SUPPORT THE WORK

GetWiki

Daisy Fellowes

ARTICLE SUBJECTS
aesthetics  →
being  →
complexity  →
database  →
enterprise  →
ethics  →
fiction  →
history  →
internet  →
knowledge  →
language  →
licensing  →
linux  →
logic  →
method  →
news  →
perception  →
philosophy  →
policy  →
purpose  →
religion  →
science  →
sociology  →
software  →
truth  →
unix  →
wiki  →
ARTICLE TYPES
essay  →
feed  →
help  →
system  →
wiki  →
ARTICLE ORIGINS
critical  →
discussion  →
forked  →
imported  →
original  →
Daisy Fellowes
[ temporary import ]
please note:
- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
- it has been imported raw for GetWiki
{{Short description|French author and fashion icon (1890–1962)}}{{EngvarB|date=August 2014}}{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2014}}







factoids
| birth_place = Paris, Francedf=yes12189029}}| death_place = Paris, France
  • {{marriage|Jean Amédée Marie Anatole de Broglie, Prince de Broglie|1910|1918|end=d.}}
  • {{marriage|The Hon. Reginald Fellowes|1919|1953|end=d.}}
}}| occupation = Socialite| nickname = Daisy| children = 4}}Daisy Fellowes (née Marguerite Séverine Philippine Decazes de Glücksberg; 29 April 1890 – 13 December 1962)Archives de l’état civil de Paris en ligne, acte de naissance numéro 16/494/1890 ; avec mention marginale du décès was a prominent French socialite, acclaimed beauty, minor novelist and poet, Paris editor of American Harper’s Bazaar, fashion icon, and an heiress to the Singer sewing machine fortune.

Parents and childhood

Born in Paris, France, she was the only daughter of Isabelle-Blanche Singer (1869–1896) and Jean Élie Octave Louis Sévère Amanien Decazes de Glücksberg (1864–1912), 3rd Duke Decazes and Duke of Glücksberg. Her maternal grandfather was Isaac Singer, the American sewing machine pioneer. After her mother’s suicide, she and her siblings were largely raised by their maternal aunt, Winnaretta Singer (Princess Edmond de Polignac), a noted patron of the arts, particularly music.

First marriage

Her first husband, whom she married on 10 May 1910 in Paris, was Jean Amédée Marie Anatole de Broglie, Prince de Broglie (born in Paris on 27 January 1886). He reportedly died of influenza on 20 February 1918 while serving with the French Army in Mascara, Algeria, though malicious observers gossiped that he actually committed suicide as a result of his homosexuality having been exposed.Their country estate was Compton Beauchamp House in Oxfordshire, where they raised three daughters:
  • Princess Emmeline Isabelle Edmée Séverine de Broglie (Neuilly, 16 February 1911 – Onez, Switzerland, 10 September 1986). Married to Marie Alexandre William Alvar de Biaudos, Comte de Castéja (Paris, 6 April 1907 – Paris, 6 July 1983) in Neuilly, 8 November 1932. Accused of collaboration during World War II, Emmeline de Castéja spent five months in the prison at Fresnes, France.Lisa Hilton, The Horror of Love: Nancy Mitford and Gaston Palewski in Paris and London (Open Road Media, 2012)
  • Princess Isabelle Marguerite Jeanne Pauline de Broglie (Lamorlaye, 27 July 1912 – Geneva, 18 July 1960). Married to Olivier Charles Humbert Marie, Marquis de La Moussaye (La Poterie, 26 Mars 1908 – Paris, 20 October 1988) in Neuilly, 3 June 1931. Divorced in Paris, 13 April 1945. Isabelle de La Moussaye was a novelist.
(File:Princess Jacques De Broglie LCCN2014701792.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Princess Jacques De Broglie)(File:Prince Jacques De Broglie LCCN2014701793.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Prince Jacques De Broglie)
  • Princess Jacqueline Marguerite de Broglie (Paris, 5 January 1918 – Crans-Montana, Valais 26 February 1965). Married to Alfred Ignaz Maria Kraus (Sarajevo, 28 November 1908–) in Neuilly, France, 6 October 1941. Divorced in Münster, 3 February 1958. After her husband—a Siemens electronics senior manager who served as a counter-espionage agent with the Abwehr—WEB,discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/SearchUI/details/C11235013?descriptiontype=Full&ref=KV+2/1727, The Discovery Service, The National Archives, was accused of betraying members of the French Resistance during World War II to protect his wife, also a member of the Resistance, Jacqueline Kraus had her head shaved as punishment.Artemis Cooper and Antony Beevor, Paris After the Liberation, 1944–1949 (Penguin, 2004).
Of her Broglie children, the notoriously caustic Fellowes once said, “The eldest, Emmeline, is like my first husband only a great deal more masculine; the second, Isabelle, is like me without guts; [and] the third, Jacqueline, was the result of a horrible man called Lischmann ....“David Herbert, Second Son: An Autobiography (Owen, 1972), page 80

Second marriage

Her second husband, whom she married on 9 August 1919 in London, was The Hon. Reginald Ailwyn Fellowes (1884–1953), of Donnington Grove. He was a banker, cousin of Winston Churchill and the son of William Fellowes, 2nd Baron de Ramsey.They had one child, Rosamond Daisy Fellowes (1921–1998). She married her first husband in 1941 (divorced 1945), Captain James Gladstone, and had one son, James Reginald (born 1943). She married her second husband in 1953 (divorced), Tadeusz Maria Wiszniewski (1917–2005); they had one daughter, Diana Marguerite Mary Wiszniewska (born 1953).

Affairs

Among Fellowes’s lovers was Duff Cooper, the British ambassador to France. She also attempted to seduce Winston Churchill, but failed, shortly before marrying his cousin Reginald Fellowes.Mary S. Lovell, The Churchills: In Love and War (W.W. Norton, 2011), page 313.

Literary works

Fellowes wrote several novels and at least one epic poem. Her best-known work is Les dimanches de la comtesse de Narbonne (1931, published in English as “Sundays“). She also wrote the novel Cats in the Isle of Man.

Status as fashion icon

She was known as one of the most daring fashion plates of the 20th century, arguably the most important patron of the surrealist couturier Elsa Schiaparelli. She was also a friend of the jeweller Suzanne Belperron,BOOK, Raulet, Sylvie, Baroin, Olivier, Suzanne Belperron, 351, Antique Collectors Club, 16 December 2011, 978-1-85149-625-9, and she was a longtime customer of the jeweller Cartier.WEB,www.jewelsdujour.com/2013/08/on-jeweled-wings-daisy-fellowes-a-spectacular-boivin-brooch/, On Jeweled Wings: Daisy Fellowes & A Spectacular Boivin Brooch – Jewels du Jour, Jewelsdujour.com, 2014-01-20, 2018-09-20, 29 June 2015,www.jewelsdujour.com/2013/08/on-jeweled-wings-daisy-fellowes-a-spectacular-boivin-brooch/," title="web.archive.org/web/20150629035154www.jewelsdujour.com/2013/08/on-jeweled-wings-daisy-fellowes-a-spectacular-boivin-brooch/,">web.archive.org/web/20150629035154www.jewelsdujour.com/2013/08/on-jeweled-wings-daisy-fellowes-a-spectacular-boivin-brooch/, dead,

Death

Daisy Fellowes died on 13 December 1962 at her hôtel particulier in Paris at number 69, (:fr:Rue de Lille (Paris)|rue de Lille).Connaissance des arts, Axelle de Gaigneron, Dernier regard sur l’hôtel particulier du faubourg Saint-Germain dans lequel régna l’Honorable Mrs Reginald Fellowes, N°302 – avril 1977, page 86–93

See also

References

{{Reflist|30em}}

Further reading

  • BOOK, Tapert, Annette, Diana Edkins, The Power of Style – The Women Who Defined The Art of Living Well,archive.org/details/powerofstyle00tape, Crown Publishers, New York, 1994, 0517585685,
  • BOOK, Thompson, Lara, Heiresses: The Lives of the Million Dollar Babies, St. Martin’s Press, New York, 2022, 978-1250202734,

External links

{{Authority control}}

- content above as imported from Wikipedia
- "Daisy Fellowes" does not exist on GetWiki (yet)
- time: 6:54am EDT - Wed, May 22 2024
[ this remote article is provided by Wikipedia ]
LATEST EDITS [ see all ]
GETWIKI 21 MAY 2024
GETWIKI 09 JUL 2019
Eastern Philosophy
History of Philosophy
GETWIKI 09 MAY 2016
GETWIKI 18 OCT 2015
M.R.M. Parrott
Biographies
GETWIKI 20 AUG 2014
CONNECT