Acquanetta: Difference between revisions
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'''Burnu Acquanetta''' (July 17, 1921 - August 16, 2004), nicknamed ''"The Venezuelan Volcano,"'' was a B-movie actress known for her exotic beauty. | '''Burnu Acquanetta''' ({{star}}July 17, 1921 - {{dag}}August 16, 2004), nicknamed ''"The Venezuelan Volcano,"'' was a B-movie actress known for her exotic beauty. | ||
She was born Burnu Acquanetta in Cheyenne, Wyoming, and raised in Norristown, Pennsylvania as Mildred Davenport after she was given up by her biological parents. Burnu means "burning fire, deep water". | She was born Burnu Acquanetta in Cheyenne, Wyoming, and raised in Norristown, Pennsylvania as Mildred Davenport after she was given up by her biological parents. Burnu means "burning fire, deep water". |
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Burnu Acquanetta (✦July 17, 1921 - †August 16, 2004), nicknamed "The Venezuelan Volcano," was a B-movie actress known for her exotic beauty.
She was born Burnu Acquanetta in Cheyenne, Wyoming, and raised in Norristown, Pennsylvania as Mildred Davenport after she was given up by her biological parents. Burnu means "burning fire, deep water".
Acquanetta started her career as a model in New York City with Harry Conover. She signed with Universal Studios in 1942 and acted mostly in B-movies, including Tarzan and the Leopard Woman, Arabian Nights, The Sword of Monte Cristo, and the notorious failure, Captive Wild Woman, in which Universal attempted to create a female monster movie franchise with Acquanetta as an ape.
She retired from movies in the 1950s after marrying Jack Ross, a car dealer. They settled in Mesa, Arizona, and she returned to a degree of celebrity by appearing with Ross in his local television advertisements, and also by hosting a local television show called Acqua's Corner that accompanied the Friday late-night movies. She and Ross had four children, and divorced in the 1980s.
Acquanetta is also the author of a book of poetry, The Audible Silence, illustrated by Emilie Touraine (Flagstaff, AZ): Northland Press, 1974.
Acquanetta succumbed to complications of Alzheimer's disease shortly after 4 a.m. on August 16, 2004, at Hawthorn Court in Ahwatukee, Arizona. She was 83.
- Acquanetta appeared in YANK magazine on September 29, 1944
Gallery
External links
- Also see the Wikipedia page [ Acquanetta ]
Acquanetta at the Internet Movie Database
- Acquanetta appeared in YANK magazine on
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