Once Upon a Time: Behind the Fairy Tale of Princess Grace and Prince Rainier
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Average customer review:Product Description
Grace Kelly was swept away when the handsome Prince Rainier, a man she barely knew, asked for her hand in marriage. After a series of relationships with married co-stars, she was exhausted by the show-business lifestyle. If she married Rainier, she would be more than just a movie star, she would be Her Serene RoyalHighness Princess Grace. Once in the palace, however, Grace found herself trapped in a fairy tale of her own making. Forced to make sacrifices that cut deeply into the core of who she was as a woman, she would then surrender her desires and ambitions for her spouse and her children. Grace and Rainier may have been royalty, but they were also husband and wife, and parents-and, as such, just as vulnerable to the conflicts that can contaminate any household. Drawing upon hundreds of exclusive interviews with family and friends, ONCEUPONATIME portrays its subjects with passion and sympathy, revealing Grace, Rainier,Caroline,Albert, and Stephanie in ways both startling and compelling.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #319882 in Books
- Published on: 2003-05
- Released on: 2003-04-15
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 512 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
She was an Oscar-winning Hollywood actress; he the scion of Europe's longest reigning monarchy. The marriage of movie star Grace Kelly and Prince Rainier Grimaldi of Monaco (a romance ironically spawned by a chance, MGM publicity-driven photo op) was one of the 20th century's most enchanting fables come to life. Yet, in veteran Hollywood biographer J. Randy Taraborelli's retelling, (the first comprehensive chronicle of the royal couple's romance and quarter-century reign) their day-to-day struggle with romantic inertia and a legacy of familial dysfunction cast their fairy tale existence in a bittersweet light long before the 1982 automobile accident that took Grace's life.
Taraborelli's struggle to walk the fine line between the respectful biography he intends and the salacious, tell-all exposes he decries makes for occasionally awkward passages. However, the author eventually succeeds in giving his royal subjects--and the ongoing conflicts with their respective families--a familiar, all-too-human scale. --Jerry McCulley
From Publishers Weekly
The "happily ever after" marriage of Grace Kelly to Prince Rainier III of Monaco is explored and demythologized in this fascinating, compelling and well-researched royal biography. After failed romances with married co-stars (Ray Milland and William Holden) and turning down a marriage proposal from Oleg Cassini, Kelly met Rainier, the prince of a popular Mediterranean resort town who was searching for a princess he hoped would become "the manifestation of all that we hope for and dream about in Monaco." Nine months after what was called "the wedding of the century" (watched by 30 million TV viewers) in 1956, Grace gave birth to the first of their three children. Never planning to stop making films, she bowed to her husband's wishes and soon her loneliness and boredom were replaced by severe depression. The prince encouraged her to accept Alfred Hitchcock's offer of the lead in Marnie. But the subjects of Monaco objected and forced her to withdraw. Before her tragic car accident death in 1982, Grace found contentment in the life she chose. As he demonstrated in his 2002 bestseller, Jackie, Ethel, Joan: Women of Camelot, Taraborrelli is adept at illuminating political intrigue and complex family dynamics. He smoothly weaves together hundreds of exclusive interviews (in fast-paced, short chapters) to create vivid, full-blooded portraits. This is the definitive book on a marriage that started as an arrangement but ended as a love story. 16 pages of b&w photos.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
A journalist and the popular biographer of such luminaries as Madonna, Frank Sinatra, and Michael Jackson now turns his focus on a supremely glamorous couple, the late Grace Kelly and her princely husband. Brad Hooper
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Customer Reviews
A Compelling Page-Turner
I tend to be one of those readers who picks up a book from his bedside table and reads for a few minutes before drifting off to sleep. This book, though, kept me up for hours the first night I started reading, and the next day I carried it with me, stealing away moments to read more -- and I ended up finishing it before that day was through. "Once Upon a Time" paints a vivid portrait of Grace Kelly's incredible life, taking the reader on a journey through her early years (living for the approval of her dominant father) her whirlwind Hollywood life (that was far more complex than I'd ever realized) and the mysterious marriage to Prince Rainier of Monaco (which, while thrilling, in some ways broke her spirit). Taraborrelli's writing style, with short, concise chapters, keeps the reader flying at warp speed through the timeline of Grace's life, without sacrificing the specificity and detail one craves when cracking open a biography. As a Grace Kelly fan, I had been left disappointed by previous attempts to capture her life on paper -- but, thankfully, this book finally gives me a bit of real estate on my shelves devoted to the memory of this enigmatic beauty. The horrific death of Grace had haunted me, as it has many over the years-- but finally, after reading this book, I feel that enough of my questions-- about her life, her career, and even that terrible accident -- have been answered. The clarity of the storytelling in "Once Upon A Time", helped me put perspective on a life that would have otherwise gone misunderstood. I highly recommend it.
A FAIRY TALE WITHOUT A HAPPY ENDING
To most of the world the wedding of Hollywood star Grace Kelly and Prince Rainier of Monaco probably had all the makings of a fairy tale. There was a handsome prince in the appropriately luxe setting. As we now know if this particular fairy tale lacked the requisite happy ending. The beginning and middle were not a bed of roses either according to biographer Taraborrelli.
In almost 500 pages there is a great deal according to Taraborrelli, some of which seems questionable. The narrative is rife with assumptions, such as attributing thoughts to Grace with, "She may have been thinking" or "She would have been pleased." Or, his comment regarding a family member's statement, "....that sounds so much like one her mother might have made." All of these conclusions seem to imply an intimacy with his subject that the writer did not enjoy.
Further the dust jacket claims that Grace's thoughts and feelings regarding her wedding are revealed. Another claim to stretch credibility. Lastly, where was Taraborrelli's editor? To mention only one oversight: the wrong year for the death of Princess Diana is an all too obvious mistake.
Aside from those reservations Taraborrelli has done a yeoman's task of assembling the minutia of both subjects lives from Grace's Philadelphia birth to Rainier's loveless childhood to their less than eventful first meeting to the Grimaldi dynasty today.
Born to Jack and Margaret Kelly, a couple who yearned to be a part of the upper echelon of Philadelphia society, Grace was one of four offspring. She would spend her life seeking her distant father's approval. Handsome and gregarious, Jack always wore custom-tailored suits and was known as one of the biggest characters in the City of Brotherly Love. He pinned his Olympic hopes on his son, Kell, and doted on daughter Peggy, who was tough and smart. An outsider in the family circle, Grace sought comfort within herself.
When she was 18 Grace went to New York City and the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. Through dint of sheer determination and a modicum of luck she became a Hollywood star, eventually winning an Oscar for "The Country Girl." Even this did not impress papa Jack who at the time is quoted as saying that he thought Peggy might have received such an honor but never Grace.
Her movie years were marked by unhappy love affairs with Ray Milland and William Holden. (Taraborrelli claims that there was never a romance between Grace and Clark Gable while other biographers make the opposite assertion.)
In 1955 Grace attended the Cannes Film Festival. For publicity purposes it was suggested that she visit Monaco while in France and have her photo taken with Prince Rainier - a meeting that would dramatically alter the lives of both.
The Grimaldis have ruled the storybook principality of Monaco for over 700 years. One of the most sought after bachelors in the world, Prince Rainier well knew it was time for him to marry and produce an heir to the throne. While Grace, following adverse publicity concerning her affair with the married Ray Milland, concluded, "I hated Hollywood. It's a town without pity."
The pair met briefly, each expressing the wish that they might meet again. They did, indeed. Upon a visit to the United States the following year Rainier, described as a "shy, sometimes moody man," proposed to Grace and she accepted, despite her strong feelings for fashion designer Oleg Cassini.
In later years, when Rainier is asked whether or not it had been love at first sight, he replied, "No....I don't believe in love at first sight anyway." It is a wishy-washy expression, which I don't use."
Nonetheless, to the world theirs was a fairy tale romance capped by a fairy tale wedding. However, few in the world knew about the fertility test Grace was required to take, the dowry required, and the marriage agreement in which she relinquished all rights to any children the couple may have should the marriage end in divorce.
As if scripted, nine months following what was dubbed "The Wedding of the Century" Grace gave birth to Princess Caroline. Prince Albert and Princess Stephanie would soon complete the family circle. Of Prince Albert's birth Rainier said in a radio address: "Let us thank God for this new happiness, this proof of His special blessing."
Albert, called "Albie," may well have been a special blessing as in future years the girls would prove challenges to both parents as the princesses entered into short-lived marriages or bore children out of wedlock. Fodder for world tabloids their escapades brought embarrassment to Monaco's rulers.
It is said that throughout her marriage Grace yearned to return to acting, hoping to do so despite being told that was an impossibility for a Princess. It does seem that much later she derived great satisfaction from her poetry readings which received accolades.
At one time the Prince relented in the hope of relieving Grace's depression and encouraged her to play a role in Alfred Hitchcock's "Marnie." However, the citizens of Monaco did not share his view and Grace reluctantly withdrew from the film.
As the couple shared over twenty years of marriage we are told that Grace had accepted her position in Monaco, and grew to care for the people as they cared for her. Rainier, too, grew to appreciate the woman he had married, thankful for her companionship, wise counsel, and listening ear. Tragically, this happiness came to an abrupt end with her death in a car accident. It is said that Rainier has never recovered from his loss, saying at her funeral, "My life will never be the same.....Without Princess Grace none of it matters for me now. It's all meaningless. My God, it's all meaningless.
So ended not a fairy tale but a very human story.
- Gail Cooke
Great Read
I have read every Grace biography available to me and own many of them. This one gave a very unique perspective, interviewing several of her "non-star" friends that I hadn't read about previously. The format of the book (short chapters) really was effective and relatively fast-paced. The treatment of her marriage was very deep and made you feel like you were inside her mind. I thought that the author was quite dignified, skimming over the early affairs instead of giving every gory detail. The only thing I did not like was, at times, it seemed like he was merely paraphrasing others' material, and he gave short shrift to some of Grace's girlfriends, referring to them only as "New York girlfriends" or "show business friends."
I am an English teacher, so I may be more picky than most. For example, I nearly screamed when I saw he placed Diana's death at 1996. THat's something that any fact checker should've found.





