A Look Into Raquel Welch’s Life Through Rare Vintage Photos

Jo Raquel Tejada

Born Jo Raquel Tejada, Raquel Welch was welcomed to the world on September 5th, 1940. Welch's father was a Bolivian engineer, and her mother's parents had English ancestry. The family moved from Illinois to San Diego when Welch was just two years old. Interestingly enough, Welch's cousin - Lidia Gueiler Tejada - became the first female president of Bolivia. It's clear that talent runs in the Tejada family! Welch attended church with her mother as a child and took an interest in performing from an early age.

Miss Photogenic

Welch studied ballet for ten years until she gave it up when she turned 17. Sadly, her dance teacher told her she didn't have the correct body shape for ballet. Regardless, Welch was a beautiful child and had already scooped up a handful of beauty titles. When she was just 14, Welch won Miss Photogenic, and Miss Contour. While attending high school she won both Miss La Jolla and Miss San Diego. After winning multiple titles, Welch went on to become Maid of California.

Miss Photogenic

Moving to San Diego

Welch went on to graduate high-school in 1958, during which time her parents separated. However, Welch went looking for an acting career and enrolled in San Diego State College to study theater arts. Just one year later, in 1959, she married her high school sweetheart, James Welch. Welch acted in several local theater productions but eventually gave up her drama classes. She got a job as a weather forecaster on a local San Diego TV station and separated from her husband.

Moving to San Diego

Waitressing in Dallas

At this point - with two children - Raquel Welch moved to Dallas, where she worked as a cocktail waitress and a model. She then picked herself up again and moved back to Los Angeles in 1963. Welch started auditioning for film roles when she met Hollywood agent Patrick Curtis. Curtis became Welch's manager, and the pair planned to turn her into a Hollywood symbol. They decided to keep Welch's married name in order to avoid her getting cast solely in Latina roles.

Waitressing in Dallas

A Swingin' Summer

Welch started picking up work, with small roles in films including A House Is Not a Home and Roustabout, both in 1964. Welch also featured on a variety of television shows including The Virginian, Bewitched, and McHale's Navy. Her first featured role came around in 1965 in the beach film A Swingin' Summer. People in Hollywood were starting to notice Welch, including the wife of a producer who recommended her to 20th Century Fox. With the help of her manager, she landed a contract.

A Swingin' Summer