Who were the “Prehistoric Women” who made cinematic history with just 17 days of footage shot mainly on a studio sound stage?
Laurette Luez - Tigri
By January of 1949, she made the Los Angeles papers with news of her divorce from Sudano. She testified during the divorce hearing that he would beat her. She also testified that when she gave birth to her son, Alexander, she thought that things would change, but they didn’t, they got worse. She waived alimony, but was awarded $50 a month in child support.
With a three-month-old child to take care of, Luez turned to modeling to pay the rent as that fifty bucks a month in child support wasn’t going to be quite enough to get by on. By November, the American Fashion Stylists were calling her “the perfect model.”
She got a break in August of 1949 when she was cast as Maria Rakubian in the Edmond O’Brien film noir thriller, D.O.A., which had a one-week “preview” showing at the Music Hall in Los Angeles during the last of December and then rolled out nationwide in 1950.
Note, Killer Shark was not a precursor to Jaws, it’s actually a coming-of-age fishing story.
By early March Killer Shark is in theatres nationwide. And later the same month her studio work for Kim had been completed and she was looking for something else, which just happened to be Prehistoric Women — as mentioned Cohen went into production on April 27 and wrapped May 13.
On the rebound from her breakup with Goldwyn, she impulsively marries the director of Prehistoric Women, Gregg G. Tallas in June … and divorces him in September!
Married to Robert Creel, she exits show business and moves to Florida. That would normally be the end of it, but Burl Burlingame, writing in the Honolulu Star Bulletin in October of 1999 had a very sweet feature column about Luez and one of her fans, Richard Blackburn. It seems that he had a coveted VHS copy of Prehistoric Women and had been a fan of Luez since he was eight and in the late ‘90s reached out to her … nothing ventured, nothing gained sort of thing.
As Burlingame relates it, “They became telephone friends and confessors,” and then in September of 1999 Blackburn received an email from Luez’s daughter, Claudia, that her mother had died at age 71 from lingering health issues. Tigri was gone.




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