ELIZABETH TAYLOR for Vogue US March 1 1965
Photographer: William Klein
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ELIZABETH TAYLOR for Vogue US March 1 1965
Photographer: William Klein
1962. Elizabeth Taylor lounging on a boat, photographed by Bert Stern.
The photo was taken by photographer Bert Stern when the actress was on vacation in Ischia, Italy.
Elizabeth Taylor, Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf, Mike Nichols, 1966
Elizabeth Taylor & Richard Burton
Elizabeth Taylor
Follies Of God
“There was a Chaucerian splendor to their behavior. Demanding a particular sausage on a particular day at a particular time, and to watch as it was air-dropped in some outer region. Yes, it was insane: Fellini could not have done better, as some poor assistant was sent to an area to fetch sausage or chocolate or chili or a certain crocheted throw that would be of benefit to Elizabeth during a cold she was suffering. Out into a field or to a nearby tarmac they would go, and they would come back with the necessary goods. “But there was always incredible sharing as well, so right when everyone was locked in paralytic disdain, clucking over such waste, you would look and see that the sound stage had been stocked with salmon and Champagne; white chocolates; Coca-Cola, which could not be found in our particular region; cigarettes; and for one sad little production assistant, an array of American candies he missed, a fact known to Elizabeth only because she possessed extraordinary hearing abilities: She could hear Richard’s zipper being pulled down across three continents.”
—Tennessee Williams on Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor/Interview with James Grissom/1982/Photograph of Taylor, Burton, and Ava Gardner on the set of “The Night of the Iguana”/
“My blind eyes are desperately waiting for the sight of you,” wrote Richard Burton to Elizabeth Taylor. “You don’t realize of course, EB, how fascinatingly beautiful you have always been, and how strangely you have acquired an added and special and dangerous loveliness.”
IN HER SIGHT
Richard Burton at 100. Burton and Taylor go to Oxford - David Wood
Richard Burton would be 100 years old on Monday, November 10, 2025. Aged 21, David Wood was in a student play with two megastars – and got to kiss the most beautiful woman in the world
In 1965, when I was in my final year at Oxford, reading English, news came through that Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor were coming to town. They were going to appear in an Oxford University Dramatic Society (OUDS) production of Dr Faustus by Christopher Marlowe. Burton would play Faustus. Taylor would play the non-speaking role of Helen of Troy.
The play would be directed by Professor Nevill Coghill, the Oxford don who had been Burton’s tutor during the war years, when he was at Exeter College. In November, a postcard arrived in my college pigeonhole, from Coghill, asking me to play Wagner.On 1st February 1966, Burton and Taylor rolled into Oxford, literally, in their splendid green Rolls-Royce, driven by Gaston Sanz, their loyal chauffeur and bodyguard.
We all trooped off to the ballroom of Oxford’s most famous hotel, the Randolph, and performed a run-through of the play. The Burtons watched with concentration and no hint of condescension.
I had the chance of exchanging a few words with Elizabeth, and was immediately hypnotised by her warm smile and friendliness. She joked that she knew every line of her non-speaking role. Burton told us that he knew his part, but not as well as he thought he did. He said that when working through them, a lot of Marlowe’s lines had started coming out as Burton’s lines!
When rehearsals started the next day, it became clear that Burton had indeed done his homework. Although he used a script, he used it more for writing notes than as an aide-mémoire. At first he spoke quietly and unemphatically, but his characteristically melodic tones were excitingly apparent.
Burton’s calm concentration involved a lot of smoking. Whenever he felt the need to light up, he placed a hand over his shoulder, whereupon the trusty Gaston would approach, place a cigarette between his outstretched fingers, then light it from behind.
Coghill, then aged 66, directed Burton quietly yet enthusiastically. Burton rarely questioned his blocking or interpretation. He was quoted as saying, ‘He is as near to a saint as any man I know.’ A few amendments were insisted upon.
No actor was allowed to get too close to him. Perhaps he knew he needed a magic circle of space around him to portray his power.
After rehearsal, we sometimes accompanied Burton to the Apollo pub across the road. He seemed very relaxed over a pint of bitter. It must have been a relief that there were no paparazzi clicking away, and that the pub regulars took little or no notice of him.
He took no chances, however. Gaston came too, and never kept his eyes off him, even escorting him to the Gents. Gaston paid for our drinks. We had already noticed that Burton, like royalty, never carried anything in the pockets of his camel jacket. Gaston looked after the cash and the cigarettes.
At one point, a photographer came in and was granted a shot, but Burton, clearly from experience, made quite sure that he was surrounded by undergraduates, both male and female, in such a way that the photo couldn’t be cropped to imply he was privately entertaining one young lady.
ELIZABETH TAYLOR for Vogue US March 1 1965
Photographer: William Klein
Richard Burton, Elizabeth Taylor and Peter O’Toole, France, 1964.
Photoplay Magazine, September 1963
Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton
Taylor and Burton
The Comedians
Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton in Cleopatra, 1963.