“I have found it impossible to carry the heavy burden of responsibility,
 and to discharge my duties as king as I would wish to do,
 without the help and support of the woman I love.”
-
–King Edward VIII, from his famous abdication speech of 1936.
| '' WHEN YOU'RE BORED WITH YOURSELF, MARRY AND  BE BORED WITH SOMEONE ELSE ..'' DUKE OF WINDSOR. | 
| June 1937, Chateau de Cande, France — Marriage of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor — Image by © Bettmann/Corbis. Wallis  Simpson, who would marry Edward and become the Duchess of Windsor was  known as the ultimate fashion trendsetter– for her impeccable manner of  dress, her extensive and precious jewelry collection, and her taste in  interior design. He was known as the Prince of Wales, the Duke of  Windsor, and the Master of Style. Men’s fashion owes him a giant debt  of gratitude to this day. Widely considered one of the best dressed men  in all of history, his personal style was impeccable, at times quirky,  and always legendary. ”Did he have style?” Diana Vreeland once  asked rhetorically. ”The Duke of Windsor had style in every buckle on  his kilt, every check of his country suits.” | 

 
The Duke and Duchess of Windsor (AKA Wallis Simpson)–  arguably one of the most controversial, talked about couples of the  20th century.  Their affair started while she was still married to her  2nd husband Ernest Simpson– a wealthy Englishman, through whom she  gained access to British high society.  The two were introduced at a  London social event, and soon she was a frequent guest at Prince  Edward’s country getaway, Fort Belvedere.
In  January of 1936, Edward was crowned the British Monarch upon the death  of King George V. He, however, had no interest in being king. Edward’s  focus was solely on marrying Wallis Simpson– the rags-to-riches American  commoner who had somehow seduced the now King of England.  Many  wondered aloud, what could he possibly see in her?  Give up the throne  for– what? Apparently it wasn’t the sex. She’s credited with icily stating, “No man is allowed to touch me below the Mason-Dixon line.” There  were also ugly and persistent rumors challenging her own physical  endowments as a lady. Shady, unsubstantiated stories surfaced that  Wallis Simpson was born a man, and suffered from Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome–  a hormonal irregularity that causes a genetic male’s body to develop as  a woman, but without fully developed, err, privates. Just the the kind  of story any gal would love to be the subject of.
And then there were the stories of her affairs, Nazi sympathizing, and shopping.
     
     
     
     
     
     
                                          Madonna shooted a film for their love...  
Many  influential members the English upper class suspected that while Wallis  Simpson was carrying on an affair with Prince Edward, that she she also  cavorting with other men– the most damning being a Nazi Officer close  to Hitler, Joachim von Ribbentrop, Reich Minister Ambassador-Plenipotentiary at Large.  It was reported that the Nazi’s were using Simpson for her connection  to The King, and she was happy to provide them with all the British  insider information they wanted, as long as she was paid. The FBI  investigated the matter, and reported to President Roosevelt with their  findings. He was quoted as saying that Wallis Simpson “played around…with the Ribbentrop set.” After marrying Edward in 1937, the two met The Fuhrer,  Adolph Hitler– whispered sweet pro-German sentiments, and were becoming  full-blown Nazi sympathizers. It’s now well known that if all had gone  as planned, the Nazis would defeat Great Britain– and Hitler had every  intention of then restoring Edward to the throne. All that was enough to  make the British take immediate action.
The couple was quickly rounded-up, and shipped off where they could do no harm. He became the Governor of the Bahamas, and together they were appointed the Duke and Duchess of Windsor. The Duchess hated it there, and spent a good amount of time power  shopping in New York– much to the shock of the British who were  tightening their belts under imposed wartime rationing. Getting the  picture that there was no love lost between her and the British?
 
 
| 1953 — Duke and Dutchess of Windsor with pet pug, Trooper.  | 
   
| 1941, Nassau, Bahamas — The Duke Windsor, and his wife the Duchess, playing a card game in their home. — Photograph by David E. Scherman for LIFE | 
 
  | 
| 1940, Lisbon,  Portugal – The Duke & Duchess of Windsor (aka Wallis Simpson) shown  with their beloved dogs. — Photograph by Thomas D. Mcavoy for LIFE | 
  | 
| 1954 — Duke and Duchess of Windsor posing with their beloved dogs | 
  | 
| 1941, Nassau,  Bahamas – Governor of the Bahama Islands, the Duke of Windsor, dressed  in a dapper plaid suit and two-tone wing tip shoes, smiling up at the  Duchess of Windsor, as he sits at her feet in the Government House. —  Photograph by David E. Scherman for LIFE | 
  
         
Paris, France, September 15th, 1967 – The Duke  of Windsor Playing Cards, Le Moulin De La Tuilerie — Photograph by Patrick Lichfield for American Vogue  via 
 
  | 
   
   
  
 
| 1941,  Nassau, Bahamas – The Duke of Windsor has no license plate, only a  royal crown emblem. – Photograph by David E. Scherman for LIFE | 
| Paris,  France, 1939 — A view showing the exterior of the Duke and Duchess of  Windsor’s new home. – Photograph by William Vandivert for LIFE | 
         
1943 – The  Governor of the Bahamas, Duke of Windsor, visiting with Bahamian farm  laborers during WWII. — Photograph by Peter Stackpole for LIFE 
 
 
  | 
   
 
   
  
 
  | 
| Wallis  Simpson photographed by Cecil Beaton. “Beaton later attempted to soften  her brittle image in a series of photographs taken at the Chateau de  Candé during the eve of the subdued and even makeshift arrangements for  her wedding to the Duke of Windsor, who had romantically given up his  throne for her. Beaton was not entirely successful. Dressed in  Schiaparelli’s organza evening dress printed with a giant lobster, and  brandishing a sheaf of pussy willow, or stroking a whippet that was  clearly not her own, Wallis makes an unlikely romantic heroine. “Since I  can’t be pretty,” she told Vogue in 1943, “I try to look  sophisticated,” and no detail of that sophisticated style escaped the  magazine’s scrutiny as Vogue celebrated her fashion and style choices  into the 1960s.” — Hamish Bowles  via | 
 
 
Keine Kommentare:
Kommentar veröffentlichen