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Fay Wray

Personal Profile

Fay Wray
  • Birth Name:
    Vina Fay Wray
  • Nickname:
    The Queen of Scream
    Queen of the Bs
  • Date of Birth:
    September 15, 1907
  • Zodiac Sign:
    Virgo
  • Place of Birth:
    Cardston, Alberta, Canada
  • Place of Death:
    New York City, New York, USA
  • Date of Death:
    August 8, 2004
  • Cause of Death:
    Natural causes
  • Height:
    5' 3"
  • Sex:
    Female
  • Nationality:
    American

Family

Fay Wray
  • Spouse:
    John Monk Saunders - Divorced
    Robert Riskin -
    Dr Sanford (Sandy) Rothenberg

Career

Fay Wray

Trivia

Fay Wray
  • On The 70th Annual Academy Awards (1998) (TV). Billy Crystal introduced a clip of her in King Kong (1933) and then came offstage and stood next to Miss Wray in the audience, and introduced her as the "Beauty who charmed the Beast, the Legendary Fay Wray".
  • Miss Wray was completely caught off guard, appearing to have not even noticed that Billy Crystal had moved near her when the lights were turned down for the clip from King Kong (1933), then rose from her seat to rapturous applause and waved.
  • Normally, the audience would have given her a standing ovation, but sensing her discombobulation at being caught off-guard on live, worldwide TV, they did not.
  • Billy Crystal gently teased her that she was on "This Is Your Life" (1952) and thanked her for being a part of the evening. Miss Wray smiled with gratitude.
  • She was "almost" a vegetarian and always stuck to her rule not to eat late at night. She woke up long before sunrise and spent a lot of time writing.
  • Best remembered as the girl held in the hand of RKO's King Kong (1933).
  • She drove a car into her nineties.
  • In January 2003, a 95-year-old Fay Wray was awarded the "Legend in Film" Award at the Palm Beach International Film Festival when she appeared there in person to celebrate Rick McKay's film Broadway: The Golden Age, by the Legends Who Were There (2003), which she also appeared in.
  • In addition to her honor, McKay's film was honored with the Audience Award "Best Documentary" of the festival by unanimous vote.
  • Adrien Brody and Robert Evans won awards in addition to Wray and McKay at the same festival.

Quotes

Fay Wray
  • "All my life I've written something, I've always cared much more about writing than I do about acting."
  • " When I shot my scenes Kong wasn't there at all. I had to use my imagination, which was exciting and terrifying at the same time. Acting is about the imagination, that's the great joy of it. But nothing quite like it had been done before, so I was a little nervous about how it would all come together."
  • "I was known as the queen of the Bs. If only I'd been a little more selective."
  • "When I'm in New York. I look at the Empire State Building and feel as though it belongs to me, or is it vice-versa?"
  • "I've been waiting to meet you for half my life".
  • "I think to have done "Titanic" would have been a torturous experience altogether."
  • "When we did it, I just thought how lucky I was to be in the movies, where something like this was possible."
  • "When my youngest daughter first saw the film, she said, "Kong wasn't trying to hurt you, he was just trying to protect you", which was right."
  • "Never got treated correctly in Hollywood, but he made me feel very happy."
  • "Those horror pictures were the parts I was being offered at the time, and the scream came into play in almost all of them. People today call them classics; that amuses me a little, because I had so many reservations about them when I made them. I thought they were much too gruesome."
View all Quotes: Fay Wray

Biography

Fay Wray
Last Updated: Saturday, September 05, 2009

Canadian-born Fay Wray was brought up in Los Angeles and entered films at an early age. She was barely in her teens when she started working as an extra. She began her career as a heroine in westerns at Universal during the silent era. In 1926 the Western Association of Motion Picture Advertisers selected 13 young starlets it deemed most likely to succeed in pictures. Fay was chosen as one of these starlets, along with Janet Gaynor and Mary Astor.

Fame would indeed come to Fay when she played another heroine in Erich von Stroheim's The Wedding March (1928). She continued playing leads in a number of films, such as the good-bad girl in Thunderbolt (1929). By the early 1930s she was at Paramount working with Gary Cooper and Jack Holt in a number of average films, such as Master of Men (1933). She also appeared in such horror films as Doctor X (1932) and The Vampire Bat (1933). In 1933 Fay was approached by producer Merian C. Cooper, who told her that he had a part for her in a picture in which she would be working with a tall, dark leading man.

What he didn't tell her was that her "tall, dark leading man" was a giant gorilla, and the picture turned out to be the classic King Kong (1933). Perhaps no one in the history of pictures could scream more dramatically than Fay, and she really put on a show in "Kong". Her character provided a combination of sex appeal, vulnerability and lung capacity as she was stalked by the giant beast all the way to the top of the Empire State Building. That was as far as Fay would rise, however, as this was, after all, just another horror movie. After "Kong", she began a slow decline that put her into low-budget action films by the mid '30s.

In 1939 her 11-year marriage to screenwriter John Monk Saunders ended in divorce, and her career was almost finished. In 1942 she remarried and retired from the screen, forever to be remembered as the "beauty who killed the beast" in "King Kong". However, in 1953 she made a comeback, playing mature character roles, and also appeared on television as Catherine, Natalie Wood's mother, in "The Pride of the Family" (1953). She continued to appear in films until 1958 and television into the 1960s.

Filmography

Fay Wray

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