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Home > Life & Career > Her Passions

FLOWERS
...to have
complete satisfaction from flowers you must have time to spend with
them.
I talk to them and they talk to me...
Quote from My Book of Flowers by
Princess Grace of Monaco(1980)
Though
Her interests were many, Her true passions were few, and they did
include a deep love and appreciation of flowers. She established
the Garden
Club of Monaco in 1968 to ...brighten the lives of people
around us. Of the club, She said, We decorated chapels,
churches, museums, old peoples homes at Christmas time and
we participated in charity bazaars. Even the railroad station in
Monte-Carlo and the airport at Nice receive a bouquet once a year.
We also give courses for adults as well as schoolchildren and have
a competition every two years for the youngsters of the principality.
A major activity of this Club is to
organize the International Flower Show which takes place annually
in May. Following a visit to Amsterdams International Flower
Show in the 1970s, the renowned Dutch lily breeder, Klaas de Jong,
named a lily Lys Princess Grace (now called simply Monaco).
With fragrant pale yellow blooms, this sturdy plant thrives in the
warm Côte dAzur climate. Princess Grace was said to
be deeply honored. At the time of Her marriage to Prince Rainier
in 1956, Antoine Meilland, a celebrated rose breeder named a highly
scented, bright pink rose the Grace de Monaco. It
is a lovely experience for a woman to have a rose named after her,
and I am especially delighted since mine is grown by a special nursery
that was created by a very special man. Princess Graces
love of botany in all its forms led Her to become an acknowledged
expert on flowers and accomplished judge of floral arrangements.
Her
knowledge and skill soon evolved into an interest in pressed flower
arrangements which She modestly signed "GPK" (Grace Patricia
Kelly). Some of Her collages were exhibited at the renowned Galerie
Drouant in Paris in 1977 and 1980 and others were displayed on Monacos
postage stamps in the 1970s. She shared Her deep love of flowers
and Her secrets of flower pressing in My Book of Flowers
which She co-wrote in 1980 with Gwen Robyns.
In the summer of 1984, Her family dedicated
a special parkland in the Principality to Her memory. The Princess
Grace Rose Garden features some 4,000 rose bushes representing
more than 180 varieties, the creations of leading European and American
rose specialists. It is a serene, beautiful garden for strolling
or meditation, and is open daily from sunrise to sunset.
In 1966, Princess Grace was instrumental
in the creation of the Monte-Carlo International Ballets Festival,
which became the Monte-Carlo International Arts Festival in 1970
(now known as the Spring
Arts Festival) which welcomes the world's premier musicians,
artists and ballet and theater troups to Monaco to perform every
year.
In Her lifetime, Princess Grace's dream
of a permanent ballet company in Monaco as in the days of Diaghilev
and the Ballets Russes was not realized. Then in 1985,
Princess Caroline fulfilled Her mother's wish with the creation
of Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo.
The company has since attained international acclaim under the direction
of choreographer, Jean-Christophe Maillot.
After becoming Princess of Monaco, She
never returned to acting in films, yet Her love for the performings
arts remained. In 1981, She oversaw the renovation of the Salle
des Beaux Arts, paying particular attention to ensuring the
artists' dressing rooms provided performers with all the comfort
they need before facing the audience! After renovations were completed,
the beautiful venue re-opened with a new name: the Princess Grace
Theater.
To fulfill a personal wish to pay homage
to Her Irish ancestry, Princess Grace started a compilation of Irish
literature and music. Her collection became the foundation of
the Princess
Grace Irish Library, created in 1984 by Prince Rainier in loving
memory of Her. Today the library boasts more than 8,000 books and
2,000 sheets of Irish music, and is one of the finest collections
in the world of its type.
In the late 1970s, Her dramatic streak
evolved to encompass a deep love of poetry and She attended
readings and recitals as far afield as the United Kingdom. She accepted
an invitation to attend the International Poetry Forum (IPF) in
Pittsburgh and the following year gave Her patronage to a special
program presented by the IPF in the Monte-Carlo Opera House and
agreed to be named as the Forums first honorary board member.

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