Bonus Episode 7: Grace Kelly’s Fateful Trip to Cannes - podcast episode cover

Bonus Episode 7: Grace Kelly’s Fateful Trip to Cannes

Aug 26, 202010 min
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Episode description

In 1955, actress Grace Kelly journeyed to the Cannes Film Festival, setting in action a chain of events that would find her trading her Hollywood throne for a real one. 

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Transcript

Speaker 1

In Grace Kelly was on top of the world. So the award for the Best Performance by an Actress, Grace Kelly for the Country. The twenty six year old actress, the daughter of a wealthy Philadelphia brickworks owner, had just received her first Academy Award for Best Actress. The thrill of this moment keeps me from saying when I really feel I can only say thank you with all my heart to all who made this possible for me. Thank you.

Kelly was young, talented, magnetic, humble. Today, she's probably best known for the three films she made with Alfred Hitchcock, and she was the perfect embodiment of Hitchcock's cool, blonde leading lady in her Hollywood stardom looked unstoppable. Five days after winning her Oscar, Grace Kelly woke up aboard the overnight train from Paris to Nice. She had made six films in the last eighteen months and she was exhausted. But the prestigious Can Film Festival was screening The Country Girl,

and you didn't say no to Can. Rupert Allen, an editor at Look magazine, was a good friend of Kelly's. He talked her into making the trip he told her, Oh, but you must, Grace, You'll be so glad you did.

Grace Kelly didn't know it at the time, but that train was taking her in a vastly different direction than the one she had intended, taking her toward an entirely new life, toward a fairy tale even more intoxicating than Hollywood, toward a kingdom in the middle of paradise that held joy, sorrow, trouble, and ultimately tragedy. I'm Sean Braswell today on flashback Grace Kelly's fateful visit to the French Rivieria and the rocky

road from Hollywood legend to true royalty. That April morning, in the trains dining car, Kelly and Rupert Allen had breakfast with Hollywood legend Olivia to Haveln and her husband, Pierre Galante, the French journalist. They were also headed to the festival. Kelly was playing a princess in her next movie, The Swan, and so Galante proposed that she visited the nearby principality of Monico to meet a real life prince,

with a few of Galante's photographers alongside her. Of course, Kelly was ambivalent, but she did not say no, and at the next station, Galante hopped off the train to arrange for the royal photo op. The journalist made several phone calls then gave Kelly the good news that she was meeting with the ruler of Monaco, Prince Regnier the Third, the very next day. And so the following morning, Kelly found herself in a pugio being driven at high speeds

around the curvy roads outside of Monica. And then it was just a fender bender and no one was injured. The actress arrived in Monaco in time for her royal engagement. Prince Regnier, on the other hand, was nowhere to be found. As she waited, Kelly was given a tour of the Palace of Monaco an hour later, and with still no prince in sight. The irritated Kelly remarked, this is outrageous and said it was time to leave. Then right on cue,

a servant entered and announced the prince's arrival. Kelly quickly practiced her curtsy in a corner, but froze in a real life movie moment when she saw in a mirror that the Prince was watching her. The thirty one year old Regnier wore a blue tailored suit. He had a black mustache and a tan, well defined face. He was not at all the aging European monarch Kelly had expected. The charming prince, educated at private schools in Britain, apologized

in perfect English for his tardiness. He proceeded to give his visitor a forty five minute tour of his private zoo and gardens. When they parted, the Prince kissed the actress's hand and placed it back at her side. He's charming, a smiling Kelly observed afterward, so charming. Seven months later, the Prince proposed to Kelly in New York Central Park,

which is incidentally bigger than Monaco. And then, just a year after their first meeting, after all the fever of publicity, the acres of newsprint, the fashion notes, and the jewel robberies, the great day approaches at last, when Grace Kelly or Philadelphia, USA, will become the bride of Regnier Prince of Monaco. The wedding of the Century was filmed by MGM and broadcast in movie theaters across the globe. It took thirty seamstresses

six weeks to make Kelly's dress. Now comes a moment for the exchanging of rings, a Bishop Haan's one to the bridegroom, who is a little nervous. Grace helps him put it on. The wedding is over and Prince Regnier's bride is no longer Grace Kenny, but her serene Highness, Princess Grace of Monaco. It was like something out of a fairy tale, and it was a dream come true for Prince Regnier. Since the thirteenth century, Monaco had been ruled by his family, but in recent years the tiny

principality had come on hard times. As its primary source of revenue, the Monte Carlo casino, lost money, and a fairy tale marriage presented a solution to another of the prince's problems. It's not often a film star's marriage affects a map of Europe, but this one may, and that's why the flags are out in Monaco. For if Prince Rainier were to die without an air, the tiny state would become French territory and its twenty population would be

subject to French taxes and the French call up. So while having Grace Kelly stopped by your house would have been a dream come true for most any man for a struggling monarch who needed a bride, an air, and an injection of cash. It was truly a godsend. Kelly not only looked the part, she came with a two million dollar dowry for the newly ordained Princess Grace of Monaco. However, the marriage proved challenging. Prince Regnier was a controlling husband.

He did not want her to return to the silver screen, and she didn't. Hollywood bid Kelly farewell at the nineteen fifty six Academy Awards. I would like to say on behalf of myself, the motion picture industry, all the nice people who think you're so nice, wishing good luck, good health, for a very happy life, and God bless you, right Kelly. In the end, Grace Kelly abdicated her throne in Hollywood at the peak of her reign as a movie star

and exchange for a somewhat disappointing fairy tale. But she continued to put a brave face on for the public, and being a princess proved to be the role of a lifetime. She had three children and focused on her royal duties. Princess Grace gave one final interview to Pierre Salinger on ABC. He asked her what turned out to be an eerily appropriate question. I know that with as much jourlier in your life to ask you this question, but at some point somebody's gonna ask you to you,

how are you? How are you gonna want to be remembered? There's a long pause. You can see Kelly has taken off guard by the question. She recovers and gives the easy answer, AH, well, I suppose I think mostly in terms of my children and their children how they will remember me. But Salinger continues to press her on the point, are there any things about your career that you like to remember? Oh? As always, Kelly keeps her composure, but you can almost see the decades of regret rising just

beneath the surface. I don't feel as though I achieved enough in my career to to stand out more than many other people. It's a bit hard to watch, but we are so far from nineteen in Hollywood now. I don't think I m h was accomplished enough as an actor to be remembered for that particularly. Uh No, I'd like to be remembered as a as a decent human being and a Caring one. Two months after that interview, Grace Kelly died in another car crash on a mountainous

road near the Palace. She was fifty two years old. Flashback is written and hosted by me Sean Braswell, Senior writer and Executive producer at Aussie. It was edited by Maeve mcgarren and produced by Tracy Moran. Chris Hoff engineered our show. Make sure to subscribe to Flashback on the I Heart Radio app or listen wherever you get your podcasts.

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