Daška McLean
Daška Marija Ivanović (1915–2004), better known as Daška McLean, was a Croatian British woman who made headlines in Europe and America when she made her 18-year-old daughter a ward of the court in the U.K. after she eloped with her fiancé in 1957.
Life and career
Ivanović (pronounced "Ivanovich") was born in Osijek, Austria-Hungary (present-day Croatia) on January 26, 1915, the daughter of Croatian Dr. Ivan Rikard Ivanović, one of the founders of the National Progressive Party (NNS) and a deputy in Croatia's Sabor (Assembly), who had helped to form the state in 1918. Her mother, Milica Popovic, was a sister of Dušan Popović, a leading Serb politician in the ruling Croato-Serb Coalition. When her mother re-married Serbian shipping tycoon Božidar "Božo" Banac (pronounced "Banats"), her children adopted the surname Ivanović-Banac. Her brother, Vane Ivanović, was the Consul General of Monaco. As a young woman she was considered to be one of the loveliest of Yugoslavia's society girls and was known locally as "The Pearl of Dubrovnik".
Her first husband was Geoffrey Alexander Farrer Kennedy (30 October 1908 - 21 September 1996) whom she married in 1938 and with whom she had three daughters (two twins) and one son. Geoffrey Kennedy came from a leading family of civil and electrical engineers and was the son of Sir John Macfarlane Kennedy and the grandson of Sir Alexander Kennedy. The marriage ended in divorce after a decade.
She married her second husband, Lt. Col. Neil McLean, DSO, on November 14, 1949 in Rome, Italy. Colonel 'Billy' McLean was a distinguished war-hero, perhaps most famous for having directed guerrilla-warfare behind enemy lines in Albania as one of several teams parachuted in by SOE. At the end of the war he served in the Consulate in Sinkiang in China for a while - as military adviser - before joining M.I.6 to work on operations against Enver Hoxha. In 1954 he became the MP for Inverness, which he represented for a decade. He died in 1986.
In 1957, one of her daughters from her first marriage, Tessa, became a cause célèbre when, against her parents wishes, she eloped with society portrait-painter Dominick Elwes, son of Simon Elwes, a favorite artist of Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother. McLean and her ex-husband immediately instituted proceedings to have Elwes arrested and their daughter made a ward of court.
McLean was widowed in 1986 and died in London, England in 2004 at age 89.