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Maria Britneva

Maria Britneva, Baroness St Just, (2 July 1921 – 15 February 1994) was a Russian-British actress who was a close friend of Tennessee Williams. As co-trustee of the trust which he set up for his sister, she became his literary executor.


The Lady St Just
Born
Maria Alexandrovna Britneva

(1921-07-02)2 July 1921
Died15 February 1994(1994-02-15) (aged 72)
London, England
Other namesMaria Britnewa, Maria St. Just
OccupationActress
Years active1947–87
Spouse
(m. 1956; died 1984)
Children3

Early life edit

Maria Britneva was born in Petrograd in the Soviet Union. Her mother, Mary Britneva, was British by birth, a daughter of Charles Herbert Bucknall, business partner in St Petersburg of the French wholesale gem dealers Leo and Georges Sachs. Her father, Alexander Britnev, was a physician who served in the Red Army and was shot by the Stalinists in the purges of 1930. He was rehabilitated (his reputation restored) in 1969.[1] In the summer of 1922, when Britneva was just thirteen months old, her mother left Russia and emigrated to England, taking with her Maria and her brother Vladimir.[1] She was brought up in Hammersmith, where her mother settled and worked as a translator of Chekhov,[2] and also by teaching Russian and French.[1] In 1939, when registered at the outset of the Second World War, her mother was living in Fulham and stated her occupation as “writer and translator” and her date of birth as 3 April 1894.[3] Britneva represented her paternal grandfather as having been court physician at Tsarskoye Selo, but no record has been traced of him.[1]

As a child, Britneva studied ballet with Tamara Karsavina and was known as "the little grasshopper" for her ability to jump high, but later she could not pursue a career as a dancer because she was too small[2] or because of foot trouble and, she said, overly large breasts.[1] She instead studied acting at Michel Saint-Denis's London Theatre Studio school,[1] where she was a contemporary of Peter Ustinov,[4] and John Gielgud employed her in his London theatre company, but he and others considered her a poor actress.[1][5]

Personal life: Tennessee Williams edit

In 1948, at a party at Gielgud's house, Britneva met Tennessee Williams,[1] and fell in love with him.[2] They corresponded for some time,[6] and then she moved to New York, where in the early 1950s she lived in a small flat.[1] Britneva wanted more than friendship, and fantasized to Arthur Miller about Williams wanting to marry her.[1] She discussed the friendship with a psychotherapist, but essentially Britneva and Williams were close friends.[7]

Williams arranged parts for Britneva in performances of some of his plays; these were not much praised.[1] He wrote epitaphs for her diabetic cousin, with whom she had been brought up,[7] and her bulldog, who always snarled at him.[8]

Britneva often traveled with Williams and his partner Frank Merlo;[6] at one point, he said he felt guilty about using her as bait to attract others.[9] She was reported to be the inspiration for the character of Maggie in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.[6][10] The biographer of Gore Vidal, who was close to Britneva and Williams, says of Britneva that she "cast herself in the role of devoted sister-caretaker"[11] while a biographer of James Laughlin says she was "Tennessee's confidant and protective demon".[12] In an article published in The New Yorker soon after her death, John Lahr wrote that he believed Britneva reminded Williams of his mother.[1]

In 1955, Williams said after Britneva’s opening night performance as Blanche in A Streetcar Named Desire, in a production in Florida, "I thought I had written a good play till I saw her in it."[13]

Personal life: others edit

Britneva had other entanglements while in the US. She was rumoured to have slept with Marlon Brando,[14] and other affairs included one with John Huston; according to some reports, she had an abortion in 1951.[1][15]

Britneva fell in love with James Laughlin,[16] and in 1954 they became engaged to be married. Williams was reported as saying that for him this would be an "old-time happy ending", because Britneva and Laughlin had "a similar place in my heart"; but Laughlin broke off the engagement.[1] He has been quoted as saying that life with Britneva would have been too restless, and that he had not realized how committed she was to the theatre.[17] One assessment is that Laughlin became "terrified" of Britneva's "castrating willfulness".[18]

 
Wilbury House

In 1956, Britneva met an English peer, Peter Grenfell, second Lord St Just, and married him on 25 July 1956.[2] Her mother had been in Canada and returned to England, arriving the day after the wedding. She was then of 24, Tennyson Mansions, Hammersmith.[19]

In marrying St Just, Britneva became the stepmother of Laura Claire Grenfell, his six-year-old daughter by his first wife, Leslie Nast, daughter of Condé Nast. With him, she had two daughters of her own, Katherine Grenfell (born 1957),[20] known as Pulcheria,[6] and Natasha Jeannine Mary Grenfell (born 1959).[20] One of her daughters had as a godfather Franco Zeffirelli, a good friend of Britneva’s.[21]

Britneva kept up her friendship with Williams, who was a frequent visitor to Wilbury House, her new home in England. [6]

In 1964, Britneva’s mother died at the St George’s Retreat, Burgess Hill, West Sussex, and was buried in Earl's Court, her funeral being conducted by the Russian Orthodox Bishop of Great Britain, Nikodem.[22]

Later years edit

Britneva and Williams continued to write to each other, until shortly before his death in 1983.[23] She was increasingly protective of him, going so far as to attempt to push his brother Dakin off a catwalk at the Lyceum Theatre after the Broadway opening of Out Cry in 1973.[1][14] In 1975, Williams angered Britneva by mentioning her only briefly in his memoirs, in which he referred to her as "an occasional actress" and said she was "afflicted with folie de grandeur". At her insistence, he wrote an apology, claiming that editors had cut down his description of "this richly sustaining attachment".[1][24] She was certainly the model for the Countess in his play This Is (1976).[1][2] She was sometimes cruel to the other women in his life,[2] and probably caused him to dismiss his agent Audrey Wood.[1][13] Late in his life, some friends were sure she supplied Williams with drugs.[1][13] However, at the end of his life, his friendship for her was cooling.[1]

Williams named Maria St Just as co-trustee (with John Eastman, a celebrity lawyer and the brother of Linda McCartney) of the trust for his lobotomized sister, Rose. This had the effect of making her his literary executor, since the copyrights to his works were vested in the trust. In this role, she fiercely defended his legacy, to an extent that many found excessive, such as involving herself in casting and advising actors, denying scholars access to Williams's papers, demanding the right to vet the manuscript of the authorized biography, and rescinding permission that Williams had granted to Lyle Leverich for such a biography.[1] She also refused permission for a biography by Margot Peters.[25] Lahr describes her as considering herself "Williams' widow without a ring".[1]

In 1981, Britneva’s daughter Katherine married Oliver Gilmour and had two children, Natalia Claire Gilmour (born 1981) and Marco Oliver Gilmour (1988). This marriage ended in divorce.[20]

Lord St Just died in 1986,[20] and in 1990 Britneva published a collection of her correspondence with Williams, under the title Five O'Clock Angel: Letters of Tennessee Williams to Maria St. Just, 1948–1982.[23] This book was adapted for the stage by Kit Hesketh-Harvey.[2] In the book, Britneva changes Brooks Atkinson's review in The New York Times of her 1955 performance as Blanche in A Streetcar Named Desire from a pan to a rave.[1][14]

Britneva died in London in February 1994. The cause of death was heart failure as a result of rheumatoid arthritis.[2][15] On her instructions, she was buried at Wilbury House, the Grenfell country house in Wiltshire, with her dogs rather than with her in-laws, with whom she did not get on well.[1][21]

Films edit

Britneva had minor parts in several films: Peccato che sia una Canaglia (1954; English title Too Bad She's Bad); The Scapegoat (1959); Suddenly, Last Summer (1959); The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone (1961); A Room with a View (1985); and Maurice (1987).[26]

Year Title Role Notes
1952 Moulin Rouge Woman Mistaken for Marie Uncredited
1954 Too Bad She's Bad English tourist
1959 The Scapegoat Maid
1959 Suddenly, Last Summer Lucy
1961 The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone Principessa Bonmeni Uncredited
1985 A Room with a View Mrs Vyse, Cecil's mother
1987 Maurice Mrs. Sheepshanks (final film role)

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x John Lahr, "The Lady and Tennessee", The New Yorker, 19 December 1994.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Kit Hesketh-Harvey, "Obituary: Maria St Just", The Independent, 24 February 1994.
  3. ^ National Registration Act 1939, register for Fulham, ancestry.co.uk, accessed 7 December 2020 (subscription required)
  4. ^ Ian Herbert, Christine Baxter, Robert E. Finley, Who's who in the Theatre: A Biographical Record of the Contemporary Stage, Volume 16 (Pitman, 1977), p. 1202
  5. ^ Ian S. MacNiven, "Literchoor Is My Beat": A Life of James Laughlin, Publisher of New Directions, New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2014, ISBN 978-0-374-29939-2, p. 303: "[S]he was too indelibly herself to assume any stage role convincingly."
  6. ^ a b c d e Kim Hubbard, "The Original Maggie the Cat, Maria St. Just, Remembers Her Loving Friend Tennessee Williams", People, 2 April 1990.
  7. ^ a b "A Wreath for Alexandra Molostvova", The Collected Poems of Tennessee Williams, ed. David Roessel and Nicholas Moschovakis, New York: New Directions, 2002, ISBN 9780811215084, notes, p. 225.
  8. ^ William B. Collins, "Maggie the Cat the Inspiration for The Tennessee Williams Heroine Was Thrilled at First. Then She Became Furious", The Philadelphia Inquirer, 29 June 1990.
  9. ^ Brenda Murphy, The Theatre of Tennessee Williams, Critical Companions, New York: Bloomsbury Methuen Drama, 2014, ISBN 9781780930251, p. 122.
  10. ^ MacNiven, p. 304.
  11. ^ Fred Kaplan, Gore Vidal: A Biography, New York: Doubleday, 1999, ISBN 9780385477031, n.p.
  12. ^ MacNiven, p. 254
  13. ^ a b c Richard Freeman Leavitt and W. Kenneth Holditch, The World of Tennessee Williams, East Brunswick, New Jersey: Hansen, 2011, ISBN 9781601820013, n.p..
  14. ^ a b c Sam Staggs, When Blanche Met Brando: The Scandalous Story of "A Streetcar Named Desire", New York: St. Martin's, 2005, ISBN 9780312321642, pp. 284–85.
  15. ^ a b MacNiven, p. 479
  16. ^ Greg Barnhisel, "The Man Who Made American Modernism and Modernism American: James Laughlin, champion of literature", Humanities 37.1, January/February 2016.
  17. ^ MacNiven, pp. 284, 296–300
  18. ^ Lahr, Tennessee Williams: Mad Pilgrimage of the Flesh, New York / London: Norton, 2014, ISBN 9780393021240, p. 104
  19. ^ UK and Ireland, Incoming Passenger Lists, 1878-1960, ancestry.co.uk, R.M.S. “Ivernia”, Montreal P. Q. to Liverpool, Date of arrival 26th July 1956: “Britnieva Mary F 21/03/1894, 24 Tennyson Mansions, Queen's Club Gardens, W14”
  20. ^ a b c d Charles Mosley, ed., Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage, 107th edition, volume 2 (2003), p. 1658
  21. ^ a b Rupert Everett, Red Carpets and Other Banana Skins: The Autobiography, London: Abacus, 2007, n.p.
  22. ^ Register of Burials in the West of London and Westminster Cemetery, 203410 Britneva Mary, St George’s Retreat, Burgess Hill, Nov. 18 1964, ancestry.co.uk (subscription required); “BRITNEVA Mary / 70 / Lewes / 5H 526” in General Index of Deaths in England and Wales (1964, Oct–Dec quarter)
  23. ^ a b Tennessee Williams and Maria St. Just, Five O'Clock Angel: Letters of Tennessee Williams to Maria St. Just, 1948–1982, New York: Knopf, 1990, ISBN 9780394564272.
  24. ^ Edmund White, "Sincerely Theirs: Letters as Literature", The New York Times, 27 May 1990, a review of Five O'Clock Angel
  25. ^ MacNiven, p. 465.
  26. ^ , British Film Institute. Retrieved 12 January 2016.

External links edit

  • Maria Britneva at IMDb

maria, britneva, baroness, just, july, 1921, february, 1994, russian, british, actress, close, friend, tennessee, williams, trustee, trust, which, sister, became, literary, executor, right, honourablethe, lady, justbornmaria, alexandrovna, britneva, 1921, july. Maria Britneva Baroness St Just 2 July 1921 15 February 1994 was a Russian British actress who was a close friend of Tennessee Williams As co trustee of the trust which he set up for his sister she became his literary executor The Right HonourableThe Lady St JustBornMaria Alexandrovna Britneva 1921 07 02 2 July 1921PetrogradDied15 February 1994 1994 02 15 aged 72 London EnglandOther namesMaria Britnewa Maria St JustOccupationActressYears active1947 87SpousePeter Grenfell 2nd Baron St Just m 1956 died 1984 wbr Children3 Contents 1 Early life 2 Personal life Tennessee Williams 3 Personal life others 4 Later years 5 Films 6 References 7 External linksEarly life editMaria Britneva was born in Petrograd in the Soviet Union Her mother Mary Britneva was British by birth a daughter of Charles Herbert Bucknall business partner in St Petersburg of the French wholesale gem dealers Leo and Georges Sachs Her father Alexander Britnev was a physician who served in the Red Army and was shot by the Stalinists in the purges of 1930 He was rehabilitated his reputation restored in 1969 1 In the summer of 1922 when Britneva was just thirteen months old her mother left Russia and emigrated to England taking with her Maria and her brother Vladimir 1 She was brought up in Hammersmith where her mother settled and worked as a translator of Chekhov 2 and also by teaching Russian and French 1 In 1939 when registered at the outset of the Second World War her mother was living in Fulham and stated her occupation as writer and translator and her date of birth as 3 April 1894 3 Britneva represented her paternal grandfather as having been court physician at Tsarskoye Selo but no record has been traced of him 1 As a child Britneva studied ballet with Tamara Karsavina and was known as the little grasshopper for her ability to jump high but later she could not pursue a career as a dancer because she was too small 2 or because of foot trouble and she said overly large breasts 1 She instead studied acting at Michel Saint Denis s London Theatre Studio school 1 where she was a contemporary of Peter Ustinov 4 and John Gielgud employed her in his London theatre company but he and others considered her a poor actress 1 5 Personal life Tennessee Williams editIn 1948 at a party at Gielgud s house Britneva met Tennessee Williams 1 and fell in love with him 2 They corresponded for some time 6 and then she moved to New York where in the early 1950s she lived in a small flat 1 Britneva wanted more than friendship and fantasized to Arthur Miller about Williams wanting to marry her 1 She discussed the friendship with a psychotherapist but essentially Britneva and Williams were close friends 7 Williams arranged parts for Britneva in performances of some of his plays these were not much praised 1 He wrote epitaphs for her diabetic cousin with whom she had been brought up 7 and her bulldog who always snarled at him 8 Britneva often traveled with Williams and his partner Frank Merlo 6 at one point he said he felt guilty about using her as bait to attract others 9 She was reported to be the inspiration for the character of Maggie in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof 6 10 The biographer of Gore Vidal who was close to Britneva and Williams says of Britneva that she cast herself in the role of devoted sister caretaker 11 while a biographer of James Laughlin says she was Tennessee s confidant and protective demon 12 In an article published in The New Yorker soon after her death John Lahr wrote that he believed Britneva reminded Williams of his mother 1 In 1955 Williams said after Britneva s opening night performance as Blanche in A Streetcar Named Desire in a production in Florida I thought I had written a good play till I saw her in it 13 Personal life others editBritneva had other entanglements while in the US She was rumoured to have slept with Marlon Brando 14 and other affairs included one with John Huston according to some reports she had an abortion in 1951 1 15 Britneva fell in love with James Laughlin 16 and in 1954 they became engaged to be married Williams was reported as saying that for him this would be an old time happy ending because Britneva and Laughlin had a similar place in my heart but Laughlin broke off the engagement 1 He has been quoted as saying that life with Britneva would have been too restless and that he had not realized how committed she was to the theatre 17 One assessment is that Laughlin became terrified of Britneva s castrating willfulness 18 nbsp Wilbury HouseIn 1956 Britneva met an English peer Peter Grenfell second Lord St Just and married him on 25 July 1956 2 Her mother had been in Canada and returned to England arriving the day after the wedding She was then of 24 Tennyson Mansions Hammersmith 19 In marrying St Just Britneva became the stepmother of Laura Claire Grenfell his six year old daughter by his first wife Leslie Nast daughter of Conde Nast With him she had two daughters of her own Katherine Grenfell born 1957 20 known as Pulcheria 6 and Natasha Jeannine Mary Grenfell born 1959 20 One of her daughters had as a godfather Franco Zeffirelli a good friend of Britneva s 21 Britneva kept up her friendship with Williams who was a frequent visitor to Wilbury House her new home in England 6 In 1964 Britneva s mother died at the St George s Retreat Burgess Hill West Sussex and was buried in Earl s Court her funeral being conducted by the Russian Orthodox Bishop of Great Britain Nikodem 22 Later years editBritneva and Williams continued to write to each other until shortly before his death in 1983 23 She was increasingly protective of him going so far as to attempt to push his brother Dakin off a catwalk at the Lyceum Theatre after the Broadway opening of Out Cry in 1973 1 14 In 1975 Williams angered Britneva by mentioning her only briefly in his memoirs in which he referred to her as an occasional actress and said she was afflicted with folie de grandeur At her insistence he wrote an apology claiming that editors had cut down his description of this richly sustaining attachment 1 24 She was certainly the model for the Countess in his play This Is 1976 1 2 She was sometimes cruel to the other women in his life 2 and probably caused him to dismiss his agent Audrey Wood 1 13 Late in his life some friends were sure she supplied Williams with drugs 1 13 However at the end of his life his friendship for her was cooling 1 Williams named Maria St Just as co trustee with John Eastman a celebrity lawyer and the brother of Linda McCartney of the trust for his lobotomized sister Rose This had the effect of making her his literary executor since the copyrights to his works were vested in the trust In this role she fiercely defended his legacy to an extent that many found excessive such as involving herself in casting and advising actors denying scholars access to Williams s papers demanding the right to vet the manuscript of the authorized biography and rescinding permission that Williams had granted to Lyle Leverich for such a biography 1 She also refused permission for a biography by Margot Peters 25 Lahr describes her as considering herself Williams widow without a ring 1 In 1981 Britneva s daughter Katherine married Oliver Gilmour and had two children Natalia Claire Gilmour born 1981 and Marco Oliver Gilmour 1988 This marriage ended in divorce 20 Lord St Just died in 1986 20 and in 1990 Britneva published a collection of her correspondence with Williams under the title Five O Clock Angel Letters of Tennessee Williams to Maria St Just 1948 1982 23 This book was adapted for the stage by Kit Hesketh Harvey 2 In the book Britneva changes Brooks Atkinson s review in The New York Times of her 1955 performance as Blanche in A Streetcar Named Desire from a pan to a rave 1 14 Britneva died in London in February 1994 The cause of death was heart failure as a result of rheumatoid arthritis 2 15 On her instructions she was buried at Wilbury House the Grenfell country house in Wiltshire with her dogs rather than with her in laws with whom she did not get on well 1 21 Films editBritneva had minor parts in several films Peccato che sia una Canaglia 1954 English title Too Bad She s Bad The Scapegoat 1959 Suddenly Last Summer 1959 The Roman Spring of Mrs Stone 1961 A Room with a View 1985 and Maurice 1987 26 Year Title Role Notes1952 Moulin Rouge Woman Mistaken for Marie Uncredited1954 Too Bad She s Bad English tourist1959 The Scapegoat Maid1959 Suddenly Last Summer Lucy1961 The Roman Spring of Mrs Stone Principessa Bonmeni Uncredited1985 A Room with a View Mrs Vyse Cecil s mother1987 Maurice Mrs Sheepshanks final film role References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x John Lahr The Lady and Tennessee The New Yorker 19 December 1994 a b c d e f g h Kit Hesketh Harvey Obituary Maria St Just The Independent 24 February 1994 National Registration Act 1939 register for Fulham ancestry co uk accessed 7 December 2020 subscription required Ian Herbert Christine Baxter Robert E Finley Who s who in the Theatre A Biographical Record of the Contemporary Stage Volume 16 Pitman 1977 p 1202 Ian S MacNiven Literchoor Is My Beat A Life of James Laughlin Publisher of New Directions New York Farrar Straus and Giroux 2014 ISBN 978 0 374 29939 2 p 303 S he was too indelibly herself to assume any stage role convincingly a b c d e Kim Hubbard The Original Maggie the Cat Maria St Just Remembers Her Loving Friend Tennessee Williams People 2 April 1990 a b A Wreath for Alexandra Molostvova The Collected Poems of Tennessee Williams ed David Roessel and Nicholas Moschovakis New York New Directions 2002 ISBN 9780811215084 notes p 225 William B Collins Maggie the Cat the Inspiration for The Tennessee Williams Heroine Was Thrilled at First Then She Became Furious The Philadelphia Inquirer 29 June 1990 Brenda Murphy The Theatre of Tennessee Williams Critical Companions New York Bloomsbury Methuen Drama 2014 ISBN 9781780930251 p 122 MacNiven p 304 Fred Kaplan Gore Vidal A Biography New York Doubleday 1999 ISBN 9780385477031 n p MacNiven p 254 a b c Richard Freeman Leavitt and W Kenneth Holditch The World of Tennessee Williams East Brunswick New Jersey Hansen 2011 ISBN 9781601820013 n p a b c Sam Staggs When Blanche Met Brando The Scandalous Story of A Streetcar Named Desire New York St Martin s 2005 ISBN 9780312321642 pp 284 85 a b MacNiven p 479 Greg Barnhisel The Man Who Made American Modernism and Modernism American James Laughlin champion of literature Humanities 37 1 January February 2016 MacNiven pp 284 296 300 Lahr Tennessee Williams Mad Pilgrimage of the Flesh New York London Norton 2014 ISBN 9780393021240 p 104 UK and Ireland Incoming Passenger Lists 1878 1960 ancestry co uk R M S Ivernia Montreal P Q to Liverpool Date of arrival 26th July 1956 Britnieva Mary F 21 03 1894 24 Tennyson Mansions Queen s Club Gardens W14 a b c d Charles Mosley ed Burke s Peerage Baronetage amp Knightage 107th edition volume 2 2003 p 1658 a b Rupert Everett Red Carpets and Other Banana Skins The Autobiography London Abacus 2007 n p Register of Burials in the West of London and Westminster Cemetery 203410 Britneva Mary St George s Retreat Burgess Hill Nov 18 1964 ancestry co uk subscription required BRITNEVA Mary 70 Lewes 5H 526 in General Index of Deaths in England and Wales 1964 Oct Dec quarter a b Tennessee Williams and Maria St Just Five O Clock Angel Letters of Tennessee Williams to Maria St Just 1948 1982 New York Knopf 1990 ISBN 9780394564272 Edmund White Sincerely Theirs Letters as Literature The New York Times 27 May 1990 a review of Five O Clock Angel MacNiven p 465 Maria Britneva British Film Institute Retrieved 12 January 2016 External links editMaria Britneva at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maria Britneva amp oldid 1212764139, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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