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Thursday, August 16, 2012

In memoriam Edith Bouvier Beale

Speranza

What comes to mind when you think of Edie Beale? 

Dancer. 

Singer. 

Actress. 

Model. 

Poet. 

Debutante.

Fashionista. 

Visionary. 

Philosopher. 

Revolutionary. 

Defiant iconoclast.

Staunch character.
"Little" Edie Beale was born in Manhattan on November 7, 1917. 


The daughter of Edith Ewing Bouvier and Phelan Beale, Edie grew up
living the privileged lifestyle that her wealthy family could afford. 

She was practically attached at her mother's hip, accompanying
Edith to lady's luncheons and high society functions.

She attended the Spence School, a private school
for the wealthy, located in New York until her mother
mysteriously took her out - apparently for a respiratory illness. 

She was kept out of the school for two years (during the age of eleven and twelve),
but accompanied her mother to movies and plays nearly every day.
In 1935 she graduated from Miss Porter's School, a highly-selective
finishing school for ladies, located in Farmington, Connecticut. 

She had her debutante debut (a formal introduction to society)
at the Pierre Hotel on Fifth Avenue, New
York on New Year's Day in 1936. 

She socialized at the Maidstone Club, the first
private sports club in East Hampton, Long Island.




















A tall, blue-eyed blonde with a superb
figure, John Davis,
Bouvier family historian, said
Edie was one of the reigning beauties
of East Hampton society,
"surpassing even the dark
charm of [her cousin]
Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy." 

She was known around town as
"Body Beautiful Beale"
and had a steady following of
beaus. 

To the dismay of her father,
she dabbled in professional
modeling. 

One of her photos was
displayed in the studio
window of famed
photographer Louis Bachrach.

Phelan Beale reportedly
smashed the window in anger. 

Another photo hung unauthorized
in the Macy's elevator in Manhattan.

Though never married, it
is believed that she had
proposals from Joe Kennedy, Jr.
and J. Paul Getty. 

She even dated jetsetters
like Howard Hughes. 

Her one true love was Julius Krug,
fomer Secretary of
Interior. 

Her mother apparently scared
off every suitor Edie ever
had for fear that she would one
day be left alone with no one to care for her.

From 1947 to 1952 she lived at the Barbizon Hotel for
Women, one of the earliest residential housing alternatives
for young women moving to New York City to take
advantage of professional opportunities. 

Codes of conduct and dress were enforced,
no men were allowed above the lobby floor,
and prospective tenants needed three letters
of recommendation to be considered residency. 

Edie hoped to land her "big break" in showbusiness
while in the city. Max Gordon, the successful
Broadway producer, saw potential in Edie and
invited her to audition for the Theatre Guild that summer. 

To her dismay, she was forced to return
to Grey Gardens before that chance came.

Her mother could no longer afford to
send her grocery money and Edie
had no legitimate way of supporting herself.

On July 29, 1952
Edie returned to East Hampton
to live with her mother at Grey Gardens. 

As famously portrayed in the Maysles documentary,
the pair would have daily routines of quarrels,
reminiscences, reconciliations, and (yes!) singing. 

Edie lived proudly in abject poverty
and filth amongst cats and raccoons at the crumbling
manor until her mother passed away in 1977.

Edie inherited Grey Gardens from her mother,
but little else (she, nor her mother, ever
received a penny from the Grey Gardens documentary). 

In order to pay the real estate and inheritance taxes
on the house, she auctioned a large collection of sterling silver
pieces including a 195-piece set of Gorham flatware
given to her mother as a wedding gift.

After 25 years of practicing her dance routines and
honing her voice under the watchful eye of her mother,
Edie would now finally have her chance to
shine in front of an audience - at the age of 60. 

She was offered an eight-show stint (January 10-14, 1978)
performing in

"The Paradise Room"

of Reno
Sweeny, a Greenwich Village cabaret in New York. 

Patrons paid $7.50 a piece to watch Edie sing, dance,
and answer questions from the audience - all while
wearing a patch over one eye (she had cataract surgery only two weeks before). 

She was also reportedly asked to perform at a club in London,
and to record an album. 

Those two propositions never materialized, though.

On the day after her final performance at Reno Sweeney,
Edie was driven back home to Grey Gardens. 

She lived there for two more years with
only five of the original cats
(the rest were given up for adoption after
her mother died). 

She eventually sold the home for $220,000
under the assumed condition that the new
owners would not demolish it. 

She left behind many mementos
in the attic including old letters, silver and
china, furniture, books, and figurines.

Little Edie moved around quite
a bit after leaving Grey Gardens (taking two favorite cats along with her). 

She initially moved to a rental cottage in South Hampton,
then to a small apartment in New York City from 1980-1983. 

She relocated to Florida, then briefly resided in Montreal,
Canada during the mid-1990's. 

She briefly stayed with relatives in Oakland,
California until she moved to an apartment in Bal Harbour, Florida in 1997. 

She lived out her final days there, swimming almost every
day, until her death on January 14, 2002 at the age of 84. 

She had not owned a cat in five years.
Edie was recognized in a video montage memorializing
members of the film industry who died over the past year during the 2002 Academy Awards.

Little has been reported about Edie's death. 


Her nephew and executor of her estate, Bouvier Beale, Jr.,

says the Dade County coroner attributed the death to a heart

attack or stroke resulting from arteriosclerosis
(thickening and stiffening of the artery
walls from too much pressure).

She appeared to have been dead for five days,
and was only discovered after a concerned fan
notified the apartment office that he could not reach her by phone.

Little Edie reportedly said that she did not want

to be buried near her mother, though it is believed that part of
her ashes were spread at the Bouvier family plot and in the Atlantic Ocean. 

She was later memorialized with a grave marker
beside her brother, “Buddy,” at Locust Valley
Cemetery in Long Island

The marker is inscribed with her quote,
"I CAME FROM GOD. I BELONG TO GOD. IN THE END - I SHALL RETURN TO GOD."

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