Betsy Drake
Betsy Drake (September 11, 1923 – October 27, 2015) was an American actress, writer, and psychotherapist best known for her roles in mid-20th-century films and her marriage to actor Cary Grant.[1] Born Betsy Gordon Drake in Paris, France, to American expatriate parents—a writer and travel agency owner—she spent much of her childhood moving between the United States and Europe, attending 12 different schools before settling in the U.S. as a teenager.[2] After studying acting at a junior college in Washington, D.C., and a theater school, she debuted on screen in 1948 with the romantic comedy Every Girl Should Be Married, playing a determined young woman pursuing Grant's character.[3] She appeared in approximately 10 films over the next two decades, including Room for One More (1952), another collaboration with Grant, and Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (1957), before largely retiring from acting following her divorce.[1] Drake met Grant aboard the RMS Queen Mary in 1947 and married him on December 25, 1949, in a small ceremony in Arizona; the union produced no children and ended in divorce in 1962 amid Grant's reported infatuation with Sophia Loren, with Drake receiving a settlement exceeding $1 million plus a share of earnings from 13 of his films.[2] During their marriage, she contributed uncredited writing to the screenplay for Houseboat (1958), a film starring Grant and Loren, and introduced him to LSD therapy, which he later credited with personal insights.[3] In 1956, while traveling alone on the Italian liner Andrea Doria, she survived its collision with the Stockholm off Nantucket, escaping with her life but losing $200,000 in uninsured jewelry and a manuscript for a novel.[1] After the divorce, Drake shifted focus to psychotherapy, studying at the UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute and earning a Master of Education degree from Harvard University, where she specialized in psychodrama therapy for children.[2] She directed psychodrama programs at UCLA and authored the children's book Children, You Are Very Little in 1971, while also writing poetry and painting.[3] In her later years, she lived quietly in London, remaining single, cycling into her 80s, and avoiding public discussion of her time with Grant until her death at age 92.[2]Early life
Family background and childhood
Betsy Drake was born Betsy Gordon Drake on September 11, 1923, in Neuilly-sur-Seine near Paris, France, to American expatriate parents Carlos Corey Drake and Ann Gordon Keith.[4] Her father wrote short stories and ran an exclusive travel agency, while her mother came from a prosperous background.[2] The family enjoyed affluence tied to Drake's paternal grandfather, Tracy Drake, who had co-founded and built the renowned Drake and Blackstone Hotels in Chicago earlier in the century.[5] As the eldest of at least two children, including a younger brother Carlos Drake Jr., Drake spent her earliest years in Paris, where her parents embraced the vibrant social scene of the Roaring Twenties.[3][2] The family's stability unraveled with the 1929 stock market crash, which devastated their wealth and led to the dissolution of her parents' marriage.[3] At around age six, Drake relocated to the United States with her family aboard the SS Île de France, marking the beginning of a chaotic and nomadic childhood.[6] She often resided in a suite at a Chicago hotel under the care of a nanny, while her parents lived separately in another hotel, reflecting the emotional and physical distance in the family dynamic.[2] The financial ruin forced the family to relocate frequently, eventually settling in New York City, where hardships persisted amid the Great Depression.[6] Drake's upbringing involved being shuttled among relatives along the East Coast and attending numerous schools across the country—reportedly as many as 12 institutions—due to the instability following her parents' separation.[2] She lived with extended family members during periods of parental absence, contributing to a peripatetic existence marked by relocation and adaptation.[5] This fragmented childhood, shaped by economic collapse and familial discord, contrasted sharply with the privilege of her early Parisian years and influenced her later independence.[3]Education
Betsy Drake's early education was marked by instability due to her family's peripatetic lifestyle, leading her to attend twelve different private and public schools across the United States.[2] Among these, she enrolled at the all-girls Madeira School, a boarding school in McLean, Virginia, where she completed her secondary education before leaving at age 17.[7] Drake developed an early interest in theater during her time at a theater school in Washington, D.C., which honed her acting aspirations and prompted her to forgo further formal schooling to pursue a career in modeling and performance in New York City.[8]Career
Acting career
Betsy Drake entered the acting profession after working as a model and performing on Broadway in the mid-1940s, where she served as an assistant stage manager and understudy in productions such as Only the Heart and The Moon and the Yellow River.[5] Her transition to Hollywood came in 1947, facilitated by Cary Grant, whom she met aboard the Queen Mary; Grant arranged her contract with RKO Pictures through producer David O. Selznick after seeing her perform in London.[6] Drake made her film debut in 1948's romantic comedy Every Girl Should Be Married, portraying Anabel Sims, a determined young woman pursuing Grant's character, which marked the first of two on-screen collaborations between the couple before their real-life marriage in 1949.[9] She followed with supporting roles in Dancing in the Dark (1949) as Julie Clarke opposite William Powell and Pretty Baby (1950) as Patsy Douglas, a secretary using a fake baby to navigate city life.[5] In The Second Woman (1950), she played Ellen Foster in a film noir thriller alongside Robert Young, showcasing her versatility in dramatic parts.[10] Her second film with Grant, Room for One More (1952), cast her as Anna Perrott Rose, a foster mother in a family-oriented comedy that highlighted her wholesome screen persona.[9] After a hiatus influenced by her marriage and personal interests in writing and psychology, Drake returned in 1957 for Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?, appearing as Jenny Wells in the satirical comedy with Jayne Mansfield.[5] Subsequent roles included Next to No Time (1958) as Georgie Brant, a British comedy, and Intent to Kill (1958) as Dr. Nancy Ferguson in a suspense thriller.[9] Drake's film career, spanning nine features from 1948 to 1965, emphasized light comedies and occasional dramas, often leveraging her poised, intelligent demeanor.[1] She also appeared in television, including episodes of Wanted: Dead or Alive (1958) and General Electric Theater (1953).[10] By the mid-1960s, following her role as Julie Harper in Clarence, the Cross-Eyed Lion (1965), she retired from acting to pursue psychotherapy, psychodrama therapy, and writing, reflecting a deliberate shift away from Hollywood.[5]Writing and psychotherapy
Following her acting career, Betsy Drake pursued writing, beginning with an unpublished story that served as the basis for the 1958 film Houseboat. Written under the pseudonym B. Winkle, the story inspired the screenplay by Melville Shavelson and Jack Rose, though Drake received no onscreen credit.[11] In 1971, she published her novel Children, You Are Very Little under the name Betsy Drake Grant, a work exploring the perspective of an eight-year-old girl navigating a fractured family and challenging adult authority to foster reconciliation.[2] Later in life, Drake also composed poetry, reflecting her ongoing literary interests.[2] Drake's engagement with psychotherapy stemmed from personal exploration, particularly after her 1958 separation from Cary Grant. She began weekly sessions with a Hollywood therapist using LSD, which was legal at the time, to address childhood trauma and marital difficulties; in her first session, she reportedly relived her birth experience.[2] This led her to introduce Grant to LSD therapy, which he underwent over 100 times for self-improvement.[2] Professionally, she shifted focus to children's therapy, earning a Master of Education degree from Harvard University and training at the UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute.[2] In the 1960s, Drake joined the UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute as director of psychodrama therapy, where she guided patients, including children, in enacting emotions and scenarios to process trauma.[3] She worked with families at community mental health centers, teaching psychodrama techniques to facilitate emotional expression.[2] By 1976, she served as director of the Psychodrama Therapy Department at Thalian's Mental Health Clinic, affiliated with Cedars-Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles, specializing in child therapy to help young patients confront personal histories through role-playing.[12] Drake maintained a private psychodrama practice and continued this work after relocating to London in the 1980s.[12]Personal life
Marriages and relationships
Betsy Drake met Cary Grant in 1947 in London, where he saw her perform in the play Deep Are the Roots.[2] Their relationship developed during the return voyage to the United States aboard the Queen Mary.[1] On Christmas Day 1949, the couple married in a private ceremony at a farmhouse in Scottsdale, Arizona, after being secretly flown there by Howard Hughes, who served as Grant's best man.[7] At the time, Grant was 45 and Drake was 26, marking the third of Grant's five marriages and his longest-lasting one.[2] During their marriage, Drake largely retired from acting to focus on domestic life, cooking for Grant and supporting his career.[2] The couple collaborated professionally, co-starring in the 1952 film Room for One More and appearing together on the radio series Mr. and Mrs. Blandings.[7] Drake also contributed an uncredited original screenplay to the 1958 film Houseboat, which starred Grant and Sophia Loren.[1] In the 1950s, Drake introduced Grant to LSD therapy under psychiatric supervision, an experience he reportedly underwent more than 100 times to address personal issues.[2] They explored shared interests in transcendentalism, yoga, and hypnosis, with Drake studying the latter to help Grant quit smoking and drinking.[3] Tensions arose during the 1957 production of The Pride and the Passion in Spain, where Grant developed an infatuation with co-star Sophia Loren, straining the marriage.[3] The couple separated in 1958 amid reports of Grant's affairs, though they remained "intimately estranged" for a period.[1] Their divorce was finalized in 1962, with Drake receiving a settlement exceeding $1 million plus a percentage of earnings from 13 films Grant produced during their marriage; she cited his emotional disinterest as a factor.[2] Following the divorce, Drake did not remarry and had no children. She pursued psychotherapy training in the United States before relocating to London in her later years, where she maintained a close platonic friendship with painter Bernard Perlin, but no other romantic relationships are documented.[7]Notable incidents and later years
In 1956, while returning from visiting her husband Cary Grant on the set of The Pride and the Passion in Spain, Drake survived the sinking of the Italian ocean liner SS Andrea Doria after it collided with the Swedish liner MS Stockholm off the coast of Nantucket, Massachusetts.[2] She was traveling first-class and escaped unharmed via lifeboat, but lost over $200,000 worth of uninsured jewelry stored in the ship's vault, along with an unpublished novel manuscript she had been working on.[13] The disaster, one of the last major transatlantic liner tragedies before the dominance of air travel, claimed 46 lives and marked a pivotal moment in Drake's life as she navigated the aftermath amid her strained marriage.[14] In her later years in London, Drake lived independently, engaging in writing poetry, painting, and cycling into her 80s; she never remarried and had no children.[2] She died at her home there on October 27, 2015, at the age of 92.[7]Works
Filmography
Betsy Drake's film career, active primarily in the late 1940s and 1950s, featured her in nine feature films, where she portrayed a range of characters from romantic leads to supporting roles in comedies, dramas, and thrillers.[9] Her debut role came opposite Cary Grant in the romantic comedy Every Girl Should Be Married (1948), marking her entry into Hollywood as a poised ingenue. She continued with lighthearted and dramatic parts, often highlighting her elegant screen presence, before retiring from acting in the mid-1960s to pursue writing and psychotherapy.[10] The following table lists her film credits chronologically, including roles where documented:| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 1948 | Every Girl Should Be Married | Anabel Sims[9] |
| 1949 | Dancing in the Dark | Julie Clarke[9] |
| 1950 | Pretty Baby | Patsy Douglas[9] |
| 1950 | The Second Woman | Ellen Foster[9] |
| 1952 | Room for One More | Anna Perrott Rose[9] |
| 1957 | Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? | Jenny Wells[9] |
| 1958 | Next to No Time | Georgie Brant[9] |
| 1958 | Intent to Kill | Dr. Nancy Ferguson[9] |
| 1965 | Clarence, the Cross-Eyed Lion | Julie Harper[9] |
Television credits
Betsy Drake's television career was brief, consisting of two guest appearances in the late 1950s on popular anthology and Western series, reflecting her transition from film roles to occasional small-screen work during a period when she was also focusing on writing and personal interests. These roles showcased her versatility in dramatic and light comedic scenarios typical of the era's episodic programming. Her first documented television role was in the anthology series General Electric Theater, where she portrayed Ellie, a romantic lead, in the episode "A Question of Romance," which aired on November 9, 1958..htm) Hosted by Ronald Reagan, the episode featured a storyline involving matchmaking and quiz show antics, with Drake sharing the screen alongside John Kerr and George Fenneman.[15] In 1959, Drake appeared in the Western series Wanted: Dead or Alive as Lucy Fremont, a seamstress entangled in a murder scheme, in the episode "The Spurs," which aired on January 17..htm) Starring Steve McQueen as bounty hunter Josh Randall, the half-hour drama highlighted themes of deception and frontier justice, with Drake's character central to the plot's intrigue.[16]| Year | Series | Episode | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1958 | General Electric Theater | "A Question of Romance" | Ellie | Anthology drama; aired on CBS..htm) |
| 1959 | Wanted: Dead or Alive | "The Spurs" | Lucy Fremont | Western episode; aired on CBS..htm) |