Rita Hayworth

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Put the Blame on Mame 00:00 Tools
Amado Mio 00:00 Tools
I've Been Kissed Before 00:00 Tools
Put The Blame On Mame [Nightclub Version] 00:00 Tools
The Heat Is On 00:00 Tools
My Funny Valentine 00:00 Tools
I'm Old Fashioned 00:00 Tools
Put The Blame On Mame (Nightclub Version) 00:00 Tools
Trinidad Lady 00:00 Tools
Put the Blame On Mame - Theme from "Gilda" Original Soundtrack 00:00 Tools
Zip 00:00 Tools
Put The Blame On Mame [Slow Version] 01:57 Tools
You Excite Me 00:00 Tools
Put The Blame On Mame - From "Gilda" 00:00 Tools
Put The Blame On Mame (Slow Version) 00:00 Tools
Dearly Beloved 00:00 Tools
Let's Stay Young Forever 00:00 Tools
Bewitched 00:00 Tools
Amado Mío 00:00 Tools
Put Blame On Mame (Reprise) 00:00 Tools
What Does An English Girl Think of a Yank 00:00 Tools
Put The Blame On Me 00:00 Tools
The Shorty Georges 00:00 Tools
Reprise- Put The Blame On Mame 00:00 Tools
This Can't Be Legal 00:00 Tools
The Blue Pacific Blues 00:00 Tools
People Have More Fun Than Anyone 00:00 Tools
The Show Must Go On 00:00 Tools
They Can't Convince Me 00:00 Tools
Moon River 00:00 Tools
On the Gay White Way 00:00 Tools
Blue Pacific Blues 00:00 Tools
My Gal Sal 00:00 Tools
Poor John 00:00 Tools
Oh, The Pity Of It All 00:00 Tools
Make Way for Tomorrow 00:00 Tools
Me and My Fella and a Big Umbrella 00:00 Tools
Bewitched, Bothered And Bewildered 00:00 Tools
Long Ago And Far Away 00:00 Tools
Reprise: Put The Blame On Mame 00:00 Tools
Here You Are 00:00 Tools
The Boy I Left Behind 00:00 Tools
What Does An English Girl Think Of A Yank? 00:00 Tools
I’ve Been Kissed Before 00:00 Tools
Long Ago (and Far Away) 00:00 Tools
Put The Blame On Mame (Gilda soundtrack) 00:00 Tools
Bewitched Bothered and Bewildered 00:00 Tools
Put the Blame On Mame (From "Gilda") 00:00 Tools
Come Tell Me Your Answer, Yes Or No 00:00 Tools
Tonight And Every Night 00:00 Tools
Wedding Cake Walk 00:00 Tools
Put the Blame on Mame (Reprise) 00:00 Tools
Long Ago & Far Away 00:00 Tools
Put the Blame on Mame [From Gilda] 00:00 Tools
Cry And You Cry Alone 00:00 Tools
Reprise - Put the Blame on Mame 00:00 Tools
Cry & You Cry Alone 00:00 Tools
Oh The Pity Of It All 00:00 Tools
Put The Blame On Mame (Film: Gilda) 00:00 Tools
Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered (From ''Pal Joey'') 00:00 Tools
Put The Blame On Mame (Voix & Guitare) 00:00 Tools
Put the Blame on Mame (Guitar Version) 00:00 Tools
The Shorty George 00:00 Tools
Amado Mio - From "Gilda" 00:00 Tools
People Have More Than Anyone 00:00 Tools
Sadie Thompson's Song 00:00 Tools
Let's Stay Forever 00:00 Tools
Zip (Version 1) 00:00 Tools
On The Banks Of The Wabash 00:00 Tools
Dream a Little Dream 00:00 Tools
Put The Blame On Mame (II) 00:00 Tools
Sure Thing 00:00 Tools
Put the Blame On Mame - From 'Gilda' 00:00 Tools
Mutual Admiration Society 00:00 Tools
The Boy I Left Behind Me 00:00 Tools
Dream a Little Dream Of Me 00:00 Tools
Rita Hayworth - Amado Mio 00:00 Tools
Somehow/After The Races Are Over 00:00 Tools
Pink Martini - Amado Mio 00:00 Tools
Put The Blame On Mame - From Gilda 00:00 Tools
Amado Mio - Original Mix 00:00 Tools
Put The Blame On Mame (Gilda) 00:00 Tools
Me and My Fella and My Big Umbrella 00:00 Tools
I'm Old-Fashioned 00:00 Tools
Amado Mio - From "Gilda" Original Soundtrack 00:00 Tools
Somehow - After the Races Are Over 00:00 Tools
Put the Blame On Mame (I) 00:00 Tools
Somehow-After The Races Are Over 00:00 Tools
Put The Blame On Mame (Gilda,1946) Bathroom and Nightclub Version 00:00 Tools
Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered - From "Pal Joey" 00:00 Tools
Somehow / After the Races Are Over 00:00 Tools
Come Tell What's Your Answer (Yes or No) 00:00 Tools
Sway Dancing 00:00 Tools
Bewitched, Bothered & Bewildered 00:00 Tools
I'm Old Fashioned (Version 2) 00:00 Tools
My Girl Sal 00:00 Tools
Put the Blame on Mame (Acoustic) 00:00 Tools
Reprise: Let's Stay Young Forever 00:00 Tools
Put the blame on mame (voix + guitare) 00:00 Tools
Reprise: Let's Stay Forever Young 00:00 Tools
Put the Blame On Mame - From 'Gilda', Version II 00:00 Tools
Bewitched, Bothered And Bewildered (From Pal Joey) 00:00 Tools
Bewitched, Bothered, and Bewildered 00:00 Tools
Dialogue 00:00 Tools
Put The Blame On Mame (Gilda theme) 00:00 Tools
Please, don't kiss me 00:00 Tools
Lets Stay young forever 00:00 Tools
I?ve Been Kissed Before 00:00 Tools
Put The Blame On Mame (Club Version) 00:00 Tools
I've Never Been Kissed Before (From "Affair in Trinidad") 00:00 Tools
The Mutual Admiration Society 00:00 Tools
Reprise: Tonight & Every Night 00:00 Tools
Zip (Version 2) 00:00 Tools
The Heat's On 00:00 Tools
Gilda: Put The Blame On Mame 00:00 Tools
Verde luna 00:00 Tools
Rita Hayworth - Put the blame on mame 00:00 Tools
The Heat Is On - From "Miss Sadie Thompson" 00:00 Tools
Pal Joey: Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered 00:00 Tools
Oh The Pity Of It All - From "My Girl Sal" 00:00 Tools
Dearly Beloved - Original Mix 00:00 Tools
I've Never Been Kissed Before - From "Affair In Trinidad" 00:00 Tools
Bewitched Bothered And Bewildered (Pal Joey) 00:00 Tools
Put the Blame On Mame - B.O. Gilda 00:00 Tools
On the Gay White Way - Original Mix 00:00 Tools
Me And My Fell And A Big Umbrella - From "My Girl Sal" 00:00 Tools
I ve Been Kissed Before - Original Mix 00:00 Tools
Gilda: Amado Mio 00:00 Tools
The Show Must Go On - From "Cover Girl" 00:00 Tools
He Boy I Left Behind 00:00 Tools
Put the Blame 00:00 Tools
put the blame on mame 1 00:00 Tools
The Shorty Georges - From "You Were Never Lovelier" 00:00 Tools
Amado mio (from Gilda) 00:00 Tools
I'm Old Fashioned - From "You Were Never Lovelier" 00:00 Tools
Please Don't Kiss Me 00:00 Tools
Bewitched - From "Pal Joey" 00:00 Tools
Put the Blame On Mame (Theme from "Gilda" Original Soundtrack) 00:00 Tools
Amado Mio (From "Gilda") 00:00 Tools
I M Old Fashioned - Original Mix 00:00 Tools
Sadie Thompson' Song (Blue Pacific Blues) 00:00 Tools
Put The Blame On Mam 00:00 Tools
I ve Been Kissed Before 00:00 Tools
Trinidad Lady - From "Affair In Trinidad" 00:00 Tools
Hear No Evil, See No Evil, Speak No Evil 00:00 Tools
Put the Blame On Mame - Original Theme from Gilda 00:00 Tools
My Gal Sal - Original Mix 00:00 Tools
Gilda: Put The Blame On Mame (Nightclub Version) 00:00 Tools
My Funny Valentine - From "Pal Joey" 00:00 Tools
Make Way for Tomorrow - Original Mix 00:00 Tools
The Merv Griffin Show (CBS, 1971) 00:00 Tools
put the blame on name 00:00 Tools
Gilda 00:00 Tools
Rita Hayworth - I’ve Been Kis 00:00 Tools
Je ne veux pas travailler 00:00 Tools
Put The Blame On Mame (Gilda,1946) 00:00 Tools
Come Tell Me What's Your Answer 00:00 Tools
Suspense: Three Times Murder 00:00 Tools
After the Races Are Over 00:00 Tools
People Have More Fun Than Anyone - From "Down To Earth" 00:00 Tools
Let s Stay Young Forever 00:00 Tools
Poor John - Original Mix 00:00 Tools
Long Ago - And Far Away 00:00 Tools
Put The Blame On Mame (OST Gilda, 1946) 00:00 Tools
Come Tell Me What's Your Answer (Yes or No) 00:00 Tools
Long Ago And Far Away (With Gene Kelly) 00:00 Tools
Bewitched Bothered and Bewildered - Pal Joey 00:00 Tools
The Blue Pacific Blues - From "Miss Sadie Thompson" 00:00 Tools
Dearly Belover 00:00 Tools
Let S Stay Young Forever - Original Mix 00:00 Tools
What Does an English Girl Think of a Yank - Original Mix 00:00 Tools
The Heat Is On - Original Mix 00:00 Tools
Zip - Pal Joey 00:00 Tools
Come Tell What's Your Answer 00:00 Tools
Pal Joey: Bewitched Bothered And Bewildered 00:00 Tools
The Carol Burnett Show (CBS, 1971) 00:00 Tools
Teach me to dance 00:00 Tools
Sadie Thompson's Song (Vocal) (from "Miss Sadie Thompson") 00:00 Tools
Affair In Trinidad 00:00 Tools
Put the Blame On Mame (Original Theme from Gilda) 00:00 Tools
Amado Mio (Film: Gilda) 00:00 Tools
Amado Mio - Theme from "Gilda" Original Soundtrack 00:00 Tools
Tonight Every Night 00:00 Tools
This Can't Be Legal - From "Down To Earth" 00:00 Tools
Cry You Cry Alone 00:00 Tools
Pink Martini 00:00 Tools
You Cry And You Cry Alone (With Marc Platt) 00:00 Tools
Rita Hayworth - Put The Blame On Mame (Gilda,1946) Bathroom and Nightclub Version 00:00 Tools
Me and My Fella and a Big Umbrella - Original Mix 00:00 Tools
Reprise: Tonight And EVery Night 00:00 Tools
Let's Stay Young Forever - From "Down To Earth" 00:00 Tools
You Excited Me 00:00 Tools
Pal Joey: My Funny Valentine 00:00 Tools
Miss Sadie Thompson: The Heat Is On 00:00 Tools
Miss Sadie Thompson: Blue Pacific Blues 00:00 Tools
Put the Blame on Mame (Rita Hayworth) 00:00 Tools
Amado mio (BSO Gilda) 00:00 Tools
I m Old Fashioned 00:00 Tools
Zip! 00:00 Tools
Wath Does An English Girl Think Of A Yank 00:00 Tools
Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered (From "Pal Joey") 00:00 Tools
Put the Blame on Mame (From Gilda) 00:00 Tools
Long Ago (And Far Away) - Original Mix 00:00 Tools
Reprise: Put The Blame On Mame (live) 00:00 Tools
You Excite Me - Original Mix 00:00 Tools
The Blue Pacific Blues - Original Mix 00:00 Tools
put the blame on mame (slow .. 00:00 Tools
Poor John (Version 2) 00:00 Tools
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Rita Hayworth (born Margarita Carmen Cansino on October 17, 1918 – May 14, 1987), was an American actress of Spanish and Irish descent who reached fame during the 1940s as the era's leading sex symbol. She was sometimes called "The Love Goddess" or "The Great American Love Goddess," and was celebrated as an expert dancer and great beauty. Rita Hayworth was born Margarita Carmen Cansino, the daughter of Eduardo Cansino (Sr.) and Volga Haworth (sic) in Brooklyn, New York. She was trained as a dancer from childhood, and was on stage by the age of six as a member of The Cansinos, a famous family of Roma Gitano Spanish dancers working in vaudeville. At age sixteen Rita attracted the attention of film producers as part of "The Dancing Cansinos" and was signed by Fox Studios in 1935. After her option was not renewed by Fox, Rita freelanced at minor film studios before signing with Columbia Pictures in 1937. Rita's metamorphosis began after a name change from Rita Cansino to Rita Hayworth and extensive painful electrolysis to raise her hairline. After two more years of minor roles she gave an impressive performance in Howard Hawks' Only Angels Have Wings (1939) as part of an ensemble cast headed by Cary Grant . Her sensitive portrayal of a disillusioned wife sparked the interest of other studios. Between assignments at Columbia Pictures she was borrowed by Metro Goldwyn Mayer for George Cukor's Susan and God (1940) with Joan Crawford and Warner Brothers for Raoul Walsh's The Strawberry Blonde (1941) with James Cagney. While on loan to Fox Studios for Rouben Mamoulian's Blood and Sand (1941) starring Tyrone Power, Rita achieved stardom with her sizzling performance as the amoral and seductive Doña Sol des Muire. This Technicolor film forever branded her as one of Hollywood's most beautiful redheads. Ironically, Carole Landis was the original choice for the role but was replaced by Rita Hayworth prior to filming because she refused to dye her blonde hair red. Fox then borrowed Rita from Columbia and dyed her raven hair auburn which soon became Hayworth's best remembered feature. Her stardom was solidified when she made the cover of Time Magazine as Fred Astaire's new dancing partner in You'll Never Get Rich (1941). The "love goddess" image was cemented with Bob Landry's 1941 Life magazine photograph of her (kneeling on a bed in a silk and lace nightgown), which caused a sensation and became (at over five million copies) one of the most requested wartime pinups. During World War II she ranked with Betty Grable, Dorothy Lamour, Hedy Lamarr, and Lana Turner as the pinup girls most popular with servicemen. Rita would also become Columbia's biggest star of the 1940s, under the watchful eye of studio chief Harry Cohn, who recognized her value. After she made Tales of Manhattan (1942) at Twentieth Century Fox opposite Charles Boyer, Cohn would not allow Hayworth to be loaned out to other studios. Hayworth's well-known films include the musicals that made her famous: You'll Never Get Rich (1941) and You Were Never Lovelier (1942) (both with Fred Astaire, who wrote in his autobiography that Rita "danced with trained perfection and individuality"), My Gal Sal (1942) with Victor Mature, and her best known musical, Cover Girl (1944) with Gene Kelly. Although her singing voice was dubbed in her movies, Rita was one of Hollywood's best dancers, imbued with power, precision, tremendous enthusiasm, and an unearthly grace. Cohn continued to effectively showcase Hayworth's talents in Technicolor films: Tonight and Every Night (1945) with Lee Bowman, and Down to Earth (1947), with Larry Parks. Her erotic appeal was most notable in Gilda (1946), a black-and-white film noir directed by Charles Vidor, which encountered some difficulty with censors. This role — in which Hayworth in black satin performed a legendary one-glove striptease — made her into a cultural icon as the ultimate femme fatale. Alluding to her bombshell status, in 1946 her likeness was placed on the first nuclear bomb to be tested after World War II at Bikini Atoll in the Marshall Islands, as part of Operation Crossroads. Hayworth performed one of her best remembered dance routines, the samba from 1945's Tonight and Every Night, while pregnant with her first child, Rebecca Welles. Hayworth was also the first dancer to partner both Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly on film - the others being Judy Garland, Cyd Charisse, Vera Ellen, and Leslie Caron. Hayworth gave one of her most acclaimed performances in Orson Welles' The Lady from Shanghai (1948), though it failed at the box office. The failure was in part attributed to the fact that director/co-star Welles had Hayworth's famous red locks cut off and the rest dyed blonde for her role. This was done without Harry Cohn's knowledge or approval who was furious over the change. Her next film, The Loves of Carmen (1948) with Glenn Ford, was the first film co-produced by Columbia and Rita's own production company, The Beckworth Corporation (named for her daughter Rebecca). It was Columbia's biggest moneymaker for that year. She received a percentage of the profits from this and all of her subsequent films until 1955, when Hayworth dissolved Beckworth to pay off debts she owed to Columbia. Rita left her film career in 1948 to marry Prince Aly Khan, the heir to the Aga Khan III, leader of Shia Ismaili Muslims. The couple moved to Europe, causing a media frenzy. Joseph L. Mankiewicz, in writing and directing 1954's The Barefoot Contessa, was said to have based his title character, Maria Vargas (played on film by Ava Gardner), on Hayworth's life and her marriage to Khan. After the marriage collapsed in 1951, Hayworth returned to America with great fanfare to film a string of hit films: Affair in Trinidad (1952) with favorite costar Glenn Ford, Salome (1953) with Charles Laughton and Stewart Granger, and Miss Sadie Thompson (1953) with Jose Ferrer and Aldo Ray, for which her performance won critical acclaim. Then she was off the big screen for another four years, due mainly to a tumultuous marriage to singer Dick Haymes. In 1957, after making Fire Down Below with Robert Mitchum and Jack Lemmon, and her last musical Pal Joey with Frank Sinatra and Kim Novak, Rita finally left Columbia. She got good reviews for her acting in such films as Separate Tables (1958) with Burt Lancaster and The Story on Page One (1960) with Anthony Franciosa, and continued working throughout the 1960s. Hayworth made her last film, The Wrath of God , in 1972. After about 1960, Hayworth suffered from extremely early onset of Alzheimer's disease, which was not diagnosed until 1980. She continued to act in films until the early-1970s and made a well-publicized appearance on The Carol Burnett Show near the end of her career. In 1977, Hayworth was the recipient of the National Screen Heritage Award (see above photo). Lynda Carter starred in a 1983 biopic of her life. She lived in an apartment at the San Remo in New York City. Following her death from Alzheimer's in 1987 at age 68, she was interred in the Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California; location: Grotto, Lot 196, Grave 6 (right of main sidewalk, near the curb). Her marker includes the inscription ""To yesterday's companionship and tomorrow's reunion." One of the major fundraisers for the Alzheimer's Association is the annual Rita Hayworth Gala, which is held in New York City and Chicago. Hayworth’s daughter, Princess Yasmin Aga Khan, has been the hostess for these events, which since 1985 have raised more than $42 million for the Association. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.