Grace Kelly
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Grace Patricia Kelly | ||
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Her Serene Highness The Princess of Monaco | ||
Born | November 12, 1929 | |
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.A. | ||
Died | September 14, 1982, age 52 | |
Monte Carlo, Monaco | ||
Consort | April 19, 1956 - September 14, 1982 | |
Consort to | Rainier III | |
Issue | Princess Caroline, Prince Albert, Princess Stéphanie | |
Royal House | Grimaldi | |
Father | John B. Kelly, Sr. | |
Mother | Margaret Katherine Majer |
Grace, Princess of Monaco, born Grace Patricia Kelly (November 12, 1929 – September 14, 1982) was an Academy Award-winning American film actress who, upon marriage to Rainier III, Prince of Monaco on April 19, 1956, became Her Serene Highness The Princess of Monaco. She is the mother of the principality's current Sovereign Prince, Albert II. Princess Grace maintained dual American and Monegasque citizenship after her marriage. Her ‘fairy tale’ life made Kelly one of the most popular and beloved Americans of the 20th century.
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[edit] Family
Grace Kelly was born in the East Falls section of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the third of four children to John Brendan Kelly, Sr., also known as Jack Kelly, and Margaret Katherine Majer Kelly, a German American Catholic convert from Lutheranism.
Kelly's father's was one of ten children in an Irish American Catholic family (originally from Kidney Lake, Newport, County Mayo, Ireland). Already a local hero as a triple gold-medal-winning Olympic sculler at a time that the sport of rowing was at its zenith, John Kelly’s brick business grew to become the largest on the East Coast. The self-made millionaire and his family were introduced to Philadelphia society. Her father's large family included two uncles prominent in the arts: Walter Kelly, a vaudevillian, and the Pulitzer Prize–winning playwright, George Kelly.
In 1935, John Kelly ran for mayor in Philadelphia as a Democrat, losing by the closest margin for any Democrat in Philadelphia. He later served on the Fairmount Park commission. During World War II, President Franklin Roosevelt appointed the senior Kelly as his National Director of Physical Fitness, a public relations post which allowed Kelly to use his fame to extol the virtues of physical fitness.
Kelly's maternal grandparents, Carl Majer and Margaretha Berg, were of German descent. Like her father, Grace’s mother was also a proponent of health and fitness, studying Physical Education at Temple and later becoming the first female to head the Physical Education Department at the University of Pennsylvania.
John B. Kelly, Jr., Grace’s brother, followed in the tradition. He won the James E. Sullivan Award in 1947 as the top amateur athlete in the country. His rowing exploits were well-chronicled. John, Jr., gave his sister the bronze medal he won at the 1956 Summer Olympics as a wedding present. Kelly Drive in Philadelphia is named for John, Jr., who was a city councilman there.
[edit] Acting career
Grace Kelly | |
Born | November 12, 1929 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.A. |
Died | September 14, 1982 Monte Carlo, Monaco |
Spouse(s) | Rainier III of Monaco |
Academy Awards | |
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Best Actress 1954 The Country Girl Nominated: Best Supporting Actress 1953 Mogambo |
Grace Kelly’s future career could be forecast from as early as childhood. Her first acting experience occurred at the age of 12, when she played a lead role in Don't Feed the Animals, a play produced by the Old Academy Players in East Falls.[citation needed] While attending the prestigious Ravenhill Academy as a youth, Grace modeled fashions at local social events with her mother and sisters. During high school, she acted and danced, and her yearbook predicted that she would be a “famous star of screen and radio.”
Upon graduation in June 1947, Grace decided to pursue acting. Using a scene from her uncle's play, Torchbearers, for an audition, she was admitted into the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York (which had trained notable talents Katharine Hepburn, Lauren Bacall, and Spencer Tracy), working as a model to support her studies. A diligent student, she would use a recorder to practice and perfect her speech. Her early acting pursuits led her to the stage, most notably a Broadway debut in Strindberg’s The Father. At 19, her graduation performance was in The Philadelphia Story, a role with which she would also end her film career.
She soon caught the eye of television producer Dilbert Mann, who cast her for Bethel Maraday in her first of nearly 60 live television programs. Success on television eventually led her to her first role in a major motion picture. Kelly appeared in a small role in Fourteen Hours (1951) when she was 22, which led to many offers, all of which she turned down for independence and another chance at the theater. She was performing in Colorado’s notable Elitch Gardens when she received a telegram from Hollywood producer Stanley Kramer, offering her the starring role opposite Gary Cooper in High Noon (1952).
The film won two Academy Awards, but Grace was dissatisfied with her own performance. She enrolled with acting coach Sanford Meisner and was soon tapped for a supporting role in the Clark Gable/Ava Gardner adventure romance, Mogambo (1953), set in the Kenyan jungle. The additional training paid off, as Kelly earned an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actress and catapulted herself into stardom.
Legendary filmmaker, Alfred Hitchcock, cast her in his 1954 Dial M for Murder and again in Rear Window (also 1954) opposite Jimmy Stewart, thus defining the young actress as the elegant, blonde ideal and making Kelly a sensation across the country. She also starred in Hitchcock’s To Catch a Thief (1955) which brought Cary Grant out of retirement and was set in Kelly’s eventual home of the European Riviera.
In 1955, Kelly won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her role in The Country Girl. Her character’s modest appearance and demanding scenarios were seen as a departure from the actress’s already famed persona of the graceful heiress, which she perfected and embodied through her last role in High Society (1956), the musical remake of The Philadelphia Story (1940).
Though her film career spanned just five years and produced only eleven films, Grace Kelly’s beauty and charm left an impression on the hearts of Americans and all moviegoers that persists to this day.
[edit] Marriage and princess life
In April 1955, Grace Kelly was asked to head the U.S. delegation at the Cannes Film Festival. While there, she was invited to participate in a photo session at the Palace of Monaco with Prince Rainier III, the ruling sovereign of the principality. After a series of delays and complications, Kelly was finally able to make it to Monaco, where she met the prince.
Upon returning to America, Grace began work on her next feature film, The Swan (1956), in which she portrays a princess, privately beginning a correspondence with Rainier. In December, Rainier came to America on a trip officially designated as a tour though it was speculated that Rainier was actively seeking a wife. A 1918 treaty with France had stated that if Rainier did not produce an heir, Monaco would revert to France.
At a press conference in the United States, Rainier was asked if he was pursuing a wife, to which he answered "no." A second question was asked: "if you were pursuing a wife, what kind would you like?" Rainier smiled and answered, "I don’t know—the best." Rainier met with Grace and her family, and after three days, the prince proposed. Grace accepted and the families began preparing for what would be ‘the Wedding of the Century’.
News of the engagement was a sensation even though it meant the possible end to Grace’s film career. Industry professionals realized that it would have been an impracticality to continue acting and wished her well. Alfred Hitchcock quipped that he was “very happy that Grace has found herself such a good part.”
Preparation for the wedding was elaborate. The Palace of Monaco was painted and redecorated throughout and the transatlantic voyage that brought the American contingent to Monaco was an ordeal. On April 4, 1956, leaving from Pier 84 in New York Harbor, Grace, with her family, bridesmaids, poodle, and over 80 pieces of luggage boarded the ocean liner for the Riviera. Some 400 reporters applied to sail though most were turned away. Thousands of fans were there to send the party off for the eight-day voyage. In Monaco, more than twenty thousand people lined the streets to greet the future princess.
The wedding consisted in two ceremonies. On April 18, in the Palace’s Throne Room, the bride and groom underwent the 40-minute civil ceremony, which was broadcast across Europe. To cap the ceremony, Grace was recited the 142 official titles (counterparts of Rainier’s) that she acquired in the union.
The following day, the grand event proceeded with the church ceremony at Monaco’s Saint Nicholas Cathedral. Grace’s wedding dress was designed by MGM’s Academy Award-winning Helen Rose, and was worked on by three dozen seamstresses for six weeks. The 600 guests at the wedding included dignitaries from around the world and it was estimated that 30 million people watched the wedding on television. The prince and princess left that night for their 7-week Mediterranean cruise honeymoon on Rainier’s yacht, Deo Juvante II.
Nine months, four days after their wedding, the royal family introduced their first child, Princess Caroline. 21 cannon blasts announced the event, a national holiday was offered, gambling ceased, and free champagne flowed throughout the principality. A little over a year later, 101 cannon blasts announced the birth of their second child, a boy.
Prince Rainier and Princess Grace had three children:
- Hereditary Princess Caroline Louise Marguerite, born January 23, 1957, and now heiress presumptive to the throne of Monaco
- Albert II, Prince of Monaco, born March 14, 1958
- Princess Stéphanie Marie Elisabeth, born February 1, 1965
Princess Grace never returned to act in motion pictures, choosing rather to fulfill her responsibilities as Monaco’s royal leader. In 1962, when Hitchcock offered Grace the lead in his film, Marnie, she was eager to take the opportunity to return to the screen. Rainier consented, but public outcry against her involvement made her reconsider and ultimately reject the project.
Grace was able to return to the arts in a unique way as she began a series of poetry readings on stage and narrated the 1977 feature film documentary The Children of Theater Street. As princess, she was active in improving the arts institutions of Monaco and eventually the Princess Grace Foundation was formed to support local artisans.
She was one of the first celebrities to support and speak on behalf of La Leche League, an organization that promotes breastfeeding; she planned a yearly Christmas party for local orphans; and dedicated a Garden Club that reflected her love of flowers.
In 1981, the prince and princess celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary.
[edit] Death
In September 1982, the 53-year-old Princess Grace suffered a stroke while driving her Rover P6.[1] It had been rumored that she was driving on the same stretch of highway in Monaco that had been featured in To Catch a Thief, although her son claims that it was not. It resulted in an accident, and she died the next day without regaining consciousness. Princess Stéphanie, who was alleged by some sources to have been the actual driver of the car, suffered only minor injuries.
Princess Grace is interred in Saint Nicholas Cathedral, Monaco; Prince Rainier was buried alongside her following his death in 2005. Nearly 100 million people watched the funeral worldwide.
Jimmy Stewart delivered the eulogy, summing up well what all fans felt about her: “You know, I just love Grace Kelly. Not because she was a princess, not because she was an actress, not because she was my friend, but because she was just about the nicest lady I ever met. Grace brought into my life as she brought into yours, a soft, warm light every time I saw her, and every time I saw her was a holiday of its own. No question, I’ll miss her, we’ll all miss her, God bless you Princess Grace.”
[edit] Filmography
- Fourteen Hours (1951)
- High Noon (1952)
- Mogambo (1953)
- Dial M for Murder (1954)
- Green Fire (1954)
- Rear Window (1954)
- The Country Girl (1954)
- The Bridges at Toko-Ri (1954)
- To Catch a Thief (1955)
- The Swan (1956)
- High Society (1956)
- The Children of Theater Street (1977) [documentary, hosted and narrated]
- The Nativity (1982) [short, voice only]
[edit] Trivia
- Kelly replaced Gene Tierney in Mogambo (1953) due to Tierney's mental health problems.[citation needed]
- Kelly was briefly engaged to Tierney's ex-husband Oleg Cassini.
- When dancer Josephine Baker was near bankruptcy, Princess Grace of Monaco helped her make a comeback.
- Director Herbert Ross attempted to lure the 47-year old former actress out of retirement for his upcoming film The Turning Point (1977) until (true to past form) Prince Rainier III nixed the idea.
[edit] Cultural references
Grace Kelly's lasting impact on popular culture and fashion has been widely noted.
- She was the first actress to appear on a postage stamp. (Source: The Book of Useless Information, 2002)
- Grace Kelly is mentioned in Billy Joel's history-themed song "We Didn't Start the Fire" ("Princess Grace").
- American alternative rock band Eels have a song named "Grace Kelly Blues" on their 2000 album Daisies of the Galaxy.
- American indie rock band The Motion Sick have a song titled "Grace Kelly" on their album Her Brilliant Fifteen. The song is about an acrobat obsessed with being like Grace Kelly.
- American alternative rock band Piebald have a song named "Grace Kelly with Wings" on their 1999 album If It Weren't For Venetian Blinds It Would Be Curtains For Us All.
- The French haute couture fashion house Hermès named one of its most famous, and now most sought-after, products for Grace Kelly—the "Kelly Bag." Waiting lists of up to two years are not unusual for this handbag, and prices start at $5000 for the small version in plain leather and soar over $50,000 for crocodile skin or other unusual materials. The late Diana, Princess of Wales had to wait for almost a year to get an ostrich skin version of one.
- The classic head-cover of a silk scarf crossed under the chin and knotted at the side or nape of the neck is known as the "Grace Kelly". This chic look is still copied by many female Hollywood stars when they wish to retain a degree of anonymity in the public eye. Famous users include: Sharon Stone, Madonna, and Annette Bening.
- The gown Princess Grace wore on her wedding day was donated to the Philadelphia Museum of Art shortly thereafter. It is currently on display in honor of her fiftieth wedding anniversary.
- She is mentioned in the Elton John song "Wrap Her Up".
- Mika, a Beirut-born singer, scored a UK Number 1 single in 2007 with the song "Grace Kelly" in which he sings "I tried to be like Grace Kelly. But all her looks were too sad."
- Kelly is mentioned in Madonna's 1990 single "Vogue".
- She is mentioned in the Rufus Wainwright song "That Night" (as "Princess Grace, the American Monarch").
- Grace Kelly is mentioned throughout The Princess Diaries books by Mia's grandmother. Apparently, Grandmere went through what is described as "a brief manic phase" in the 1980s when Princess Grace died, and had eyeliner tattooed all the way around her eyes in this period.
- Brian Setzer mentions Grace Kelly marrying Prince Rainier III in his song "'59" off the album Ignition.
- Grace Kelly is mentioned often as a guest to Studio 54 in the movie 54
- The song "Six Billion People" by Paul Gilbert mentions the one of the things he's fallen in love with "is a black-and-white picture of Grace Kelly"
There also was a sitcom in the US aired from 1993-1998 (Grace Under Fire) whose title character is named Grace Kelly.
[edit] External links
- Grace Kelly at the Internet Movie Database
- Grace Kelly at the TCM Movie Database
- Grace Kelly at the Internet Broadway Database
- Ancestry Chart of Prince Albert
- A list of ancestors of Grace Kelly
- Grace Kelly at Findagrave.com
- Grace Kelly US fansite
Awards | ||
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Preceded by Audrey Hepburn for Roman Holiday |
Academy Award for Best Actress 1954 for The Country Girl |
Succeeded by Anna Magnani for The Rose Tattoo |
Preceded by Audrey Hepburn for Roman Holiday |
Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Drama 1955 for The Country Girl |
Succeeded by Anna Magnani for The Rose Tattoo |
Preceded by Katy Jurado for High Noon |
Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress - Motion Picture 1954 for Mogambo |
Succeeded by Jan Sterling for The High and The Mighty |
Princess Consort to the Reigning Monarch of Monaco | ||
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Preceded by Princess Charlotte, Duchess of Valentinois, Comtesse de Polignac (Charlotte Louise Juliette Grimaldi, née Louvet) |
Princess of Monaco 1956 - 1982 |
Succeeded by None (will be the bride of Prince Albert II upon marriage) |
Persondata | |
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NAME | Kelly, Grace |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Grace, Princess of Monaco |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | American actor, Monegasque princess |
DATE OF BIRTH | November 12, 1929 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.A. |
DATE OF DEATH | September 14, 1982 |
PLACE OF DEATH | Monte Carlo, Monaco |
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