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I have an admiration for a woman who knows
exactly what she wants and go after it relentlessly.
The theme for this issue is the Art of Resilience.
Elizabeth Taylor is our Cover Lady because she is
the epitome of a Resilient Lady.

As I was growing up, I watched and admired
Elizabeth Taylor she was one of the most beautiful
ladies that I have ever seen. Even today, in her
golden years she is the most famous woman in the
world and still as beautiful as ever.

Liz's resilience has kept her in the game for a very
long time; she is the symbol of fine taste, glamour,
extravagance, and style.
More than any other film star, she symbolizes the old-time Hollywood glamour and
here we will highlight the dynamics of her long wonderful career.

Elizabeth Taylor is a beautiful English-born American actress, who is known for her
creative acting skills, high profile lifestyle, larger-than-life celebrity persona, and many
marriages.

Taylor was born in Hampstead, a wealthy district of north-west London, the second
child of Francis Lenn Taylor (1897-1968) and Sara Viola Warmbrodt (1895-1994), who
were Americans residing in England.

From the time that Liz was a young girl, she was noted to have star like qualities.
When producer David O. Selznick was casting the minor roles for the infamous Gone
With The Wind, Liz was considered to play Bonnie Blue, the daughter of Scarlett
O'Hara and Rhett Butler, but her dad Francis Taylor who had no interest in letting his
seven-year-old daughter pursue an acting career.
At the age of nine, Cheever Cowden chairman and major
stockholder of Universal Pictures in Hollywood was taken away
by Elizabeth's dark beauty. She appeared in her first motion
picture in There's One Born Every Minute, her first and only film for
Universal Pictures, since the studio's production chief, Mr. Muhl,
was appalled that Elizabeth could not sign, dance, nor act.

However, in September 1941, Universal Pictures signed Elizabeth
to a six-month renewable contract at $100 a week, a contract
that ended less than a year later. Then in October 1942 Metro
Goldwyn Mayer signed Taylor to $100 a week for his role as
Priscilla in Lassie Come Home, increasing at regularly until it
reached a hefty $750 during her seven year contract.

As they say the rest is history. Ms. Taylor went on to play Helen
Burrows in Charlotte Bronte, she then returned to England to
appear in The White Cliffs of Dover.
Elizabeth's career was skyrocketed to stardom at the tender age of 12 for her role of Velvet Brown a young girl who trains her
beloved horse to win the Grand National, MGM's National Velvet, which also costarred Mickey Rooney and Angela Lansbury.
National Velvet grossed over $4 million at the box office and Taylor was signed to a new long-term contract that raised her
salary to $30,000 per year.

In 1963, Taylor became the highest paid movie star when she accepted US$1 million to play the title role in the lavish production
of Cleopatra for 20th Century Fox.

Liz is known internationally for her beauty, especially for those violet eyes, with which she captured audiences early on in her
youth and has kept the world hooked on ever since.
Magazine Creation by Cole & Associates