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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 6, 1958)
r f WHAT HAS HAPPENED TO THIS- 1 FVkTip r a v ior tittt-v I HAD TO RENOUNCE HER ILL-FATED 3 LOVE FOR by Isabella Tave ' Isabella Tauea has been a ree lance magazine writer for the past 13 years. She is also the author of two books, "Success ful Women" and 'The Three Lives of Harriet Hubbard Ayer" (with Margaret Ayer). She has traveled extensively (the accom-y Danuino photo was h taken on a Rhine JS River boat trip last year) Family WitHu. July 6, 195.1 WILL PRINCESS MARGARET EVER MARRY Princess Margaret was like the little girl who wanted to have her cake and eat it, too. She tried to be both a princess and an ordinary human being. The result: indigestion. She loved the trappings of royalty, the applause of the crowds, the robes and diamonds, the respectful "ma'am" she rates even from her circle of intimates. But she also liked American jazz, show people, pink champagne, and her own way. This conflict made her more interesting than her one dimensional sister, who is the perfect picture of a Queen of England. But it has caused her many troubles. Elsa Maxwell, who is one of the American entertainers Princess Margaret finds amusing, tells a re vealing story about Margaret. Elsa was once invited to sit in the royal box at a London concert. The music, according to Elsa, was awful. After ward the Queen and her husband smiled and applauded as usual, bow ing graciously to artists and audience. So did Princess Margaret, except that while she was beaming and bobbing, she was muttering, not quite under her breath: "Booooo Booooo." Few people in the United States realize how little is really known V Ms I if -A ' . J ft - - v I: i - . ') t , ' Si f - ? ' .11 Billy Wallace I kj Duko Rufland VIA Ear) of Dalkeith about the British royal family. Al though a valet or governess occasion ally turns blabbermouth and tells all he or she knows, the royal family as a rule is kept under thick and discreet wraps. Close friends don't dare talk to reporters for fear of ceasing to be close friends. The Queen has a public relations officer, Commander Colville, who has his office at one end of Buck ingham Palace, but his major official function is to say, "No comment" In 1947, 1 went over to London with the naive American idea of inter viewing Princess Elizabeth for an American publication. I looked up Buckingham Palace in the telephone book and called for an appointment. I didn't see Princess Elizabeth, but I did get inside the palace and talk to the young woman whom Commander Colville had hired to handle the Princess' press relations. She was eminently qualified for the job by having been a wartime employee in Winston Churchill's top secret, hush-hush Map Room. I didn't find out anything about the Princess from her. But the English journalists gave me "A" for brassy American enterprise. Even the ones who are officially attached to the palace are expected to keep their distance and ask only polite questions. It is only around the pubs in Fleet Street, where the journalists gather and ex change rumor and speculation and gossip, that the royal family is dis cussed as freely and irreverently as our Presidents and their families. Since Margaret's troubles have piled up, her personal inner circle is as tight-lipped and grim as Commander 1J 1 TT it: l loivine couia nope, ner nigiuic&s ic tires more and more frequently from public view with her cases ot royal sulks. Yet it wasn't always so. In happier, younger days Margaret will be 28 in August we in the United States and the common people in T.nnHnn pnpelnd at her newsDaDer pictures, showing more cleavage than any royal torso had ever exposed at least, in print. She smoked cigarettes in long blacK noicicrj. Even run-of-the-mill reporters saw her and her friends at the Bohemium restaurant in Soho, and overheard her giving imitations of Louis Armstrong. Ordinary tourists passing by Clarence House, where she lives with the Queen Mother, could hear the piano playing late at night, often repeat ing Margaret's favorite, "La Ronde d' Amour." Records of the song, sub titled By a rtoyal r-ersonage, were bootlegged in London at $20 each. Margaret then gave little indication of fearing reporters, and some au thentic news leaked down direct from hir inner circle to Fleet Street pubs. At a private party in Paris, she sang r n,,A;tinnn whirh included Garbo. 1UI dll uuuii"v- When she came of age and into $18,000 a year from the Civil List and a lump sum of $60,000 under the will . . it i i of an old family lnena, sne ceieuraieu by buying a $21,000 Rolls Royce and a white strapless Dior evening dress (which later, when she came back- to England, quietly acquired straps). Whilo Mnrcarct was in Italy, photog raphers disguised as improbable - i fnilnrl hpr into the surf 115IICI INCH llii"vu at Capri and got pictures of her in a bathing suit. Not a bit daunted, she came back to England and danced a can-can at another private pany. Reports of these activities filtered down to Fleet Street, and English journalists shared gossip and tidbits with American reporters. A friend of ..,; (mm a London tabloid once asked a male member of Margaret's inner circle: "If you tried to kiss Margaret good-night after a party, would she pull her rank on you? And the fellow replied, without a trace of a smile: "Inaeea sne un like frozen lightning." Even then, there were solid indications that the gay young Princess wanted to have her fun without the consequences. Speculation about whom she would marry was a guuu gmue iui news papers all over the world, and Mar garet s dozen-or-so tairiy sieaay escorts became for a time almost as well known as leading cinema stars. Today aii e tcept faithful, well-heeled Billy Wallace have slipped back into comoarative obscurity. Kl obody noticed the quiet figure of ' ' Group Captain Peter Town- 1 . . t t. J. L UJ sena in uie uucjigiuuuu, nc nau been around too long, equerry to the King since Margaret was n. On her 21st birthday, which she celebrated at the family's Scottish castle at Balmoral, a Fleet Street photographer caught pictures of Marearet ridins with a man, then apologized to his editor when he dis- n,r.TaA "it uroe nnltT TnUTI GPnd." It is possible that for a while Town send himself did not suspect that the young Princess had a "crush" on him. He was IB years older man sne. ne was married, and King George was godfather to his second son. Although the marriage was dissolved late in 1952, not even malicious gossip has ever hinted that it was for love of Margaret. Reporters close to the for the whole family, particularly VI r .1 fttaar VI 1 -IT Vint Vl simply ' relegated his marriage to second place. Margaret called him Peter. Town send always called her "ma'am" In the presence of the press. When the royal family toured South Africa in 1947. Townsend was with them as acting manager of the royal house hold. He and 17-year-old Margaret swam together in the Indian Ocean, roue nui acutiiv HJBswitip Victoria Falls. When Elizabeth . . -. , .i . j i married, margarei seemeu io uepeuu more and more on Townsend, and chose him as her companion and .ad ministrator on her first important solo mission abroad, to the Netherlands. After her father's death and Eliza beth's coronation in 1953, Townsend niDG riinciin nq cnmntroller of the household when the widow and Margaret moved from the palace to Clarence House. The stigma of divorce, still strong in court circles, maae no difference in the case of the royal family's favorite. The first rumors of the love affair started in newspapers in the United Qioinc a fow davs after Queen Elizabeth's coronation. Margaret and her mother were about to fly to Africa with the inevitable Townsend. Over night, Townsend was sent with the Queen and Philip to Ireland, then rapidly posted to Brussels as air attache, a job which was almost an insult to a man wearing the Dis tinguished Service Order (next to the Victoria Cross) , Distinguished Flying Cross and Bar, with 11 German air craft to his credit during the Battle of Britain. In Africa, Margaret retired with a "diplomatic cold." When she came back to London, she cut out nearly all her public engagements, and started going to church frequently. She wasn't I- :.U. (cchinnolila seen in mfc11"- uuua ui restaurants. Her old inner circle kept mum; It IS possiDie mai oniy a lew 01 them saw very much of her. For 28 months Townsend stayed pat in Brussels. How many times Margaret talked to him over her green tele phone is one of the royal mysteries. But after she returned from a very successful tour of duty in the West Indies, reliable vord came from the inner circle that Margaret had been talking to Townsend on the telephone. Her 25th birthday, when she would be free to marry without consent of her sister and the Privy Council, was only a few months away. The news papers promptly descended in force on Townsend in his Brussels flat, and the Queen extended his royal posting until the end of September, a monm after Margaret's birthday. IP the Queen and Philip (who is said to have a great deal of In fluence with Margaret and dis likes Townsend) hoped to change Margaret's mind in six months, they failed. The Princess began going out more socially, even "stood in" during rehearsals of a fashionable socialite amateur play, and was reported to show her old enthusiasm and wit. Then m J nnmn ka-lr in Tnrlnn nn iUWIIWiiu lamv u"-" Oct. 12, 1955. The couple met for an hour and a half the next day at Clarence House, the first of a series of meetings which they tried to keep secret The meet ings went on for 19 days and were reported in sometimes fictional detail in papers all over the world. Every one pretended to have the inside track on the question of whether Margaret would marry Townsend. It was never a question of her sacrificing a penny (her grandmother, Queen Mary, had also left her a sizable sum) or, necessarily, her right of succession to the throne. The pertinent point to a devout girl I Jjj (Continued on page 10) Family Weekly, July I, I95J 7