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Hedy Lamarr



Hedy Lamarr, Genius behind the Beautiful Face



Long unrecognized for her intelligence, movie star, inventor finally has her story told in new documentary Bombshell



By Greg Beaubien

By GREG BEAUBIEN    May 22, 2018

Email: gbeaubien@moresbypress.com



“GIVE THE WORLD THE BEST YOU HAVE AND YOU’LL BE KICKED IN THE TEETH. Give the world the best you’ve got, anyway.”

Read in voice-over by actress and inventor Hedy Lamarr toward the end of the fascinating new documentary Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story, the advice sums up the experience of a woman celebrated for her beauty but ignored for her brilliant mind.

Born Hedwig Eva Maria Kiesler in Austria in 1914, she began modeling as a teenager. In 1933, at the age of 19, she appeared  nude—and seemed to masturbate herself to orgasm—in the controversial Czechoslovakian film Ecstasy. In London she met Louis B. Mayer, head of the studio Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, who offered her a movie contract in Hollywood. Mayer changed her last name to Lamarr and promoted her as “the world’s most beautiful woman.”

She was a film star from the late 1930s until her career began to fade in the 1950s. Her best-known movies include Algiers with Charles Boyer, which launched her U.S. career in 1938; the 1940 box-office hit Boom Town, with Clark Gable, Claudette Colbert and Spencer Tracy; and Cecil B. DeMille’s 1949 biblical epic Samson and Delilah. Invariably, Lamarr was cast as an exotic—and often nearly naked—seductress.


‘You never knew if they loved you, or their fantasy of you,’ Hedy Lamarr said.


She married and divorced six times, but said none of her husbands could see past her face to the real person within. “You never knew if they loved you, or their fantasy of you,” she said. “The brains of people are more interesting than the looks, I think.”

As the single mother of two children, a boy and a girl, Lamarr worked hard. At home, she was a self-taught inventor. She tried to develop a cube that would dissolve in a glass of water to create a carbonated drink similar to Coca-Cola, but the results were inconsistent and the project fizzled. She later helped Howard Hughes design faster airplanes.

But her most important invention, which she hit upon in 1941 when she was 27 years old, had the potential to save the world from tyranny. During World War II, Lamarr devised a way to defeat German frequency-jamming technology so that British submarines could guide torpedoes with radio signals. When a signal traveled on only one frequency, the Nazis used radio interference to jam the transmission, sending the torpedo off course and rendering German U-boats virtually unsinkable. Lamarr had the breakthrough idea of frequency-hopping, in which the submarine and the torpedo would follow a synchronized pattern that constantly jumped from one radio frequency to another across a spectrum of 80 different frequencies, making it impossible for the enemy to jam the transmission.


Her most important invention could have saved the world from tyranny, but she never received a penny nor any official recognition for it.


Lamarr asked her friend, the American avant-garde composer and pianist George Antheil, to help her implement her idea by developing a device that would make frequency hopping possible. He synchronized a pair of miniature player-piano mechanisms that activated the radio signals, one on the ship and one on the torpedo.

Together, Lamar and Antheil patented the invention. But when they brought it to the U.S. Navy, the military brass scoffed, “You want to put a player piano inside a torpedo? Get out of here.” She was urged to use her beautiful face to raise money for the war effort instead—which she did, eventually selling $25 million worth of war bonds, the equivalent of about $343 million today.

After leaving MGM in 1945, she took the daring, nearly unheard-of step of creating her own film-production company. In 1954 she produced the DeMille-style epic The Loves of Three Queens in Italy. Lamarr played all three lead roles in a story about beauty standing in the way of love for the great women of history. She spent millions of dollars of her own money to finance the film, but it never found a U.S. distributor, and she was left broke.

Although she had raised millions for the American war effort, she was not yet a U.S. citizen. A short time later her patent for her frequency-hopping invention was seized by the U.S. government as the property of an “enemy alien.” Her innovation would later be widely adopted by the U.S. military and eventually form the basis for the Wi-Fi, GPS and Bluetooth technologies that we use today. Lamarr never received a penny nor any official recognition for her invention.

In her later years, she reportedly was addicted to pills—the legacy of the amphetamines that studios gave stars to keep them working six days a week and churning out movies. She was arrested twice for shoplifting and underwent a series of plastic surgeries that disfigured her face. She became a recluse, refusing to see anyone, not even her family. Hedy Lamarr died in Florida on Jan. 19, 2000, at the age of 85, without her story being told.

From director Alexandra Dean, and part of the American Masters series on PBS, the engaging and poignant film Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story, is now streaming on Amazon Prime.

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