screen rush
After the forgettable MGM outing "Green Fire" (1954), Kelly sought another loan-out to Paramount to work again with Hitchcock. In "To Catch a Thief" (1955), she also returned to her showcase character type; a flirty, devil-may-care debutant playing with intrigue, this time with Cary Grant as her on-screen love interest. Off-screen, during filming in the south of France, she entertained the overtures of a new brand of suitor, the 41-year-old fashion designer and international playboy, Oleg Cassini. Before the end of the shoot in the idyllic setting, Cassini, enraptured as so many before, casually broached marriage and Kelly accepted. But they returned to the U.S. to find Kelly's star going nova, as Life and The Hollywood Reporter had predicted, and their relationship already the subject of professional gossipmongers. That did not sit well with Jack and Margaret Kelly, who similarly considered Cassini beneath their pedigree and, when they met, went out of their way to alienate him. The Kellys' humiliating treatment and their daughter's tacit servility to them gave Cassini ominous pause about the future would-be marriage. Journalist John Glatt later suggested Kelly may have been pregnant by Cassini but, in the wake of the imbroglio with her family, had an abortion.
At the end of 1954, "The Country Girl" opened to critical raves, and The New York Drama Critics Circle gave Kelly even more ammunition in her renewed contract dust-up with MGM, naming her their "Best Actress of 1954." It would prove a harbinger of big things to come, and not just professionally. The next March, Kelly beat out Judy Garland, Jane Wyman, Audrey Hepburn and Dorothy Dandridge for the Academy Award for Best Actress for "The Country Girl." She had asked Cassini to beg off attendance for appearances' sake and later intimated she went home alone with her Oscar - though on biography suggested a more ribald after-party, with the Best Actor winner Brando slipping her his phone number during the post-event photo op and winding up in bed with her only a few hours later. According to the Kelly biography, Crosby, hoping to rekindle things, actually walked in on the couple in flagrante delicto. If that seemed an awkward celebration to the evening, Jack Kelly's backhanded response to the news may have topped it. "Of my four children," he told reporters, "she was the last one I'd expected to support me in my old age." But the accolade also led her to join the American delegation to the Cannes Film Festival, where in a famous photo op in the royal palace of the tiny, nearby principality of Monaco, she met its 31-year-old sovereign, Prince Rainier III. While the trip saw Kelly strike up a new relationship with France's foremost actor, Jean-Pierre Aumont, she also began a secret courtship of letters with the prince upon her return to the U.S.
Her next movie, "The Swan" (1956), would prove strangely prophetic, as it had when Kelly had starred in a teleplay version of it on CBS in 1950. In it, she plays the well-born scion who must choose between being true to herself or marrying a disinterested prince for the good of her country and family. In December 1955, Prince Rainier made a celebrated trip to the U.S., reputedly on the hunt for a princess, and while both had officially denied anything between them, his path led to the Kelly family's door in Philadelphia. After a courtly visit, he proposed. Not surprisingly, the Kelly family proved far more gracious to Rainier than to her previous beaus. The wedding was set for April 1956, and the news of the engagement swept through the media as a fairy tale come true. Grace went on to make "High Society," MGM's extravagant, if fluffy musical remake of the Oscar winning 1940 comedy "The Philadelphia Story," set to tunes by Cole Porter. It re-teamed Kelly with Crosby and new co-star Frank Sinatra, the husband of her friend Ava Gardner. It would be her last film, another dazzling turn as an independent-minded, sexy Kellyesque character, who sported the 12-carat diamond ring Rainier had given her in real life. It was not, reputedly, the last quality time she would spend with Sinatra.
Kelly and her entourage boarded the U.S.S. Constitution on April 4 with thousands of fans seeing her off from New York's Pier 84 and some 20,000 Monegasques lining the streets of her future kingdom to greet her at the end of the voyage. Conspicuously, Kelly received a chilly reception from her mother-in-law-to-be, Princess Charlotte, whose entire family would soon be appalled by the media circus that engulfed their kingdom. On April 18, Kelly and Rainier married in a civil ceremony in the his palace, with a cathedral wedding the next day attended by a star-studded throng of 600 - ironically bereft of other European royalty, who considered Monaco's House of Grimaldi to be lesser royalty - and watched on television by upwards of 30 million people. Kelly officially became Grace Grimaldi, an irony given Jack Kelly's reactionary dismissal of previous "ethnic" suitors. Never one to miss a trick, MGM released "The Swan" to coincide with the event.