(Music)
She was born into a prosperous
Philadelphia family.
Though she was a shy child,
she would live her life in the public eye.
"Don't try to be a hero!
You don't have to be a hero,
not for me!"
"I'm not trying to be a hero..."
By the age of 23, her beauty and talent
took her to Hollywood.
She made eleven films in
three and a half years
and became one of the most
sought-after stars of her time.
She worked with Hollywood's
most important directors,
played opposite its top leading men.
"There's nothing quite so mysterious
and silent as a dark theater..."
Then, at 26, she turned her back
on make-believe.
But make-believe came true,
in a fairy tale shared
by the entire world.
Her name was Grace Kelly.
It became Her Serene Highness,
Princess Grace of Monaco.
I don't think Grace really believed that
she was going to give up acting when
she became Princess Grace of Monaco.
I think that the reallity of that probably
struck her some place in the middle of
the Mediterranean after
the honeymoon began.
She took everything so much in her stride,
nothing seemed to be too much for her.
Of any name, Grace, could not have been
more fitting,
and even her death, her tragic early death
made her enter even more into legend.
Monaco, a principality of less than
five hundred acres on the French Riviera.
For centuries, the Monégasques had held on
to their distinctive character,
and their pride.
But, to this world, this place was known
as a "playground for the wealthy"
and came to enjoy its beauty
and its gambling.
Monaco became a home of young
American actress
who arrived in 1956 to be its Princess.
She brought it fame, her cool beauty,
her intelligence, and she brought war
a sense of purpose.
Well, this story about the Princess
was firmly anchored in reality.
Reality had its origins
back in Philadelphia.
Competition came easily to the Kellys.
Here along Kelly Drive
named after Grace's father, John B. Kelly,
they still race in the sport for which
Jack Kelly won an Olympic medal.
A statue elected by the citizens
of Philadelphia
commemorates that achievement.
Jack Kelly's father was a bricklayer from
Ireland who went on to make a fortune.
Young Jack soon joined
the family business:
construction and brick making.
He started his own business
and made his own fortune.
But he always professed pride in
his family's humble origins.
Jack Kelly believed that the world
was what you made it.
Margaret Majer, who married Jack, had been
a model as well as a champion
swimmer and athlete.
Margaret and Jack were determined
to raise their children their own way.
If you are good enough, you're sure
to reach the top.
It was drilled into the Kelly children
from their earliest years.
As a family, we were always very close,
four of us, Peggy, my sister, the oldest,
our brother Jack, Grace and then myself.
She was the baby for three and
a half years
and loved every minute of it.
Grace, when she was young,
was very shy
and a mama's baby.
There were many times
were we had pictures taken
that our mother had to lean back
away from the camera so Grace
would not cry
and taken away from her mother,
she was very sweet and soft, and
loved to held
and cuddled and kissed, and loved.
I, on the other hand, and I think my
brother and older sister, were more
"don't let me," "don't get around me,"
we wanted to do our
own things.
We always had a place
at the shore when we were young,
and, at that time, I think we had
our best times together,
we just had a marvelous time,
and Grace, all her life, loved
being by the ocean and the sea.
Grace and all the family were
a competitive family.
I think we got that, I know we got
that from our mother
and our father.
They instilled into us a deep sense
of competition
and the love of sports,
the will of winning,
but also taught us
how to lose gracefully.
But the Kellys didn't intend to lose
and there never was a better
drillmaster than Jack Kelly.
It was fun, family fun, and it left a
special kind of determination.
This determination didn't
manifest itself in Grace
as much in the sporting field.
But her determination sooner took
another turn.
She loved to sit by the hours and pretend
and create situations and say:
"Lizzie, you do this, and I'll be this,"
and, "I'll be the mother and
you'll be the baby,"
of course, I gave her a hard time
a lot of times because I did not
want to play her games.
For Grace, growing up wealthy
meant winter sports in Lake Placid.
It also meant the best private schools.
Working for causes you believed
in started young.
With modeling, it's
society fashion benefits.
But for Grace, these shows meant
more than fundraising;
They were theater.
She got most of her love from the
theater my uncle George.
He was a playwright and
he directed plays.
Very gracious, highly educated
person, well-read, and very witty.
And she just was fascinated with
all the tales of the
stage and the theater.
Her uncle George Kelly was a
great example to her.
He was sensitive and kind, and talented,
and I think of all the men she ever
knew,
rather than going for the
"athletic macho type,"
I think her ideal man was
her uncle George.
My recollections with her father,
Jack Kelly,
were of an enormous man with
a tremendous amount of gusto,
everything up front,
everything in the open, moved ahead.
A nice man, but not a tremendous
amount of internal sensitivity.
Her father believed absolutely that Peggy,
the elder sister, was gonna be
the big star of the family and
succeed,
and he never paid any attention
to basically the middle of the
family and his four children,
and she was quiet, observant of
the others and adored
her older brother too Kell,
John B. Kelly Jr., an also athletic
star, great racer,
her father thought he was great,
but Gracie just accepted, and I
don't think
he understood her at all,
but she adored him.
And yet, one wonders, when you
don't
get from a parent, what it is
perhaps what you need, if that isn't what
creates a great deal of the
drive in you
to go out and become the
fullest part of yourself.
She decided to go to New York, and my
mother and father especially surprised
because she was a shy and retiring girl.
My mother and father were a little
wary of New York and on her own,
but mother said: "Jack, it's not as if
she is going to Hollywood or to
California."
Grace knew that her father didn't
think much of an acting career.
They allowed her to go, to get it
out of her system,
"Let her go, it won't mount to
anything."
Grace was accepted into the
American Academy of Dramatic Arts
and then housed in
Manhattan's Carnegie Hall.
It was 1947 and Grace Kelly was 18
years old.
She supported herself by modeling.
She got her round portfolio, and
little by little,
she started getting jobs.
So that she didn't have to ask
for the favor of being supported
in her efforts
so that she could justify her own
existence
by her own earning power.
Grace also appeared in
commercials.
She was the girl-next-door,
the girl a man hoped they could
marry.
After graduating from the
American Academy,
Grace found parts in stock
companies
and her first professional role
in her uncle George Kelly's play:
"The Torch-Bearers".
Then, came her first Broadway role
in a Strindberg play.
And we all went up to Philadelphia
to see the opening night,
and dad did not know that
Raymond Massey was in the play.
Grace introduced her father to
Raymond and he said:
"Oh! Jack! How are you?" And he said:
"Is this your daughter?
I did not know that!"
So she did everything on her own
and did not want any help
from any of the family
because she said: "If I don't do it
for myself,
I don't want to do it at all."
I was very taken away for the way
she looked,
and the way she walked,
and specially her lovely voice.
She had a beautiful voice.
Except for the speech was not
yet
as an actress blended with her
posture
with that stately figure that
she projected.
She studied,
she really applied herself to the
characters
that she was working on.
I met Grace Kelly early in her career
back in 1950 when I was directing
"Danger" for CBS Television.
Her mother came up, and I think
her brother
came up to watch her rehearsal,
and when the rehearsal was over,
I heard her mother say:
"Darling, your speech was affected
a little bit, can you, kind of, make it
more natural?"
and she said
"Mother, I'm working on it."
"Your city is full of sounds, listen..."
"I don't hear a thing."
"Because there is no automobile
'going pass in the road'
and the boat in the harbor..."
She played the lead in the "Rich
Boy" for me.
"I'll take you."
"Will you?..."
Under the pressures of live television,
no retakes,
no ability to go back and get
changed.
Television when they had to flat
full down on tea tables
and everybody was out there
improvising.
She performed absolutely
brillantly
and very quickly became one of
the
leading members of the so-called
"stock company,"
those actors that we would tend
to cast
over and over again.
"... basic I would say.
Oh, I must sound very snobbish
about the west."
"Oh! No! I'm interested,
I just never thought about that
way."
"Well, people in the west are more open."
"I'm open."
"That's because you've had a lot to
drink.
You drink a lot, don't you?"
"No!"
"When I was watching you from
across the room,
you kept filling your glass
every few minutes."
"You were watching me?"
"And so were the other girls.
Some men are like that,
they compel attention.
"I didn't even see you until just a
few minutes ago,
and I couldn't wait to be introduced."
"Some men are like that..."
The first time I saw Grace, I would
be hard-pressed
to describe her as the glamour
queen of the world.
During the rehearsal, she had a
pair of glasses on,
and they were just a little bit down
her nose,
and she had a terrible cold.
And she was quite withdrawn.
I remember we shook hands, but it
wasn't a very hearty handshake,
it was the handshake of a little girl.
And I thought: "Ooh, what a nice
schoolteacher!"
She's from Philadelphia, and that was
my first impression of Grace.
Grace was given a small part in
the movie "Fourteen Hours"
in which she was hardly noticed.
She returned to television and to
stock theater.
Her big break came almost by
chance.
I met Grace in 1953 actually going
through the receiving line
at my wedding to my then-
husband Jay Kanter,
who was her agent.
I was intrigued by her looks in the
photographs that he sent me
by her background, and probably
more by the fact that
she absolutely would not accept the long-
term studio contract.
He was a young agent, I was a
young producer,
and he brought to me Marlon
Brando,
then he sent me a photograph of
Grace Kelly
at the time we were casting "High Noon".
Now, I wanted an unknown girl. I
asked to see her.
She came in from Denver for an
interview.
For an interview for a part in a
Western with white gloves
no less.
That goes way back when we were
children.
My mother insisted every time we
went into town:
"You wore hats and gloves."
That's not only my mother,
we were brought up at a convent,
and the nuns insisted that you
wore white gloves
on special occasions.
I went overboard because she had
that lady-like quality,
that kind of dignity, which was in
contrast to the Western scene,
which works so well. These are the
corporate.
"... Your love and wedded husband,
to love and to hold, from this day
forward."
The reason I think she was miscast
is that Cooper was much older
than Grace Kelly,
he was too old for Kelly, actually,
in the role.
She didn't believe that she did well
in the film,
I didn't think so either.
There was a girl in the film named
Katy Jurado,
who played the Mexican girl on the town,
Katy Jurado was dynamic and overpowering,
and yet, Kelly wasn't swallowed
even in her miscast
because this lady-like thing came through.
"... they were on the right side, but
that didn't help them anyway
when the
shooting started.
My brother was 19.
I watched him die..."
For Grace Kelly was her big break,
and
for me, it was my first American
picture
making here on Hollywood.
I was two years older than she was,
I have seven years making pictures
in Mexico, but there was something
so different between Grace and I,
we could not really explain that we
could not be very close,
but I could see a girl with a lot of
dignity, and a lot of character
because she wants to be
somebody in movies
and she worked very hard in that picture.
She looked weak and very tiny, but
she was a very strong person.
I believe she was one of the
strongest movie star I worked with.
She knew what you want,
and she did it.
Gary Cooper went on to win an
Academy Award for Best Actor of 1952,
but there were no more roles for
Grace,
and she promptly headed back to
New York for more study.
She was a Kelly, and she had to do better.
We both probably read the thing
when she says that
"You can see everything in Gary
Cooper's eye" but that her eyes
were
"flat and dull, and dead" and
that she didn't like them
she couldn't tell what the
character was feeling.
She began to work harder on
concentrating on her objective.
In other words, that would've
eventually be the cure for the way
she
attacked her characters, to make
them come alive
to make her eyeball shine with meaning.
She always had this inner image of
being an old-fashioned actress
with the kind of glamour that you
have on Broadway.
Grace was eager for a lead role in
a New York production of "Cyrano
de Bergerac".
I wanted to have Grace as Roxanne,
I wanted her, not because of her
great acting ability, but
because of that discipline that she
appeared to have.
Unfortunately, she never did
realize that
every part she went up for in
Broadway,
with the exception of "The Father",
she lost.
And when she didn't get it, there
were mentions of it in the columns
and so on.
She was very, very, very distressed
and she picked herself up, and went on.
"Mogambo" was a picture that
Grace apparently
wanted to do very badly because
she was willing to
sign a long-term contract with
MGM to do the picture.
"Is that all you're going to do for
him?!"
"Well, what do you expect me to
do, Mrs. Nordley,
crawl in bed with him and hold his
hand?"
The thought of playing opposite of
star-like Clark Gable
being directed by John Ford, a
fellow Irishman.
And I also think she was intrigued
to the idea of going to Africa.
On location for "Mogambo," Clark
Gable described an incident
to Rupert Allan, then Look
magazine correspondent.
Grace was alone and was
discovered by Gable.
She turned to him and he saw that
she was crying,
and he said: "Well, why are you
crying, Grace?"
She says: "So beautiful. I'm reading
'The Snows of Kilimanjaro'
by Hemingway, and I looked up
and I was just reading about this
frozen leopard I think they
found way up in the snows
of this highest mountain in Africa,
and I looked up in that book
thinking about
what a beautiful picture it was
inside Hemingway,
and then I saw a lion walking along
the seashore.
It's just too beautiful."
She gave human personalities to
her animals
and very often she gave animal
personalities to humans.
She used to call some of her close
friends bird and she called
Rita bird, Jay bird, this bird, that
bird.
I mean, people and animals
became interchangeable with
Grace.
Grace's role in "Mogambo" earned
her an Academy Award
nomination as Best Supporting
Actress of 1953.
"What are you saying? You're
drunk!"
"You know how it is on safari.
It's in all of us, a woman
always falls for the White Hunter
and we guys make the most of it,
can you blame us?
Oh, when you get along with that
look in your eye..."
Some critics called her a star in
the making.
Few realized how luminous that
star would become,
and in how short a time.
Hollywood, as far as Jack and
Margaret Kelly were concerned,
was no place for a girl on her own.
On Sundays many times, we used
to go to church,
and then uncle George who lived
in Southern California
would come pick us up
and take us for a ride around and
take us to lunch,
and she enjoyed those rides with
George so much.
That I would sit in the backseat
and maybe take a little nap,
but the two of them would talk
theater and books and poetry.
Some of the people in town, the
studio heads,
were quite mystified by her,
and they didn't understand why
she didn't wanna go their dinner
parties
and be sitting next to all the
people that young
actresses should wanna be seating next to.
She didn't rush out effusively
and reach forward to make lots
and lots and lots of friends.
She got up five o'clock in the
morning, went on set, came home
and grabbed something to eat.
Usually a hamburger which was
Gracie's favorite food.
And then went to bed.
She was always charming, she was
never cold, she was never icy to
anybody on the set.
She could give that appearance of
coldness, of being sort of
above it all at all times, but inside,
she was a very often seething.
And she was a volatile person but
always under control.
Alfred Hitchcock used to say
about Grace Kelly
with his usual whit that her
apparent virginity was like
a mountain covered with snow,
but that the mountain was a
volcano.
In 1953, director Hitchcock found
in Grace his perfect heroine
It was a scene in "Dial M for Murder"
where he wanted her to answer the phone
by putting on her bathrobe
and she said: "There is no reason for
her to put a bathrobe on, jut to answer
a telephone, with no one else in the
house but her"
and said: "What would you wear?"
and she said: "I'll wear a night gown"
She said: "I'll right"
and it worked out very well
"Hello...
She seemed to know the movements
before Hitchcock had anything to say
about it
and I think Hitchcock liked that
I think everybody liked it
In the picture "Rear Window" Hitchcock
said no to Grace
"Now, you're going to go have to
go across and go into the room"
and Grace without any direction,
she just went over, climbed the firescape
climbed in one of the windows and
sneaked into the door
and then, looked over across
the way to Hitchcock and said:
"Is that what you mean?"
Well, everybody applauded, and she
deserved it because
that was exactly what Alfred Hitchcock
wanted
What Grace brought, as an actress,
was, Grace brought the actual young
women of the '50s into
a vision of glamour
It was a very proper era, in a way
very premier
Underneath that, of course, there was
always the sense of flirtatiousness
of young women, and the sense of fun
Grace had trully arrived
She appeared on the covers of
national magazines
But success meant more time spent
in Hollywood
She was really a family person,
she didn't liked to be alone
I remember when she first went to
California to make films
she lived alone, and suddenly she asked
Rita Gam to come and live with her
and Grace let me in, and there she was
wearing the same Philadelphia skirt
same sensible shoes, the same tight
back hair, ecept now, she was becoming
a very valuable property, and I had no
idea that her background was one
I thought of her as a coworker
an actress
Then, out of the clear blue sky,
and very directly, openly and warmly
she said: "Would you like to share the
flat?
How would that fit in with your
schedule?"
I said: "I will have to wake up at 5
in the morning"
"Should I get up at 5 too?, I said:
"We both would go to sleep at 9"
Terrific!, that's it"
I think, the thing that most people forget
is that when all of this was happening
to Grace, this extraordinary excitement
of her career being generated
and roles with the world's most famous
leading men
and the world's most respected
directors, she was just a girl in her
early 20s
One time in Hollywood, Grace and I were
invited to what tuned out to be rather
sticky dinner party with two
bachelors
We thought it was going to be this
grand party with a lot of people
and, there we were, and the lights were
getting lower
and the wine was getting heavyer, and
I was getting very nervous
and I knudged Grace under the table
Grace had her glasses on, I think that
was her protection
mine, was this sort of chatting nervously
and say "let's go, let's go Grace"
and she whispered back "Let's wait
until after. Dessert might be good"
The bridges that took a reek gave Grace
the opportunity to play opposite
an actor she admired:
William Holden
"Harry, you've got to tell me about
those bridges"
The kind of concentration that a
good actor was capable of would
definetly inffect her
"I know we aren't going to fly about
above the mountains"
"We're going to fly between them"
It would make her respond, and in that
way you could see to the chat of nervous
system that was similar to lookness paper
She reacted immediately
"You didn't want to tell me because
you didn't want me to worry
well, I don't want you to worry either
about me, I mean"
"I know what the admirant was trying to
tell me; I had to face those bridges too"
Director George Seaton was impressed
by Grace's performance
and wanted her for the demanding role
of the wife in "The Country Girl"
But, the before relising, MGM insisted
she appeared in "Green Fire"