Marisa Berenson Movies
Marisa Berenson was born to an aristocratic family: her grandfather was art historian/collector Bernard Berenson, her maternal grandmother was fashion designer Elsa Schiafarelli, her father was a Boston-based diplomat, and her stepmother was Marchessa Cicciapouti di Guilliano. Reportedly,
Marisa made her on-camera debut in the 1961 film
Some Like It Cool. She is better known for her later career as a top-drawer fashion model, gracing the covers of all the best international fashion magazines. Hired by filmmaker
Luchino Visconti for a major role in
Death in Venice (1971),
Berenson proved she could act, and that she was not merely a wealthy dilettante. She was quite good as Jewish bride Natalie Landauer in
Cabaret (1972), Lady Lyndon in
Stanley Kubrick's
Barry Lyndon (1975), and, her lovely hair buzz-cut to the bone, as a cynical death-camp inmate in the made-for-TV
Playing for Time (1980). She curtailed her filmmaking activities in the 1990s.
Marisa Berenson's younger sister
Berry Berenson was the wife of actor
Anthony Perkins. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi