May Britt, Swedish Actress and Wife of Sammy Davis Jr., Dies at 91
She starred in such films as 'The Blue Angel' and 'Murder, Inc.,' but Fox declined to renew her contract after she and the legendary entertainer got engaged in 1960.
She was not on the list.
May Britt, the statuesque Swedish actress who starred in such films as The Blue Angel and Murder, Inc. before becoming the second wife of legendary entertainer Sammy Davis Jr., has died. She was 91.
Britt died Dec. 11 of natural causes at Providence Cedars-Sinai Tarzana Medical Center, her son Mark Davis told The Hollywood Reporter.
Spotted and signed by famed Italian producer Carlo Ponti
when she was 18, Britt starred in several films in Italy before she was
screen-tested in Rome and signed to a contract by 20th Century in 1957.
She portrayed the wife of a pilot (Lee Phillips) in the Korean War drama The Hunters (1958), starring Robert Mitchum, then was a love interest of Marlon Brando‘s German officer in the World War II-set The Young Lions (1958), directed by Edward Dmytryk.
Often described as a warmer, more approachable Greta Garbo, Britt came to fame when she starred as the scandalous cabaret entertainer Lola-Lola in Dmytryk’s The Blue Angel (1959).
The film was a remake of a 1930 drama that had ignited the career of the original Lola, Marlene Dietrich, and most everyone in Hollywood at the time thought Marilyn Monroe was getting the part.
She then played another singer-dancer, Eadie Collins, the ill-fated wife of a singer (Stuart Whitman) menaced by New York mobsters, in Murder, Inc. (1960).
Britt and Davis first met after he performed at the Mocambo nightclub on the Sunset Strip and invited her to a party, according to the 2014 book Sammy Davis: A Personal Journey With My Father, written by Tracey Davis, their daughter.
Soon after, Davis broke off his engagement to Canadian dancer Joan Stuart. Britt converted to Judaism (her fiance had converted in 1961), and he announced to the press in June 1960 while in England that they were engaged.
Britt and Davis were married by a rabbi on Nov. 13, 1960, at his home on Evanview Drive in Los Angeles, followed by a reception for about 200 guests at the Beverly Hilton. Frank Sinatra, Davis’ partner in the Rat Pack, served as the best man. She was 26, he was 34.
At the time, interracial marriages were illegal in 31 states, and coincidentally or not, Fox elected not to renew her contract shortly after their engagement was announced. They received death threats throughout their relationship and at times employed 24-hour armed guards to protect them.
Amid reports linking Davis to singer-dancer-actress Lola Falana, the couple divorced in December 1968, but their daughter told the Los Angeles Times in 2014 that her parents never fell out of love.
When she asked her dad why they broke up, Davis replied, “I
just couldn’t be what she wanted to me to be. A family man. My performance
schedule was rigorous.”
The older of two daughters, Majbritt Wilkens was born on March 22, 1934, in Lidingö, Sweden, on the outskirts of Stockholm. Her father, Hugo, was a postal clerk and her mother, Hillevi, a housewife.
Working as a photographer’s assistant when she was 18, she was spotted in Stockholm by Ponti, who signed her to a contract and cast her in leading roles in the 1953 films The Unfaithfuls (with Gina Lollobrigida), Jolanda la Figlia del Corsaro Nero and The Devil Is a Woman.
The 5-foot-8 Britt also starred with Anthony Quinn in Fatal Desire (1953) and in Modern Virgin (1954) with Vittorio De Sica before Fox chief Buddy Adler spotted her in King Vidor’s War and Peace (1956), starring Andrey Hepburn and Henry Fonda.
In America, Britt showed off her singing and dancing skills in both Blue Angel and Murder, Inc.
One month after she met him, Britt married Edwin Gregson, a Stanford student and son of a real estate mogul, in February 1958 in Tijuana. She appeared on the cover of Life magazine in August 1959 — the cover line was “May Britt: Star With a New Style” — with an article describing her as a Hollywood ingenue who enjoyed motorcycles and played tennis in the morning in a see-through nightdress.
A month after the story appeared, she and Gregson separated,
and they finalized their divorce in September 1960.
Davis, meanwhile, had hurriedly married Black dancer Loray White at the Sands in Las Vegas in January 1958 after gangsters, with instructions from Columbia Pictures chief Harry Cohn, had reportedly threatened his life because he was dating white actress and studio star Kim Novak. He paid White a lump sum (said to be between $10,000 and $25,000) to marry him and act as his wife.
“Sammy had already lost one eye in an accident and Harry
Cohn threatened to take out the other one,” Novak told The Guardian in a 2021
interview. “I’m sure he would have gotten his gangster friends to do it. Cohn
was definitely in with the mob.”
Davis and White lived together only briefly and divorced in April 1959.
At the insistence of Sinatra, who had campaigned to get John Kennedy elected president, Davis and Britt agreed to postpone their wedding for about a month until after the election, even though the invitations had been mailed, to avoid harming Kennedy’s chances. Davis had campaigned for JFK as well.
“It was disappointing, but I was prepared for anything, I knew what I was getting into,” Britt said in her daughter’s book.
After Kennedy won, Davis and Britt were disinvited to the inauguration gala three days before it was to be held, with JFK not wanting to alienate Southern congressmen by hosting the interracial couple. In 1963, they were asked to leave a White House reception for African-American leaders.
Their daughter, Tracey, was born in July 1961, and the couple went on to adopt sons Mark and Jeff, with the family living in a Beverly Hills mansion once owned by Gone With the Wind producer David O. Selznick.
Britt gave up her career while married to Davis and did very little acting after they divorced. She showed up on episodes of The Danny Thomas Hour, Mission: Impossible, The Most Deadly Game and The Partners and starred in the 1976 horror film Haunts.
She told Vanity Fair in 1999 that she had no regrets. “I loved Sammy, and I had the chance to marry the man I loved,” she said.
Davis wed dancer Altovise Gore in May 1970 in a Philadelphia courthouse ceremony that was officiated by the Rev. Jesse Jackson. They were together until his death on May 16, 1990, from throat cancer at age 64.
Britt didn’t get married again until May 1993, when she wed Lennart Ringquist, an entertainment executive and horse breeder (his former wife, Penny Chenery, bred and owned Triple Crown winner Secretariat). He died in January 2017.
In addition to her sons, survivors include her sister,
Margot, and her grandchildren, Andrew, Ryan, Sam, Montana, Greer and Chase.
Tracey Davis died in November 2020 after a short illness at age 59.
Actress
Probe (1988)
Probe
7.9
TV Series
Helga
1988
1 episode
May Britt in Haunts (1976)
Haunts
4.7
Ingrid
1976
Hans Conried in The Partners (1971)
The Partners
7.1
TV Series
Miss Winters
1971
1 episode
Ralph Bellamy, George Maharis, and Yvette Mimieux in The
Most Deadly Game (1970)
The Most Deadly Game
6.3
TV Series
Lili
1971
1 episode
Barbara Bain, Martin Landau, Peter Graves, Peter Lupus, and
Greg Morris in Mission: Impossible (1966)
Mission: Impossible
7.9
TV Series
Eva Gollan
1969
1 episode
Danny Thomas in The Danny Thomas Hour (1967)
The Danny Thomas Hour
7.2
TV Series
Anna
1968
1 episode
Murder, Inc. (1960)
Murder, Inc.
6.6
Eadie Collins
1960
The Blue Angel (1959)
The Blue Angel
6.1
Lola-Lola
1959
Robert Mitchum, Robert Wagner, May Britt, Richard Egan, and
Lee Philips in The Hunters (1958)
The Hunters
6.4
Kristina 'Kris' Abbott
1958
Marlon Brando, Montgomery Clift, and Dean Martin in The
Young Lions (1958)
The Young Lions
7.1
Gretchen Hardenberg
1958
War and Peace (1956)
War and Peace
6.7
Sonia Rostova
1956
Prigionieri del male (1955)
Prigionieri del male
5.3
Nadia Ulianova, giornalista Sovietica
1955
L'ultimo amante (1955)
L'ultimo amante
5.7
Maria Spanisch
1955
Ça va barder (1955)
Ça va barder
5.8
Gina
1955
Vergine moderna (1954)
Vergine moderna
5.2
Claudia Bardi
1954
Fatal Desire (1953)
Fatal Desire
7.0
Santuzza
1953
The Ship of Damned Women (1953)
The Ship of Damned Women
7.1
Consuelo Silveris
1953
Totò in Funniest Show on Earth (1953)
Funniest Show on Earth
6.3
Brigitte - la domatrice
1953
The Devil Is a Woman (1953)
The Devil Is a Woman
6.7
Maria Maricchia
1953
Jolanda la figlia del corsaro nero (1953)
Jolanda la figlia del corsaro nero
6.3
Jolanda
1953
May Britt, Pierre Cressoy, and Gina Lollobrigida in The
Unfaithfuls (1953)
The Unfaithfuls
6.8
Liliana Capacci Rodgers
1953
Soundtrack
Murder, Inc. (1960)
Murder, Inc.
6.6
performer: "Hey! Mister"
1960
The Blue Angel (1959)
The Blue Angel
6.1
performer: "Lola-Lola", "Falling in Love
Again"
1959
Thanks
Jonas Fjeld in Jonas Fjeld i 70-sonen (2023)
Jonas Fjeld i 70-sonen
TV Movie
thanks to
2023
Self
Unsung Hollywood (2014)
Unsung Hollywood
8.1
TV Series
Self (as May Britt Ringquest)
2015
1 episode
Brando (2007)
Brando
8.2
TV Movie
Self
2007
Kings of Black Comedy (2002)
Kings of Black Comedy
TV Series
Self
2002
1 episode
E! True Hollywood Story (1996)
E! True Hollywood Story
6.5
TV Series
Self
2001
1 episode
Hollywood Greats (1977)
Hollywood Greats
7.7
TV Series
Self
2001
1 episode
V.I.P.-Schaukel (1971)
V.I.P.-Schaukel
7.7
TV Series
Self
1976
1 episode
Alec Guinness, Sandy Dennis, Carol Channing, and Bert Lahr
in The 18th Annual Tony Awards (1964)
The 18th Annual Tony Awards
TV Special
Self - Audience Member
1964
Bob Hope in The Bob Hope Show (1950)
The Bob Hope Show
7.3
TV Series
Self - Guest
1959
1 episode
Archive Footage
Sammy by Sammy, mes années 60 (2022)
Sammy by Sammy, mes années 60
6.8
Self (archive footage)
2022
Sammy Davis, Jr.: I've Gotta Be Me (2017)
Sammy Davis, Jr.: I've Gotta Be Me
7.6
Self (archive footage)
2017
Deborah Norville in Inside Edition (1988)
Inside Edition
4.1
TV Series
Self (archive footage)
2015
1 episode
Sinatra: All or Nothing at All (2015)
Sinatra: All or Nothing at All
8.0
TV Mini Series
Self (archive footage)
2015
1 episode
Bruce Lee in Hollywood Screen Tests: Take 2 (1999)
Hollywood Screen Tests: Take 2
7.4
TV Special
Self (archive footage, uncredited)
1999

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