Tura Satana, icon of '60s drive-in cult films, dies

I recently watched "Grindhouse", a film by Quentin Tarrantino and Robert Rodriguez, with a friend of mine who bought it on blu-ray. The film is a salute to the low-budget B-movies of the 60's and 70's. It has all the grainy video, bad edits, video lines running through, and poor dialogue that made these cheaply made films worth watching. There is a comic faction built into them for those of us with a twisted sense humor.  One wonders why we were watching it on blu-ray and not VHS tape.

turasata.jpgTura Satana in "Faster Pussycat Kill Kill"

One of the actress in the film,  Rose McGowan,  becomes this strong female character, who does not like to be pushed around. She is the tough chick (a real bad ass).  This is a character we have seen played before. One of my favorite no-nonsense female

characters is in the Russ Meyer's 1965 film "Faster Pusscat, Kill, Kill." The film features gratuitous violence, sexuality, provocative gender roles, and campy dialogue. It is not a film for everyone, but is worth watching for the acting of actress, Tura Satana, who plays the leader of a gang of  thrill-seeking go-go dancers.

The Japanese born Tura Satana took her Final Taxi this week at the age of 72 in Reno Nevada.

In "Faster Pusscat, Kill, Kill" Tura played "Varla" a very sexual yet aggressive female character, sort of like something out of a comic book.  In the film she did all of her own stunts and fight scenes. She asked the director to do this because of all the martial art training she had taken as a child.  She learned aikido and karate after being sexually attacked. In an interview in with Psychotronic Video Magazine, she said that she later tracked and exacted vengeance on each of her attackers.

After being "discovered" by silent screen comic Harold Lloyd, she first worked in the movies with Jack Lemmon and Shirley Maclaine  in 1963's "Irma La Douce".  In the musical she played one of the  Parisian prostitutes friend of the main character. That same year she played a dancer in "Who's Been Sleeping in My Bed?" with Dean Martin and Elizabeth Montgomery. Other films include the James Bond parody "Our Man Flint" (1966) with James Coburn, "The Astro-Zombies" (1968), "The Doll Squad" (1974) and "Mark of the Astro-Zombies" (2002).

In TV Tura appeared in "Burke's Law", "The Greatest Show On Earth", "Hawaiian Eye", and "The Man From U.N.C.L.E.".

In her personal life Tura Satana at one time dated "the King of Rock and Roll'" Elvis Presley, but turned down his marriage proposal but she kept  the ring. She also had a relationship with Frank Sinatra.

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