Maria Luisa Pierangeli and her twin sister Anna Maria were born in Sardinia, Italy. They were fraternal twins with different personalities as well. Anna Maria was dreamy and innocent; Maria Luisa was independent and studious. They moved to Rome in the late 1940s. In 1948 their lives changed when director
Vittorio De Sica cast Anna in
Tomorrow Is Too Late (1950). In 1950 the family moved to Hollywood, where Anna Maria changed her name to
Pier Angeli.
Marisa was not interested in acting, but was cast by
John Ford in
What Price Glory (1952) starring
James Cagney. She changed her last name to Pavan, the name of a Jewish officer her family had hidden from the Nazis during World War 2. Marisa signed a contract with Fox, but was relieved when it was broken. She wanted a wider choice of roles than her sister. Pavan's performance in
The Rose Tattoo (1955) supporting Italian icon
Anna Magnani, earned her a nomination for Best Supporting Actress.
She lost interest in Hollywood while filming
Solomon and Sheba (1959). She remembered it as a bad experience, and not just because costar
Tyrone Power died during the filming. Pavan turned her attention to television in the 1960s. She and husband
Jean-Pierre Aumont toured America and Europe in plays and musicals, including "Gigi". Later in France, she returned to film.
As of 2018, Pavan lives in the South of France. Marisa is the founder and director of URMA (Unis pour la Recherche sur la Maladie d'Alzheimer), an organization she created to support research working to find treatments for Alzheimer's.