âI donât like fame. I donât like the sense of belonging to the public,â Elizabeth Taylor admits in Elizabeth Taylor: The Lost Tapes, a new documentary featuring unearthed recordings of the Hollywood legend by journalist Richard Meryman. âThe person my family know[s] is real. But the other Elizabeth Taylor, the famous one, really has no depth or meaning to me. Itâs a commodity and it makes money. One is flesh and blood, and one is cellophane.â Taylor, who skyrocketed to fame as a child actor and was among the first film stars to receive a $1 million payday for a role, spent much of her life in the spotlight. Itâs not surprising, then, that the late icon considered her public image to be completely divorced from her private persona.
The Lost Tapes, which premiered on HBO this month, grants viewers a glimpse into that life through Taylorâs candid reflections on it allâthe romances, the tragedies, the opulence, and the scandals. Though her superstar status meant that even her rare private moments sometimes got the on-camera treatment, the below selection reveals an intimate look at the ârealâ Elizabeth Taylorâs time at home, outside the limelight.