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Grace Kelly Biography
- Born: 12 November 1929
- Birthplace: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
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Died: 14 September 1982
(automobile crash)
- Best Known As: The actress who became Princess of Monaco
An icon of Hollywood elegance and beauty, Grace Kelly won a best actress Oscar in 1954 for The Country Girl (in which she was the long-suffering wife of an alcoholic actor played by Bing Crosby). She is still better known for playing the gorgeous, reserved blonde in three Alfred Hitchcock films: Dial M for Murder (1954), Rear Window (1954, with Jimmy Stewart) and To Catch a Thief (1955, with Cary Grant). She also played Gary Cooper's wife in the iconic western High Noon (1952) and starred with Crosby and Frank Sinatra in the musical romp High Society (1956). While attending the Cannes film festival she met Prince Rainier III
of Monaco. The two were married on 18 April 1956 and Kelly abandoned
her acting career to become Princess Grace. She was killed in a 1982
auto accident in Monaco, in which she apparently suffered a stroke and
then crashed while driving with her daughter Stephanie.
Grace and Rainier had three children: Caroline (b. 1957), Albert (b. 1958) and Stephanie (b. 1965)... Among her grandchildren are Caroline's popular daughter Charlotte and son Andrea... Rainier was deeply affected by the death of Princess Grace, and remained unmarried until his death in 2005.
As a talented young film star, Grace Kelly (1929-1982)
captured the imagination of the American public when she married Prince
Ranier III of Monaco, to become Grace, Princess of Monaco. Her tragic
and untimely death in 1982 touched the entire world. Grace,
Princess of Monaco was born Grace Patricia Kelly on November 12, 1929
in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She aspired to an acting career in her
teens, and was a major motion picture star by the age of 25. Kelly
became acquainted with Prince Ranier Grimaldi III of the principality of Monaco during a photo session arranged by Paris Match in 1955. The couple was married in the spring of 1956, and they raised three children. Princess Grace brought a special aura of excitement and sophistication to Monaco that contributed to the growth of the principality into a major tourist haven and a playground
for the rich and famous. She was noted for the manner in which she
adapted her American ways to her lifestyle as a royal mother. It wasn't
long before she won the love and respect of the entire world. The
fairy tale romance came to a tragic conclusion in 1982 when the princess
suffered a debilitating stroke while driving her car on a twisting
mountain road. The car, along with Princess Grace and her daughter,
Stephanie, plunged 150 feet, causing fatal injuries to Princess Grace.
Her daughter survived the ordeal,
but the Grimaldi family, along with Monaco and the entire world, were
left with only memories of the beloved Grace, Princess of Monaco. The woman who would become the princess of Monaco was the granddaughter
of the Kelly family patriarch, John Henry Kelly, who immigrated to
America from Ireland in 1867. He fathered six sons, including George
Kelly, a Pulitzer Prize winner; Walter C. Kelly, a vaudevillian
personality; and John B. "Jack" Kelly, Sr., father of Grace Patricia
Kelly. Jack Kelly was an Olympic sculler and a self-made millionaire.
Her mother was Margaret Majer Kelly, a former model. Jack and Margaret
Kelly had four children: Margaret "Peggy" (Baba) Kelly Conlan, born in
1925; John B. (Kell) Kelly, Jr., born in 1927; Grace Kelly, born in
1929; and Lizanne LeVine, born in 1933. All of the Kelly children were
born and raised in Philadelphia. The issue of religion was
critical to the Irish-Catholic Kelly clan. Margaret Kelly converted from
her Lutheran faith after her marriage, and the Kellys maintained a
strict Catholic household. Jack Kelly held a reputation as an uncultured man who placed great emphasis on athletic prowess. Grace Kelly's brother took after his father and was an accomplished world class oarsman.
Grace Kelly enjoyed playing hockey and swimming, but was not a
passionate athlete. She preferred instead to practice ballet, to read,
and to study theatrical arts. Kelly attended the Catholic
Ravenhill Academy in East Falls, Pennsylvania and eventually transferred
to Stevens School, a secular academy. She was extremely reserved and
quiet as a youngster, but was popular among her high school friends. Kelly was always a stunning
beauty, even as an infant. After graduating from high school in 1947,
she attended the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York City.
During her years at the Academy she lived at a hotel for women called
the Barbizon. She supported herself through modeling and was in great
demand as a cover girl. After graduating in 1949, it was Kelly's
desire to act on the live stage-not to make movies and television
appearances. She worked in theaters in New York and Colorado, and, most
notably, she performed with Raymond Massey in The Father before signing with agent Edith Van Cleve. To experts, including the great actress Helen Hayes, Kelly was unsuited to live stage acting because of her shallow voice. At Van Cleve's urging, Kelly studied privately under Sanford Meisner at the Neighborhood Playhouse
in New York, and worked summer stock until Van Cleve-fully aware of
Kelly's film potential-moved the young actress into television work.
Kelly acted in 60 teleplays in New York, mostly between 1950 and 1951.
Over the course of the next five years she made 11 movies. Some critics,
including gossip columnist Hedda Hopper, accused Kelly of employing adulterous
liaisons to further her film career. Others presumed that Jack Kelly's
prominent position and political connections were in part responsible
for his daughter's show business success. Jack Kelly, a Democratic Party
boss in his native Philadelphia, was well acquainted with some of the
most prominent figures of the times, including President Franklin
Roosevelt. Powerful personalities such as Isaac Levy, founder of the
Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS), were also counted among the Kelly
associates. Regardless, Grace Kelly was determined to succeed without
special considerations and did little if anything to "pull strings" of
any nature in order to further her career. Film Career In 1950, Grace Kelly made her feature film debut in a movie called Fourteen Hours. Her next film, High Noon,
with Gary Cooper in 1952, marked the beginning of a string of motion
pictures over the course of the next four years. To Kelly's displeasure,
each of her films generated rumors of a love affair between Kelly and
her co-star. Friends of the actress maintain that, in actuality, it was
an actor named Gene Lyons who attracted Kelly's attention during those
years. The two enjoyed a romance that matured during the filming of High Noon and later disintegrated while Kelly was on location in Africa for the filming of Mogambo, a 1953 release with Clark Gable. In 1954, Kelly starred in Alfred Hitchcock's Dial M for Murder, with Ray Milland. This was followed by a second Hitchcock thriller, Rear Window with Jimmy Stewart. The Bridges at Toko-Ri, with William Holden was completed in 1954. That same year, Kelly appeared with Bing Crosby in Country Girl, the film that earned her an Academy Award for Best Actress. In 1955, Kelly starred in Green Fire with Stewart Granger, followed by To Catch a Thief with Cary Grant. In 1956, she starred in a musical adaptation of Philadelphia Story called High Society, with Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra. The final film of her brief but intense career, The Swan,
was released in 1956. She co-starred with Alec Guinness and received
top billing for the first and only time in her career. During the years
when Kelly was under contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, she shared her
time between the incessant demands of Hollywood and her chosen home in New York City, where she aspired to find work on the Broadway stage. A Meeting in Monaco In 1955, Kelly was in Monaco for the filming of Hitchcock's To Catch a Thief
with Cary Grant. An introduction was arranged between the young
American actress and the bachelor prince of Monaco as part of a
publicity stunt by Paris Match. The pair met initially at the
Cannes Film Festival in order to be photographed together for the
magazine. The event was well publicized, down to the shimmering black
cotton dress worn by Kelly. Later in 1955, the prince and the movie star
spent Christmas together in Philadelphia with Kelly's family. Less than
one week after the holidays, on January 5, 1956, Kelly and the prince
announced their engagement from her parent's home. Kelly and the prince
were wed in Monaco, where the ceremonies and festivities lasted for two
days-April 18 and 19, 1956. A Catholic nuptial ceremony was celebrated
at the Cathedral of St. Nicholas in Monaco. The prince and princess
honeymooned aboard a royal yacht. The royal couple's eldest child,
Princess Caroline Louise Marguerite, was born in January of 1957. Their
next child, Crown Prince Albert Alexandre Louis Pierre, was born in
March of the following year. Their youngest child, Princess Stephanie
Marie Elisabeth, was born in February of 1965. Princess Grace lived with
her husband and children in a 200-room palace and maintained a private
retreat in France at Roc Agel. Even as princess of Monaco, Kelly never
shunned her American roots. She commuted regularly between Europe and
Philadelphia, if for no other reason than to see her doctor, dentist, and bankers. At
home in Monaco, Princess Grace ran the palace to the best of her
ability as a normal home. She expended great effort to stay
intrinsically involved with her children and to personally tend to their
needs. She cooked meals for her family, especially breakfast for her
children. Despite her great wealth, she never succumbed to needless or excess extravagance. The populace
of Monaco loved Princess Grace dearly, as did her film audiences in the
United States. After she married, Princess Grace became involved in
charitable pursuits and public service organizations. She served as
president of the Garden Club of Monaco, president of the Red Cross of
Monaco, and president of the organizing committee of the International
Arts Foundation. Her fondest benevolent
association was The Princess Grace Foundation, established to foster
involvement among young people in the creative arts, especially to
provide scholarships for eligible young students. Princess Grace brought positive and long overdue
changes to the social climate of Monaco. Her presence revitalized the
mood of the principality, encouraged tourism, and endowed a dogged state
with renewed hope and energy. Not long after the birth of her youngest daughter, it was rumored that Princess Grace had grown increasingly unhappy and become homesick
for the more casual atmosphere of the United States. She moved to an
apartment in Paris, joined the board of directors of 20th Century Fox
productions, and traveled frequently to the U.S. During the final years
of her life, she involved herself in dramatic readings and pressing
flower designs for linens, in addition to her royal responsibilities and
her many charitable pursuits. Untimely Death Princess
Grace died unexpectedly from injuries incurred at the wheel of her own
car, a Rover 3500, when it careened from a cliff and crashed 150 feet
down the mountainside.
The accident occurred at the Grimaldi's private retreat at Roc Agel.
Princess Grace remained unconscious for two days before she died in
Monte Carlo on September 14, 1982, following the removal of life-support
apparatus. Later reports confirmed that she suffered a stroke at the
time of the crash and would have been paralyzed
on one side had she survived. Funeral services were held at the
Cathedral of St. Nicholas in Monaco, the same church where she had been
married in 1956. The death of Princess Grace was felt around the world. The family of the princess acknowledged the receipt of tens of thousands of letters and cards of condolence.
Mourners continued to leave flowers at the site of the auto crash for
months afterward. Prince Ranier III admitted to "a heaviness of heart
that I don't think will change in my lifetime," as quoted by writer
Roger Bianchini in Ladies Home Journal. Ranier went forward with his wife's intended plan to build a house on Kelly ancestral lands in Ireland. Further Reading Collier's Encyclopedia, 1997. Englund, Steven, Grace of Monaco: an interpretive biography, Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1984. Cosmopolitan, April 1991, p. 212. Entertainment Weekly, September 11, 1992. Good Housekeeping, September 1992. Ladies Home Journal, April 1983. Life, March 1983. People Weekly, September 5, 1983; September 12, 1983. |