Maria Britneva

Maria Britneva
Born (1921-07-02)2 July 1921
Petrograd
Died 15 February 1994(1994-02-15) (aged 72)
London, England
Other names Maria Britnewa
Occupation Actress
Years active 194787
Spouse(s) Peter Grenfell (195686)
Children 3

Maria Britneva, later Lady Maria St Just (2 July 1921 – 15 February 1994) was a Russian-British actress who was a friend of Tennessee Williams and his literary executor.

Life and career

Maria Britneva was born in Petrograd in the Soviet Union. When she was 13 months old, her mother emigrated to England with her and her brother Vladimir,[1] and she was raised in Hammersmith.[2] She represented her paternal grandfather as having been court physician at Tsarskoye Selo and her father as having been murdered in the Soviet purges shortly after she came to England, but there is no record of the former and her father, also a physician, served in the Red Army, and although he was shot by the Stalinists in 1930, was rehabilitated in 1969, while her mother was British by birth.[1]

She studied ballet with Tamara Karsavina as a child and was known as "the little grasshopper" for her ability to jump high, but could not pursue a professional career either 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 school,[1] and John Gielgud employed her in his London theatre company, but he and others considered her a poor actress.[1][3] After meeting Tennessee Williams, she moved to New York, where she lived in a small flat in the 1950s and he arranged parts for her in performances of some of his plays; again her performances were not much praised[1] and Williams himself said after her opening performance as Blanche in A Streetcar Named Desire in Florida, "I thought I had written a good play till I saw her in it."[4]

She appeared in five films: Peccato che sia una Canaglia (1954; English title Too Bad She's Bad); The Scapegoat (1958); Suddenly, Last Summer (1960); A Room with a View (1985); and Maurice (1987).[5]

Friendship with Tennessee Williams

Britneva met Tennessee Williams in 1948 at a party at Gielgud's house.[1][6] They became lifelong close friends—Williams wrote epitaphs for both her diabetic cousin, with whom she had been raised,[7] and her bulldog, who always snarled at him[8]—and she fell in love with him;[2] she consulted a psychotherapist about the relationship and fantasised to Arthur Miller about his wanting to marry her.[1] The biographers of Gore Vidal and James Laughlin, both of whom were close to both her and Williams, describe her as "cast[ing] herself in the role of devoted sister-caretaker"[9] and as "Tennessee's confidant and protective demon".[10] She often travelled with Williams and his partner, Frank Merlo;[6] at one point he felt guilty about using her as bait to attract others.[11] She was sometimes cruel to the other women in his life,[2] and probably caused him to dismiss his agent, Audrey Wood.[1][4] She was reportedly the inspiration for the character of Maggie in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof,[6][12] and was certainly the model for the Countess in This Is.[1][2] In an article published in The New Yorker soon after her death, John Lahr wrote that he believed she reminded him of his mother.[1] 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][13] late in his life, some friends were sure she supplied him with drugs.[1][4]

Williams angered her by mentioning her only briefly in his 1975 memoirs, where he dismissed her as "an occasional actress" and "afflicted with folie de grandeur". At her insistence, he wrote an apology saying that editors had cut down his description of "this richly sustaining attachment".[1][14] However, at the end of his life his friendship for her was cooling.[1]

Williams named Maria St Just co-trustee (with John Eastman, a celebrity lawyer and the brother of Linda McCartney) of the trust for his lobotomised sister, which made her his literary executor since the copyrights to his works were vested in the trust. 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 authorised biography, and rescinding permission that Williams himself had already granted to Lyle Leverich for such a biography.[1] She also refused permission for a biography by Margot Peters.[15] Lahr describes her as considering herself "Williams' widow without a ring".[1]

In 1990 she published a collection of her correspondence with Williams,[16] which was adapted for the stage by Kit Hesketh-Harvey.[2] In the book she changes Brooks Atkinson's review in the New York Times of her 1955 performance Off-Broadway as Blanche in A Streetcar Named Desire from a pan to a rave.[1][13]

Personal life and death

In addition to Williams, she was also romantically linked with James Laughlin;[17] in 1954 they became engaged, which Williams reportedly said would for him be an "old-time happy ending" since Britneva "[held] a similar place in [his] heart" with Laughlin; but Laughlin broke it off.[1][18][19] She was rumoured to have slept with Marlon Brando,[13] and other affairs included John Huston; according to Lahr, she had an abortion in 1951.[1][20]

In 1956 she married Peter Grenfell, the second Lord St Just; they had two daughters.[2] One of them had Franco Zeffirelli, another good friend, as godfather.[21] Lord St Just died in 1986.[6] She died in London of heart failure as a result of rheumatoid arthritis,[2][20] and is buried at Wilbury House, the Grenfell estate, with her dogs rather than with her in-laws, with whom she had a bad relationship.[1][21]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 John Lahr, "The Lady and Tennessee", The New Yorker, December 19, 1994.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Kit Hesketh-Harvey, "Obituary: Maria St Just", The Independent, 24 February 1994.
  3. 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."
  4. 1 2 3 Richard Freeman Leavitt and W. Kenneth Holditch, The World of Tennessee Williams, East Brunswick, New Jersey: Hansen, 2011, ISBN 9781601820013, n.p..
  5. "Maria Britneva", British Film Institute, retrieved 12 January 2016.
  6. 1 2 3 4 Kim Hubbard, "The Original Maggie the Cat, Maria St. Just, Remembers Her Loving Friend Tennessee Williams", People, 2 April 1990.
  7. "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 Enquirer, 29 June 1990.
  9. Fred Kaplan, Gore Vidal: A Biography, New York: Doubleday, 1999, ISBN 9780385477031, n.p.
  10. MacNiven, p. 254.
  11. Brenda Murphy, The Theatre of Tennessee Williams, Critical Companions, New York: Bloomsbury Methuen Drama, 2014, ISBN 9781780930251, p. 122.
  12. MacNiven, p. 304.
  13. 1 2 3 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.
  14. See also Edmund White, "Sincerely Theirs: Letters as Literature", The New York Times, 27 May 1990, review of Five O'Clock Angel with a quotation from it.
  15. MacNiven, p. 465.
  16. 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.
  17. Greg Barnhisel, "The Man Who Made American Modernism and Modernism American: James Laughlin, champion of literature", Humanities 37.1, January/February 2016.
  18. MacNiven, pp. 284, 296–300. MacNiven quotes Laughlin as saying life with Maria would have been too restless, and that he had not realised how committed she was to the theatre.
  19. In his Tennessee Williams: Mad Pilgrimage of the Flesh, New York / London: Norton, 2014, ISBN 9780393021240, Lahr writes that Laughlin was "terrified" of Britneva's "castrating willfulness".
  20. 1 2 MacNiven, p. 479.
  21. 1 2 Rupert Everett, Red Carpets and Other Banana Skins: The Autobiography, London: Abacus, 2007, n.p.

External links

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