Deirdre Hart-Davis

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Deirdre Hart-Davis
Ronald Balfour and Deirdre Hart-Davis, The Tatler, 1929.jpg
Hart-Davis and Ronald Balfour in 1929
Born
Deirdre Phyllis Ulrica Hart-Davis

(1909-07-05)5 July 1909
London, England
Died23 November 1998(1998-11-23) (aged 89)
Lewes, East Sussex, England
Other namesDeirdre Balfour
Deirdre Wolfers
Deirdre Bland
Deirdre Inman
Occupation
  • Socialite
  • gallery owner
Spouse(s)
Ronald Balfour
(m. 1930; died 1941)
David Wolfers
(m. 1945; div. 1949)
Anthony Bland
(m. 1950; div. 1971)
William Inman
(m. 1984; died 1994)
Children3

Deirdre Phyllis Ulrica Hart-Davis (later Balfour, Wolfers, Bland, and Inman; 5 July 1909 – 23 November 1998) was an English socialite, gallery owner and model, included in The Book of Beauty by Cecil Beaton.[1] She became a famous beauty and a beacon of style.[2]

Biography[]

Deirdre Phyllis Ulrica Hart-Davis was born on 5 July 1909 the only daughter of Richard Vaughan Hart-Davis and Sybil Mary Cooper. She was the niece of Lady Diana Cooper and Duff Cooper.[3] She had one brother, Rupert Charles Hart-Davis.[2] Hart-Davis was a great-great-great-granddaughter of William IV. William had several illegitimate children with his mistress, Dorothea Jordan. Their youngest daughter, Lady Elizabeth Fitzclarence, later Countess of Erroll, had daughters including Lady Agnes Hay. Lady Agnes married James Duff, 5th Earl Fife and among their children was Lady Agnes Duff, who married Sir Alfred Cooper. Their children included Sybil Cooper, mother of Deirdre Hart-Davis.[4]

As a child, Deirdre and Rupert Hart-Davis were drawn by Augustus John and painted by William Nicholson (1912).[2][5] Her coming-out dance in 1928 was held by her aunt, Lady Diana Cooper, at 34 Grosvenor Street, whose "café au lait ball-room made a very good setting for the many pretty girls who came".[6] The Sketch wrote: "Miss Deirdre Hart-Davis, is one of the loveliest debutantes of this year and is greatly admired in society [...] Our photographic study shows Miss Hart-Davis in the flame-coloured taffeta dress which she wore when she acted as the bridesmaid at the marriage of Miss Wanda Holden to the Hon. Charles Baillie-Hamilton. It is adorned with a black lace scarf, which looks most effective."[7]

On 24 April 1930 she married , the only son of Brigadier-General Sir Alfred Granville Balfour and Lady Alfred Granville Balfour, the daughter of Sir Benjamin Simpson.[3] They had two daughters, Susan and Annabel. Ronald Balfour died during World War II killed in a car accident.[2]

Cecil Beaton, who included her in The Book of Beauty in 1933, used her as model as well.[2][1]

After she was a widow, she moved to New York City and worked for the moving back to London at the end of the war.[2]

She married a second time to .[2] Her friends included Gerald Barry, Hugh Casson and Lawrence Gowing.[2]

She married a third time to Anthony John Bland, an academic lawyer. They had one daughter, Lucy. In the 1960s the family moved to Lewes, Sussex, to be near Sussex University where Bland was Reader of Law. They separated when Bland moved to the University of West Indies.[2]

From 1973 to 1987 she ran the Southover Gallery out of her own home in Lewes and she exhibited, among others, Duncan Grant, Quentin Bell, Julian Trevelyan, Mary Fedden, John Nash and .[2]

She married a fourth and last time to . Inman took care of her when she developed Parkinson's disease from which she died on 23 November 1998.[2]

References[]

  1. ^ a b Beaton, Cecil (1933). The Book Of Beauty. Retrieved 19 January 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Obituary: Deirdre Bland". The Independent. 1998. Retrieved 21 January 2018.
  3. ^ a b The Tatler, 1929
  4. ^ Theroff, Paul: Theroff Files (j1d.txt), listing descendants of King James VI & I of England and Scotland.
  5. ^ "Rupert and Deirdre Hart-Davis as Children (also known as Children of Mr. and Mrs. Hart-Davis)". The Athenaeum. Retrieved 21 January 2018.
  6. ^ Gosling, Lucinda (2013). Debutantes and the London Season. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 55. ISBN 9780747813392. Retrieved 21 January 2018.
  7. ^ "The Sketch: A Journal of Art and Actuality, Volume 147". 147. 1929: 413. Retrieved 21 January 2018. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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