Sylvia Kristel is gone soon.
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Sylvia Kristel, a Dutch actress who became an international sex star after she played the title role in the 1974 erotic film “Emmanuelle,” died on Wednesday in the Netherlands. She died at 60.
The cause was cancer, her agency, Features Creative Management said in a
statement on its Web site, without saying where she died. AVN, a trade
publication for the sex film industry, reported that she died at home in
The Hague.
Ms. Kristel was a willowy, dark-haired model and beauty contest winner
in her early 20s with scant acting experience when she was cast by the
French director Just Jaeckin as Emmanuelle, the wife of a French
diplomat in Bangkok who seeks solace for her boredom in a variety of
sexual encounters.
With its simulated sex scenes shot largely in soft focus, an exotic
locale and a sentimental pop score, the film became an avatar of
soft-core pornography. An immediate hit in France — it stayed at the
same theater in Paris for several years — and later in Japan, where it
was perceived as a triumph of feminism (mostly, Ms. Kristel pointed out,
for one scene in which Emmanuelle climbs on top of her husband during
sex), it was distributed in the United States by a major studio,
Columbia Pictures, a relatively respectable alternative to the
scandalous hits of two years earlier, “Deep Throat” and “Behind the
Green Door.”
Ms. Kristel went on to appear in several Emmanuelle feature films and
made-for-television movies.
According to AVN, ”Emmanuelle” is said to have earned more than $100
million. Ms. Kristel was ambivalent about her experience making the
films; they allowed her to travel and opened doors for her as an
actress, she said, and it was hard not to be proud of a film that so
many people had seen. But the career that grew out of them was not what
she had planned or hoped for.
She did act in mainstream films, working with renowned European
directors including Alain Robbe-Grillet (“Playing With Fire,” 1975) and
Claude Chabrol (“Alice or the Last Escapade,” 1977), starring in Mr.
Jaeckin’s adaptation of “Lady Chatterley’s Lover” (1981) and spending
several years in Hollywood, where she appeared in the action-adventure
film “The Fifth Musketeer” (1979); “The Nude Bomb” (1980, a reprise of
the 1960s television series “Get Smart,” starring Don Adams); and the
racy, very successful comedy “Private Lessons” (1981), in which she
played an immigrant maid who seduces a teenager. But she was nearly
always cast in sexually suggestive parts, and her performances drew
considerably less attention than her face and figure.
In her 2006 autobiography, “Undressing Emmanuelle,” she wrote that she
was “disappointed and a little hurt” that her more serious work went
unappreciated. “I was dressed but people preferred me naked,” she wrote.
Ms. Kristel was born in Utrecht, the Netherlands, on Sept. 28, 1952, and
grew up in a hotel owned by her parents, who separated when she was 16.
She worked as a secretary before becoming a model, and when she was 20
she won the Miss TV Holland and the Miss TV Europe beauty contests.
In later years Ms. Kristel pursued a career as a painter. She directed a
short animated film, “Topor et Moi,” that was shown at the Tribeca Film Festival in 2006.
She was married and divorced twice. In Hollywood, she had a volatile
relationship with the British actor Ian McShane, whom she met while
making “The Fifth Musketeer,” and she acknowledged that during that time
she had problems with alcohol and cocaine. She also acknowledged
romantic liaisons with GĂ©rard Depardieu, Roger Vadim and Warren Beatty.
Her survivors include a son, Arthur Kristel, whose father was Hugo
Claus, a Belgian artist and writer who died in 2008.
In interviews in recent years, Ms. Kristel spoke about her time as
Emmanuelle with appreciative dispassion. “The series allowed me to paint
for a year and live in peace,” she said in 2009. “And I think that
justifies the means.”