The Passing of Miss Torso ("Rear Window")

From the L.A. Times:

Georgine Darcy, who played the across-the-courtyard dancer dubbed “Miss Torso” by wheelchair-bound voyeur James Stewart in Alfred Hitchcock’s classic 1954 thriller “Rear Window,” has died. She was 68. The former ballerina, who never viewed herself as an actress, was one of the last surviving members of a stellar cast that included Stewart, Grace Kelly, Thelma Ritter, Wendell Corey and Raymond Burr. Darcy was 17 when she was chosen for the film. Hitchcock hired her based on a publicity photo of her with a green feather boa and dressed in a black leotard that emphasized her voluptuous figure.
After the film was completed, Hitchcock suggested, “If you go to Europe and study Chekov, I could make a big star out of you.” But she didn’t follow that advice either. “Well, what a crazy suggestion! I assumed he was just teasing,” she told director Malcolm Venville earlier this year for a documentary to be introduced at the Edinburgh International Film Festival in Scotland.
While “Rear Window” was greeted as a Hitchcock masterpiece and Darcy’s role memorable, she was not impressed. Recalling the premiere for Venville, she said: “I was never an exhibitionist. I’d never seen myself so big as I was on that screen, and I was terrified.” Although detractors claimed Hitchcock manipulated women, Darcy told Venville: “He was incredibly gentle and quiet. People may think him ferocious, but to me he was a big old penguin.”
Born in Brooklyn, Darcy was urged by her mother to become a stripper (!). Instead she chose ballet, and acted sporadically. She married twice — once at 19 and for the last 30 years to actor Byron Palmer, who is her only survivor. Other than “Rear Window,” Darcy’s most memorable role was as the irreverent secretary Gypsy on the 1960-61 television series “Harrigan and Son,” featuring Pat O’Brien as her attorney boss. She also appeared in the films “Don’t Knock the Twist” in 1962, “Women and Bloody Terror” in 1969 and “The Delta Factor” in 1970, and in guest roles on television’s “M Squad,” “Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse” and “Mannix.”
Darcy conceded in 2000 that she could no longer button the pink shorts with the 21-inch waistband that she wore in “Rear Window.” She could, however, still get them on and had never deteriorated to Thelma Ritter’s sardonic prediction from the movie that Miss Torso would end up “old, fat and alcoholic.”

Some stills from Rear Window (including two of “Miss Torso”) can be found here.

Rear Window was on TCM last night and Susan and I watched it again. We both decided that we couldn’t have lived in any of the buildings - there was just way too much noise from all the neighbors.

Awww . . . Rest in peace Georgine. Miss Torso was my favorite neighbor, especially with the glimpse of her Real Boyfriend returning home after all those guys she was stringing along.

DD

I still can’t get over "Darcy was urged by her mother to become a stripper . . . "

Zip! Walter Lippman wasn’t brilliant today
Zip! Will Sorayan ever write a great play?
Zip! I was reading Schopenhauer last night
Zip! and I think that Schopenhauer was right.