Betsy Drake, an actress and writer who in the 1950s introduced her then-husband, Cary Grant, to the hallucinogen LSD, endured his infatuation with Italian screen siren Sophia Loren and survived the sinking of the Andrea Doria ocean liner, died Oct. 27 at her home in London. She was 92.
Her death was confirmed by a friend, Michael Schreiber, who did not cite a specific cause.
Ms. Drake, whose grandfather helped build the landmark Drake and Blackstone hotels in Chicago, described a life of glittering highs and shattering lows. She spent her earliest years in Paris, where her American expatriate parents embraced the roar of the Roaring Twenties.
The stock market plunge of 1929 ended the frivolity and their marriage, and Ms. Drake was shuffled among relatives along the East Coast. She took to acting first as a balm and gradually as a career.
By the time she left the all-girls Madeira School in McLean, Va., at 17, she had begun to draw attention for her good looks and rumba skills. She attended a theater school in Washington and found work in New York as a Conover model and Broadway understudy.
Grant — 19 years her senior, twice divorced and one of the world’s most debonair and captivating movie stars — saw the play and was struck by Ms. Drake’s charm and low-voiced allure. By chance, they soon met aboard the Queen Mary on a voyage to New York, and they shared an intense shipboard attraction. She soon moved into his Los Angeles home.
With Grant’s pull, she won a contract at RKO studios and debuted opposite her future husband in a confection called “Every Girl Should Be Married” (1948) as a resourceful woman in pursuit of her romantic prey, a bachelor pediatrician. New York Times film critic Bosley Crowther called her “foxily amusing.”
Ms. Drake followed that film with starring roles in trifles such as “Dancing in the Dark” (1949) with William Powell, “Pretty Baby” (1950) with Dennis Morgan and “Room for One More” (1952), again with Grant. Rejecting a lavish build-up, she pulled back from her career to focus on her home life.
She and Grant had married on Christmas Day 1949, with industrialist Howard Hughes as best man. According to an account she later gave to Vanity Fair, she cooked Grant’s meals, greeted him at breakfast each day with a poem and studied hypnosis in an effort to wean them both off cigarettes and hard alcohol.
She persuaded Grant to retire — briefly — but could not interest him in fatherhood. They delved into transcendentalism, mysticism and yoga. She became a writer and took up causes including the plight of homeless children in Los Angeles.
Grant was lured back to work by director Alfred Hitchcock for “To Catch a Thief” (1955), co-starring Grace Kelly and set in the French Riviera. The marriage began to deteriorate and was mostly fallow by the time Grant left for Spain to film “The Pride and the Passion,” a Napoleonic drama released in 1957.
If you are reading this and you need the service of a professional hacker, who can help you hack and spy on a cheating partner, I boldly refer to Hackspy-lord. He specializes in catching cheating spouses by hacking their phone to monitor all their communications, such as calls,emails, text, social networks like, Facebook, twitter, Dating sites, Upgrade of Credit score, Clearing of unwanted records, Change of school grade, Website hacks etc. Contact him via "hackingloop6@gmail . com" also on WhatsApp +1(484)540 - 0785, if you need any of the services, his customer service and efficiency is top notch. I used his service and promised him that I will share this online for people hacking assistance, it's a promise I made him to share this on here.
ReplyDelete