ATHENS — Greek actress and singer Irene Papas, who gained international recognition starring in classic 1960s films such as Zorba the Greek and The Guns of Navarone, has died at the age of 96, Greece’s culture ministry said on Wednesday.
Ms. Papas enjoyed a 50-year film career capped by John Madden’s Captain Corelli’s Mandolin in 2001 alongside Hollywood stars Nicolas Cage and Penelope Cruz, and Manoel de Oliveira’s A Talking Picture in 2003, her final performance alongside Catherine Deneuve and John Malkovich.
Zorba the Greek, a smash hit in 1964, in which she starred alongside Anthony Quinn and Alan Bates, captivated international audiences with its soundtrack — especially “Zorba’s Dance” — composed by Mikis Theodorakis.
Ms. Papas also collaborated with late composer Vangelis on folk song album Odes and on 666, the final studio album of Greek progressive rock band Aphrodite’s Child.
“Majestic, stately, dynamic, Irene Papas was the personification of Greek beauty on cinema screens and on the stage, an international star who radiated Greekness,” Culture Minister Lina Mendoni said in a statement. “With the power of her talent and the charm of her personality, she conquered the world of cinema and theater.”
Ms. Papas suffered from Alzheimer’s disease in recent years according to Greek media. The culture ministry did not say when she died.
She was born in a village outside Corinth on the Peloponnese peninsula to a family of teachers; her father taught classical drama.
Among her biggest early successes was the title role in 1962’s Electra, a cinematic transcription of Euripides’ ancient Greek tragedy directed by Michalis Cacoyannis.
She played a Greek island resistance fighter against Nazi occupation in The Guns of Navarone and a young widowed woman on the island of Crete in Zorba the Greek.
Her liberal political views forced her into exile in Italy and the United States in 1967-1974, when a far-right military junta ruled Greece.
With her long dark hair, pale skin and thick arched eyebrows, Ms. Papas became a symbol of Mediterranean beauty.
Married twice, Ms. Papas told Italy’s Corriere della Sera daily in 2004 that “the passion of her life” was the Oscar-winning screen star Marlon Brando, whom she met for the first time in 1954 in Rome and for the last time in 1999 in Athens. — Reuters