Raquel Welch, 'One Million Years BC' and 'Fantastic Voyage' star, dead at 82

Raquel Welch died Wednesday at the age of 82 following a brief illness. The Golden Globe award winner became a sex symbol after finding fame in the '60s.

Actress Raquel Welch died Wednesday, her representative confirmed to Fox News Digital. She was 82.

The superstar catapulted to fame in the 1960s with "Fantastic Voyage" and "One Million Years B.C."

"Raquel Welch, the legendary bombshell actress of film, television and stage, passed away peacefully early this morning after a brief illness," her rep, Steve Sauer, said. "The 82-year-old actress burst into Hollywood in her initial roles in ‘One Million [Years] B.C.’ and ‘Fantastic Voyage.’"

"Her career spanned over 50 years starring in over 30 films and 50 television series and appearances. The Golden Globe winner, in more recent years, was involved in a very successful line of wigs. Raquel leaves behind her two children, son Damon Welch and her daughter, Tahnee Welch."

Welch starred alongside some of Hollywood's leading men through the years, including Frank Sinatra, Robert Wagner, James Stewart, Dean Martin and Burt Reynolds.

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Her role as "Loana the Fair One" in "One Million Years B.C.," in which she rocked a "prehistoric" bikini, almost didn't happen as Welch had zero interest in making a "dinosaur movie."

"I told [Fox’s studio head] Dick Zanuck I didn’t think I was going to do it because it was a dinosaur movie and I didn’t want to be caught dead in a dinosaur movie," Welch told Fox News Digital. "And he was not sympathetic to that.

"He said, ‘No, you’re going to do it, Raquel. And listen, Raqui, you’re going to become a huge star.’ I said, ‘What? What am I even going to wear? What happened in dinosaur time?' ... He said, ‘Don’t worry, they’ll figure something out.' And they sure did."

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Reluctantly, the then-26-year-old, who had already worked alongside her teen idol, Elvis Presley, in 1964’s "Roustabout," agreed to take on the role. Welch was sent far away from Hollywood, specifically the volcanic Canary Islands.

"We were so far from civilization," she recalled. "I mean, there was a hotel at the bottom of the volcano near the sea. And I was at the top. And it was snowing."

Welch, who was filmed wearing the skimpy costume during severe weather conditions, developed tonsillitis that she insisted became worse with time.

"I had already so much penicillin when I was wearing the fur bikini that I almost died," she claimed. "… I had to rush, turn my car around and head right back to the doctor’s office, just run upstairs, jump in the elevator and all that.

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"And I barely got there. They had to shoot me with an antidote. Otherwise, I would have died. It was a really rough shoot, man. Really rough. And then I came to London and everybody knew who I was."

Welch earned a Golden Globe for best actress in a comedy after starring in 1973’s "The Three Musketeers." She revealed that winning the award was one of her proudest career achievements.

"Every single [film] contributed to my [transition]," she told Fox News Digital.

"I played a lot of action figures, like in Westerns … I carried a gun; I was a very formidable woman who could handle herself, who could ride and shoot. … I also showed myself in a lot of different periods of time. … I worked in Spain for a lot of the Westerns, which is where most American Westerns were filmed."

Welch is survived by her two children, Damon and Tahnee.

Fox News Digital's Stephanie Nolasco contributed to this report.

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