She was born Margarita Carmen Cansino on October 17, 1918, in Brooklyn, New York. Her Spanish father, Eduardo Cansino, was a professional dancer and her mother Volga had performed in the Ziegfeld Follies. When she was eight the family moved to Los Angeles and her father opened a dance studio. Rita took lessons and became a very talented dancer. Eduardo decided to pull her out of school and made her his professional dance partner. They performed in Mexican bars and casinos as “The Dancing Cansinos”. Eduardo was a violent alcoholic who forced Rita to rehearse for hours. The twelve year old was dressed in sexy costumes and Eduardo referred to her his “wife”. Sadly her father began sexually abusing her and raping her. Her mother, who was an alcoholic, knew about the abuse but did nothing to stop it. In 1935 she made her film debut in Dante’s Inferno using the screen name Rita Cansino. Then she had small parts in Paddy O’Day and Charlie Chan In Egypt. At the age of eighteen she escaped her father’s abuse by marrying her forty-one year old manager Edward Judson. He convinced her to lift her hairline with electrolysis and dye her hair auburn red. Unfortunately Edward became very controlling and stole her money.
Rita with her father Eduardo Cansino
Her career took off when she signed a seven year contract with Columbia pictures in 1940. She starred in a string of successful films including Blood And Sand, You Were Never Lovelier, and Cover Girl. Harry Cohn, Columbia’s president, treated her terribly because she refused to sleep with him. The stunning redhead became a popular World War 2 pin-up and appeared on dozens of magazine covers. Life magazine declared she was “The Love Goddess”. After divorcing Edward she dated Victor Mature, her costar in My Gal Sal. Rita married director Orson Welles in 1943. The following year they had a daughter named Rebecca. In 1946 she played a seductive femme-fatale in the film-noir Gilda. Her performance got rave reviews the movie became a huge hit. During filming she began a love affair with Glenn Ford that would last for decades. Orson directed her in the 1948 film-noir The Lady from Shanghai. As a publicity stunt he made her cut her trademark red hair and dye it blonde. The movie bombed and their marriage ended in 1947. Although she was one of the world’s biggest sex symbols she was painfully shy and desperate to find true love. She started dating billionaire Howard Hughes and got pregnant. When he refused to marry her she had an abortion.
She later said “All I wanted was just what everybody else wants, you know, to be loved.” In 1952 she returned to Hollywood to star in the drama Affair In Trinidad. It became one of the biggest box-office hits of her career. Her success continued with the hit films Salome and Miss Sadie Thompson. Rita married singer Dick Haymes in September of 1953. Sadly he began physically abusing her and she left him after two years. She married her fifth husband, producer James Hill, in 1958. They formed a production company and made the film Separate Tables together. By the early 1960s her marriage to James was over and she had a serious drinking problem. She dated actor Gary Merrill but was never able to find a lasting relationship. As she got older she had trouble remembering her lines and her mental state began deteriorating. Eventually she was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and had to retire from acting. Her final film was the 1972 drama Wrath Of God. Rita was cared for by her daughter, Princess Yasmin, until her death on May 14, 1987. She is buried at Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California. Princess Yasmin is now the President of Alzheimer’s Disease International.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videoseries