Lady Marguerite Tangye

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Lady Marguerite Tangye
Lady Marguerite Tangye in 1953
Born24 April 1913
Died10 October 2002
Spouse(s)Claud Dobree Strickland (1934-41), Gordon Haywood (1942-51), Nigel Tangye (1951-64)
ChildrenLucinda Haywood, Gareth Haywood
Parent(s)Esme Ivo Bligh, 9th Earl of Darnley and Daphne Rachel Mulholland

Lady Marguerite Tangye (24 April 1913 – 10 October 2002), born Lady Marguerite Rose Bligh, was the daughter of Esme Ivo Bligh, the 9th Earl of Darnley, and Daphne Mulholland. She was a famous debutante, model, and actress in 1930s London and was widely photographed.[1][2] Lady Marguerite worked for the Mechanised Transport Corps in World War II and in later life held a variety of jobs as well as writing about her childhood in Brazil.[3]

Life

Lady Marguerite's parents separated when she was three (divorcing in 1920) and her mother Daphne, along with Marguerite and her brother Peter, went to live with her parents, Alfred and Mabel Mulholland, at Worlingham Hall, Beccles.[1]

Daphne Mulholland then married Hugo Chandor, an old Etonian sheep farmer recently returned from

Tres Barras, in rural central Brazil, to build a sawmill. Following a revolution in Sao Paulo they were cut off completely for six months. After five years in Brazil, they returned to England and went back to Worlingham.[1]

Lady Marguerite attended

Belstead School for two years from the ages of 13-15 but had little other formal education. She was a debutante and was presented at Court in 1931[1] and wore ‘a gown of ivory and silver lace and net over flesh pink crêpe de Chine’ with a silver train.[4]

In 1991 Lady Marguerite was interviewed about her youth by Thames Television, as part of their historical programme 'The River Thames' (Episode Four).[5]

Work

Lady Marguerite modelled for advertisements for Pond's cream, Will's Gold Flake, Kirbigrips, and Horlicks. Although she was a non-smoker and rarely drank alcohol, Lady Marguerite was often featured in cigarette and alcohol advertisements of the 1930s.[6] She was widely photographed as a model and copies of her portrait photographs are held by the National Portrait Gallery.[7] She was photographed by Antony Beauchamp and Baron.

In 1939, Gerald Brockhurst painted Lady Marguerite. The realist painting, entitled By the Hills, achieved the top price at the Royal Academy summer exhibition that year. The painting is now held by the Ferens Art Gallery.[8]

During the war she served in the Mechanised Transport Corps, teaching soldiers how to dismantle engines, but was dismissed after the photographer Baron took her photograph without a hair net. She also served as an ambulance driver in the London Blitz.[9]

With her third husband,

Post Office and as a query clerk at Harrods.[1]

Animal welfare

Lady Marguerite was a lifelong

vegetarian and supporter of animal welfare causes and charities.[9] She was a member of the Animal Defence League, and travelled to Algiers to help rescue sick and maltreated animals with her Sicilian friend Marie Ruperto. On the outbreak of World War II, fearing an invasion of the east coast, Lady Marguerite and her friend Rosemary Potter took a carthorse and polo pony on a nine day journey (carrying fodder) from Worlingham to a safer location in Gloucestershire.[9]

Selected publications

  • A Brazilian Childhood

References

  1. ^ . Retrieved 4 July 2018.
  2. ^ "Lady Marguerite Tangye". The Times. 20 October 2002. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
  3. ^ "The Edmonds Family Forest". daryledmonds.com. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
  4. ^ "Genteel Millinery or The Other Rose Bertin - Museum of London Blog". Museum of London Blog. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
  5. ^ The River Thames: episode 4, retrieved 25 March 2021
  6. . Marguerite Tangye.
  7. ^ "Lady Marguerite Rose Tangye (née Bligh) - Person - National Portrait Gallery". www.npg.org.uk. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
  8. ^ Spalding, Frances (29 June 2017). "Pre-juggernaut paradise: True to Life – British Realist Painting in the 1920s and 1930s review". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
  9. ^ a b c d "Lady Marguerite Tangye". The Telegraph. Retrieved 14 January 2023.