This provocative sex kitten had the obvious makings of a superstar blonde bombshell and could have ended up in
film history annals as merely a second-rate
Brigitte Bardot, but Marina Vlady rose above her sex symbol status and proved she was capable of so much more. In her prime she was
nominated for a Golden Globe and won a "Best Actress" award at the 1963
Cannes Film Festival for her stunning performance in
The Conjugal Bed (1963) with Italy's
Ugo Tognazzi.
She was born Marina De Poliakoff-Baïdaroff, in
Clichy, France on May 10, 1938, the youngest of four acting sisters.
Her Russian-born father was a well-established painter in France. While
young Marina trained in dance and initially seemed to entertain
thoughts of becoming a prima ballerina, she discovered, as did her sisters, a closer kinship to acting. The most outgoing of her
siblings, Monica caught the eye of talent agents via more uninhibited
roles. Older sister
Odile Versois, who
possessed a similar feline beauty, was the first of her family to enter
pictures. Marina (playing a youthful roller-skater) and another sister
Olga Baïdar-Poliakoff made their minor film debuts in
Orage d'été (1949) [Summer Storm],
which featured Odile. The remaining sister
Hélène Vallier was featured in Marina's highly-praised film
Penne nere (1952) (Black Feathers).
In 1955, at the ripe young age of 17, Marina met
and married director/writer/actor
Robert Hossein, who featured her
prominently and seductively in a number of his films including
The Wicked Go to Hell (1955), as a femme fatale bent on revenge,
Pardonnez nos offenses (1956),
Double Agents (1959) and, notably,
Blonde in a White Car (1958) [aka Nude in a
White Car], which co-starred sister Odile. She had two sons by Hossein
but the marriage lasted only a few years.
Gracing both French and Italian productions throughout most of her
career, Marina was not shy at playing unsympathetic, even caustic
characters, and proved adept at both saucy comedy and edgy drama,
appearing for such notable directors as
Jean-Luc Godard and
Christian-Jaque. Playing opposite some
of Europe's finest leading men, she was a vision in loveliness
alongside
Marcello Mastroianni in
Penne nere (1952), a
touching WWII drama, she also co-starred with Italy's top character
actor
Aldo Fabrizi in
Too Young for Love (1953). One of her rare English-speaking appearances came with the
Orson Welles historical drama
Chimes at Midnight (1965).
Marina became a strong social and political activist, notably for women's reproductive rights, into the 1970s. She continued strongly in films with
Sapho ou La fureur d'aimer (1971),
Tout le monde il est beau, tout le monde il est gentil (1972),
Let Joy Reign Supreme (1975), the Hungarian film
The Two of Them (1977),
The Bermuda Triangle (1978) and
L'oeil du maître (1980). As she moved Into the 1980's, the actress turned more and more towards TV work.
Married three times, Vlady was the widow of heralded Russian poet/songwriter/actor
Vladimir Vysotskiy, her last husband, who allegedly died of heart failure in 1980 at the age 42 after years of alcohol and drug abuse.
Later films would include
Bordello (1985), in which she played a French madam; a smaller role as the wife of hotel manager
Philippe Noiret in the comedy
Twist again à Moscou (1986); leads in both the Greek drama
Anemos stin poli (1996) and the gay-themed French film
A Few Days of Respite (2010). She also had a recurring role in the French TV dramedy series
Sam (2016).
In her later years, Marina and longtime companion, Léon Schwartzenberg, a leading French-Jewish cancer specialist widely known as a radical political activist, became involved in a number of social injustices. He passed away in 2003. As a writer, she published a book on the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and continued performing on stage, including a political one-woman show on one of her books about husband Vysotsky. Marina outlived all her her elder sisters. Odile died in 1980, Helene in 1988 and Olga in 2009.