Gaby Deslys

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Gaby Deslys

Gaby Deslys, circa 1915
Born Hadiwga Nawrati
November 4, 1881(1881-11-04)
Flag of FranceMarseilles, France
Died February 11, 1920 (aged 38)
(throat infection; influenza)
Flag of FranceParis, France
Occupation actress, singer, dancer
Years active c. 1909 - 1919

Gaby Deslys (November 4, 1881February 11, 1920) was a famous dancer and actress of the early 20th century from Marseilles, France. She selected her name for her stage career. It is an abbreviation of Gabrielle of the Lillies. She was blonde, trim, and possessed a good figure.

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[edit] Uncertain ethnicity

Deslys heritage has been disputed. She had many admirers among royalty, most notably Manuel II of Portugal. A detective employed by an imperial personage discovered that her true name was Hadiwga Nawrati. Another spelling of the surname is Hedviga Navratil(ova). The investigator reportedly found that Deslys denied her elderly mother's claim to kinship when he brought her to see the dancer. Deslys paid her mother a large amount of money to leave. Deslys attempted to conceal her identity, but claimed to be of French ethnicity. The probe disclosed that she was in fact a Czech peasant girl, born in Horni Mostenice. At least twenty-four people with the surname Navratilova exerted claims to Deslys' fortune after her death.

In January 1930 the Minister of Foreign Affairs (France) said he had settled the disagreement about Deslys' birthplace. According to him Deslys was born at Marseilles on November 4, 1881. She was the daughter of Hippolyte Caire and his wife née Terras. The study alleged that the claim of the Navratil family was based on a statement that their daughter was the double of Gabrielle Caire, and adopted the stage name Gaby Deslys. Friends of the family asserted that the original Gabrielle Caire either died in obscurity or remained alive in England.

[edit] Royal admirer

Deslys became a celebrity following newspaper stories which gossiped about King Manuel's infatuation with her. Manuel is thought to have given Deslys a pearl necklace worth $70,000 after first meeting her in Paris in July 1909. More gifts soon followed. One was a diamond necklace with black and white pearl drops set in a platinum band. Deslys cultivated a pearl fetish. She became so absorbed in collecting them that before she died she asserted she owned her weight in them. It is conjectured that Manuel's recklessness in regard to royal finances hastened the revolution which erupted in Portugal in October 1910.

Deslys' other suitors included American dancer Harry Pilcer, who she was rumored to have been engaged to. She denied this and other reports that suggested she had married one of her many wealthy admirers.

[edit] Dancer

Before Manuel's extravagant actions Deslys was popular in the dance halls of Paris and London, England. Her appearance at the Liverpool Olympia was also well received. She had been to the United States where she had earned $4,000 per week. She was dedicated to the art of dancing. At least a part of her popularity was a result of her desire to please the audiences who came to watch her perform.

While she was dancing at the Hyperion Theater at Yale University, in November 1911, students rushed the stage. The Yale News had complained about ticket prices for the production being raised to $2. The performance followed the Yale - Princeton University football game played earlier the same day. The inflated price of admission is thought to have triggered the students to pull the seats to pieces and proceed with the outbreak. Deslys retreated to her room while stage hands used fire extinguishers to subdue the students.

The same month Deslys performed at the Winter Garden Theater in a production of Vera Violetta.

On a number of occasions she appeared at the Grand Casino in Marseilles. Her final performance there was in 1919. Her passion for Marseilles was matched by her animosity toward her critics among French editors. One of her most prominent detractors was Ernest Charles. She sued him for $50,000 francs in August 1912. She at first considered hiring a groom (horses) to horsewhip Charles before her lawyer advised against it.

[edit] Death from influenza

Deslys contracted a severe throat infection caused by influenza in December 1919. She was operated on multiple times in an effort to eradicate the infection, on two occasions without the use of an anaesthetic. Surgeons were inhibited by Deslys' demand that they not scar her neck. She died in Paris in February 1920.

In her will Gaby Deslys left her lovely villa on the Marseilles Corniche Road, and all of her property in Marseilles, to the poor of Marseilles. The property was valued at half a million dollars.

Her carved and gilded bed, in the form of an enormous swan, was bought at auction by the Universal Studios prop department, and was used in the 1925 film of "The Phantom of the Opera". In 1950 it was in "Sunset Boulevard" as the bed of Norma Desmond.

[edit] References

  • "Yale Students Refuse To Let Gaby Deslys Proceed", Los Angeles Times, November 19, 1911, p. IV12. 
  • "Gaby Deslys Brings Suit", Los Angeles Times, August 4, 1912, p. II9. 
  • "Acting Of The Irish Players", New York Times, November 26, 1911, p. X2. 
  • "Gaby Deslys Dies After Operation", New York Times, February 12, 1920, p. 11. 
  • "Gaby Deslys Kin Appear", New York Times, April 25, 1925, p. 2. 
  • "Seeks Gaby Deslys Estate", New York Times, January 3, 1927, p. 9. 
  • "France Solves Mystery Of Glamorous Gaby Deslys", Olean Evening Times, January 31, 1930, p. 10. 
  • "Europe's $50,000,000 Playboy Finally Learned Gaby Deslys' Lesson About Women, Difficult As It Was", Syracuse Herald, July 31, 1932, p. 35. 

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