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Elizabeth Taylor's Many Marriages, Divorces

Elizabeth Taylor

By BOB THOMAS   03/23/11 11:12 AM ET   AP

LOS ANGELES -- Jokers liked to call her Mrs. Hilton Wilding Todd Fisher Burton Burton Warner Fortensky. Indeed, Elizabeth Taylor was prolific as a bride.

"I think I ended up being the scarlet woman partly because of my rather puritanical upbringing and beliefs," she once said. "I couldn't just have a romance; it had to be marriage."

Her husbands were a hotel chain heir, an English actor, a flamboyant producer, a pop crooner, a Welsh actor (twice), a U.S. senator and a construction worker.

Her romances over the years included a football legend, a billionaire publisher and a Mexican lawyer.

Taylor's love life probably received more public notice than any figure in history, including Cleopatra (whom she portrayed) and Casanova.

She encountered a portent of things to come during her first romance, with Glenn Davis, the famed "Mr. Inside" of the Army football champions. When her dates with Davis attracted huge press attention, Taylor commented, "Maybe I should have fallen for a busboy, then the whole thing wouldn't cause so much attention."

A year later, her mother announced Taylor's engagement to William D. Pawley, 22-year-old son of a former ambassador to Brazil. The engagement was canceled three months later, and Taylor was rumored to be dating Howard Hughes. Mrs. Taylor angrily denied her daughter had ever seen the bashful billionaire without her parents' being present.

The wedding of Elizabeth Taylor, 18, to Conrad Nicholson "Nicky" Hilton, 23, on May 6, 1950, was hailed as the Hollywood social event of the year. They were married by a priest (Hilton was Roman Catholic, his bride was not) with a lavish reception at the Bel-Air Country Club.

"The honeymoon in Europe lasted two weeks," Taylor wrote in a 1965 memoir. "I should say the marriage lasted for two weeks. Then came, yours sincerely, disillusionment – rude and brutal."

Hilton began drinking on their wedding night and seldom stopped. After the honeymoon Taylor went home to her mother and filed for divorce.

Of her marriage to British actor Michael Wilding, Taylor wrote: "We had a lovely, easy life, very simple, very quiet. Two babies were born. We had friends. We didn't do much."

That all changed when she met Mike Todd. He was the dynamic producer of Broadway girlie shows, promoting the big-screen Cinerama and an all-star film of "Around the World in 80 Days." He swept Taylor off her feet and out of her marriage to Wilding.

"He had a joy, a relish about being alive, a vitality that was so contagious," she wrote. "He was a fabulous con artist – could con the gold out of your teeth – but was terribly, gregariously generous."

Todd's life was snuffed out on a New Mexico mountaintop in the 1958 crash of his private plane. Among those who consoled the widow was singer Eddie Fisher. Their romance caused the biggest Hollywood scandal of the time, to be superseded by a bigger scandal surrounding her fourth marriage.

Taylor was branded a "home wrecker" for allegedly breaking up Fisher's marriage to Debbie Reynolds, mother of his two children. Two years after her 1959 marriage to Fisher, Taylor met Richard Burton on the set of "Cleopatra."

"Has anybody ever told you that you're a very pretty girl?" said the hard-living actor. Her reaction: "Here's the great lover, the great wit, the great intellectual of Wales, and he comes out with a line like that!"

They were soon madly in love, and the world's press trumpeted every development of the affair. After divorces from their spouses, Taylor and Burton were married March 15, 1964. They divorced in 1974, remarried in 1975 and divorced finally the following year.

From show business, Taylor moved to politics. In 1976 she married Virginian John W. Warner and helped his successful campaign for the U.S. Senate in 1978. They were divorced in 1982.

"Being a senator's wife is not easy," she told a reporter. "It's very lonely. I wouldn't wish it on anyone."

Taylor's romances during the 1980s kept the tabloids busy but didn't reach the proportions of her earlier ones. She was engaged to New York businessman Dennis Stein and Mexican lawyer Victor Luna. She was rumored engaged to the late publisher Malcolm Forbes, but both claimed their relationship was platonic.

Her companion as she battled pneumonia in April 1990 was Larry Fortensky, 37, a construction worker she met while both were undergoing treatment at the Betty Ford Center.

She married Fortensky in October 1991 at friend Michael Jackson's ranch, as tabloid photographers peered down from helicopters overhead. "Marriage does give a sense of oneness that just being together can't," she said.

But in August 1995, they announced a trial separation; and in February 1996 she filed for divorce.

"You don't get over men like the flu," she said. "Every divorce is like a little death."

Which was not to say she was giving up on men entirely.

"I'm not going to join a nunnery," she said. "I said I'm through with marriage, but I'm not through with men – that wouldn't be realistic."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST DIVORCE

LOS ANGELES -- Jokers liked to call her Mrs. Hilton Wilding Todd Fisher Burton Burton Warner Fortensky. Indeed, Elizabeth Taylor was prolific as a bride. "I think I ended up being the scarlet woman...
LOS ANGELES -- Jokers liked to call her Mrs. Hilton Wilding Todd Fisher Burton Burton Warner Fortensky. Indeed, Elizabeth Taylor was prolific as a bride. "I think I ended up being the scarlet woman...
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07:16 AM on 03/24/2011
HuffPo: Are you serious? A true legendary star dies and top spot on the Entertainment page take people like ...Bachelor Brad(!!!) ? Selena Gomez? Billy Ray Cyrus? Really? You must be joking...
I'm so dissapointed. I really expected more ...
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lizipoo
Sick of sockpuppets
02:38 AM on 03/24/2011
AP is reporting that the Westboro whackadoos are planning to protest Elizabeth Taylor's funeral.   It's apparent they have no tolerance for the compassion she exhibited with her tireless fund-raising efforts for AIDS foundations.
 
She will be remembered with love and respect while these fools will be lucky to scare up a minion for their own final services.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DHC
01:27 AM on 03/24/2011
HuffPo: I'm very disappointed with your coverage of Elizabeth Taylor's death. You need an obituary writer on your staff, at the very least. What happened to the dignity this web site used to have, we are talking an icon here.

Dame Elizabeth Taylor was the first high profile person to utter the acronym, AIDS, in the mid-eighties, when even President Reagan refused to utter the words -- that is his legacy. Miss Taylor was a beacon of light in some rough seas back when it counted. Beautiful, yes. Stunning actress, yes. Survivor, yes. RIP.
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skunky93
12:15 AM on 03/24/2011
I'm sad to see her go. I hope she found her true love waiting for her on the other side.
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Afterschool Carl
10:32 PM on 03/23/2011
Her time came and went decades ago. She won't be missed.
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Jced
I'd love to kiss ya...but, I just washed my hair!!
10:38 PM on 03/23/2011
Either will you!
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BlueZoo
Independent voter, Independent thinker!
11:47 PM on 03/23/2011
You are so incredibly wrong! She is the last, the very last, of the great Hollywood legends and of the star system. She will be greatly missed!
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Altario
Among nerds, I'm cool.
09:57 PM on 03/23/2011
Personally, I won't remember her many marriages and the emotional turmoil it must have caused her.  Instead, I will remember her for her wonderful film roles, and for her extraordinary character in the fight against AIDS and other causes.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
08:59 PM on 03/23/2011
It looks as if Liz never gave up.
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Nicole Dixson
10:11 PM on 03/23/2011
A great quality to have.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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SurrealSequences
2 understand the future: research & study the past
08:30 PM on 03/23/2011
Swing on sweet lady - I'll see you on the next level. Stay sweet.
07:00 PM on 03/23/2011
She had an amazing life. She did more living in her years than most do in one. I will miss her voice. She could go from a soft feminine whisper to a bawdy husky laugh, all dependent on the subject matter. She faced death so many times personally and then had to endure the deaths of so many she loved. Her beauty is what made her a star. Her life is what makes her a legend.