But it would be a shame if that's the only way she is remembered.
She was also one of the biggest beauty queens of the `40s and `50s, one of
the most beautiful women in the world. This was one of the great glamour
queens of Hollywood, one of the
last ones."
George Barris, who created the ghoulish "Munsters"
car, equipped De Carlo's Jaguar with spider web hubcaps, a gargoyle hood
ornament and a glossy black sunroof.
"She was a wonderful lady and a car buff. She loved the show so much
that she incorporated it into her life, her own car," Barris said
Wednesday.
De Carlo sustained a long career by repeatedly reinventing herself. When
movie roles became scarce, she ventured into stage musicals. Her greatest
stage triumph came on Broadway in 1971 with "Follies," which won
the 1972 Tony award for best original musical score.
Over the years, De Carlo augmented her stardom by shrewd use of publicity.
Gossip columnists reported her dates with famous men. In her 1987 book,
"Yvonne: An Autobiography," she listed 22 of her lovers, who
included Howard Hughes, Burt Lancaster, Robert Stack, Robert Taylor, Billy
Wilder, Aly Khan and an Iranian prince.
The Canadian-born De Carlo began her career with a parade of bit parts in
films of the early 1940s, then emerged as a star in 1945 with "Salome _
Where She Danced," a routine movie about a dancer from Vienna who
becomes a spy in the wild West.
Universal Pictures exploited her slightly exotic looks and a shape that
looked ideal in a harem dress in such "sex-and-sand" programmers as
"Song of Scheherazade," "Slave Girl," "Casbah"
and "Desert Hawk."
The studio also employed her to add zest to Westerns, usually as a
dance-hall girl or a gun-toting sharpshooter. Among the titles:
"Frontier Gal," "Black Bart," "River Lady,"
"Calamity Jane and Sam Bass" and "The Gal Who Took the
West."
In 1956 she veered from her former image when Cecil B. DeMille chose her
to play Sephora, wife to Charlton Heston's Moses in "The Ten
Commandments." The following year she costarred with Clark Gable and
Sidney Poitier in "Band of Angels" as Gable's upper-class sweetheart
who learns of her black forebears.
De Carlo was born Peggy Yvonne Middleton in Vancouver,
British Columbia, on Sept. 1, 1922 (some sources say 1924). Abandoned
by her father, she was raised by her mother in poor circumstances. The girl
took dancing lessons and dropped out of high school to work in night clubs
and local theaters. She continued dancing in clubs when she and her mother
moved to Los Angeles.
Paramount Pictures signed her to a contract in 1942, and she adopted her
middle name and her mother's middle name. Dropped by Paramount
after 20 minor roles, she landed at Universal.
In 1955, De Carlo married Bob Morgan, a topflight stunt man, and the
marriage produced two sons, Bruce and Michael. During a stunt aboard a moving
log train for "How the West Was Won," Morgan was thrown underneath
the wheels. The accident cost him a leg, and for a time De Carlo abandoned
her career to care for him. They later divorced.
In her late years, De Carlo lived in semiretirement near Solvang, north of
Santa Barbara. Her son Michael died
in 1997, and she suffered a stroke the following year.
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