Elizabeth Varley
Elizabeth Varley (26 September 1909 – 6 May 2002), born Elizabeth Susan Douglas-Scott-Montagu, was the daughter of John Douglas-Scott-Montagu, 2nd Baron Montagu of Beaulieu. She pursued careers in the entertainment industry, literature, and advertising.
Early life
She was born at Beaulieu Abbey, Hampshire, on 26 September 1909, the second daughter of the 2nd Lord Montagu by his first wife Lady Cecil Kerr. She was a direct descendant of Charles II and Lucy Walter, via their son, the Duke of Monmouth. Her mother died in the 1918 flu pandemic. Varley attended St Margaret's School, Bushey, and attended a finishing school at Lausanne, but was not interested in society life and chose instead to train as an actor at the RADA from 1932. [1]
Film and theatre
She began an acting career at the Newcastle Repertory Company and appeared in a number of stage productions in the West End and on BBC Radio dramas. She was personal assistant to Arturo Toscanini while he was in London to conduct at the BBC's London Music Festivals in 1937–38. She helped Walter Legge found the Philharmonia Orchestra. After the war, she worked on film scripts for film directors, such as Alexander Korda.[1]
In 1948 she met Graham Greene in Vienna. She showed him (and later Orson Welles) some of its less reputable night-clubs while he worked on the script for The Third Man. She introduced Greene to Peter Smolka, the eastern European correspondent for The Times. Smolka gave Greene stories about the black market in Vienna.[2] She was a committee member of Benjamin Britten's English Opera Group and she wrote the libretti for Rolf Liebermann and Paul Burkhard.[1]
European travels
She travelled extensively throughout Europe in 1935–39, and also studied at a piano school in Switzerland. When asked about her racial background while applying for a visa at the German consulate in St. Gallen, she angrily swept items – including a portrait of Hitler – from the desktop onto the floor. Her passport was confiscated.[1]
She was sent to France at the start of the Second World War as an ambulance driver. After her unit retreated to Bordeaux, she refused to leave and hid at a friend's home for several months. On a train to Switzerland she noticed she was under surveillance, so she asked two hat salesmen for help at the next station. She escaped while hidden under the boxes in their car.[1]
While working at the Political Intelligence Department at the British Embassy in Berne, she translated material from within Germany, including information on what was happening at Treblinka extermination camp.[1]
Advertising
In the 1960s she co-founded Francis-Montagu, company that produced television advertising, whose clients included Ryvita and Black Magic chocolates.[1]
Politics
Her times in theatrical digs had created strong socialist leanings. She became involved in the women's committee of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.[1]
Personal life
After the death of her lover, the classical pianist Renata Borgatti, she became the fourth wife on 29 August 1962 of Colonel Arthur Noel Claude Varley CBE (mil) (1902-85), the founder of the advertising agency Colman, Prentis and Varley.[1] There were no children of the marriage.
She wrote her autobiography, "Honourable Rebel: The Memoirs of Elizabeth Montagu (later Elizabeth Varley)". A film of her life, Honourable Rebel, was released in 2015.[3]
Bibliography
- Honourable Rebel: The Memoirs of Elizabeth Montagu (later Elizabeth Varley). Montagu Ventures Ltd. March 2003. ISBN 0952338610.