Patricia Bosworth, an actress who once starred alongside Audrey Hepburn and later wrote biographies on several stars including Marlon Brando and Montgomery Clift, has died due to the coronavirus, She was 86.
Her death was announced in an appreciation on the website of Vanity Fair, the magazine to which she was a longtime contributor. She died of complications of Coronavirus disease.
Ms. Patricia Bosworth has a gilded childhood in San Francisco, where her glamorous parents gave parties that included writers and celebrities. Her mother was a novelist, and her father was a well-connected lawyer and White House adviser whose clients included Hollywood stars.
Bosworth’s stepdaughter, Fia Hatsav, told The New York Times that pneumonia brought on by the virus was the cause of death. Bosworth died on Thursday in New York.
Patricia Bosworth played a nun opposite of Hepburn in the 1959 classic The Nun’s Story. Along with penning bios for Brando and Clift, she also wrote biographies on actress Jane Fonda and famed photographer Diane Arbus, who photographed Bosworth in a Greyhound bus advertisement.
Her biography on Arbus served as the base for the 2006 film Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus, which starred Nicole Kidman.
Under the tutelage of Lee Strasberg, Patricia Bosworth studied acting at the Actors studio alongside Marilyn Monroe, Paul Newman, Steve McQueen, and Fonda. Bosworth worked on Broadway and starred in television shows including Naked City and The Patty Duke. Bosworth turned her attention from acting to focus on a career in journalism as a successful editor and writer.
She wrote for The New York Times and New York magazine, and was an editor for several stars, McCall’s and contributed to Vanity Fair.
She wrote memoirs about her own life in 1998’s Anything Your Little Heart Desires: An American Family Story and 2017’s The Men in my Life: A Memoir of Love and Art in 1950s Manhattan.