Nancy
Reagan (born July 6, 1921, New York, New York, U.S.—died March 6,
2016, Los Angeles, California) was an American first lady (1981–89)—the
wife of Ronald Reagan, 40th president of the United States—and actress,
noted for her efforts to discourage drug use by American youths.
Early life
and acting career
Christened
Anne Frances, she was quickly nicknamed Nancy by her mother and used that name
throughout her life. Her father, Kenneth Robbins, a salesman, and her mother,
Edith Luckett Robbins, an actress, separated when Nancy Robbins was very young.
Edith Robbins immediately resumed her acting career and began
traveling a great deal, leaving Nancy Robbins in Bethesda, Maryland,
where she was raised by Edith Robbins’s sister and brother-in-law. Nancy
Robbins saw little of her mother over the next five years and had no contact
with her father; her parents divorced in 1928.
In 1929,
when her mother married Loyal Davis, a wealthy Chicago neurosurgeon,
Nancy Robbins went to live with the couple. Davis eventually adopted her, and
she assumed his last name. After graduation from the Chicago Latin School
for Girls, she enrolled at Smith College in Massachusetts and
majored in drama. Her mother’s theater friends often visited the Davis
household in Chicago, fueling Nancy Davis’s interest in the stage. After
graduation in 1943 and a brief stint working at a department
store in Chicago, she turned to acting. Her mother’s contacts helped her
obtain a job with a touring company and then a role on Broadway. By
1949 she was working in Hollywood, and she eventually made 11 movies,
including East Side, West Side (1949), Shadow on the
Wall (1950), and Hellcats of the Navy (1957), in
which she starred with Ronald Reagan.
Marriage
to Ronald Reagan and turn to politics
Nancy
Davis had met Ronald Reagan almost as soon as she arrived in California.
He had just divorced Jane Wyman, also an actress, and showed no eagerness
to enter quickly into another marriage. After a lengthy courtship, the two were
married on March 4, 1952; Nancy Reagan later said that her life began with her
marriage to Ronald Reagan. Their daughter, Patricia Ann (“Patti”) Reagan, was
born in October, and their son, Ronald Prescott Reagan, in 1958; Ronald Reagan
was already the father of a daughter, Maureen Reagan, and had adopted a son,
Michael Reagan, with his first wife in 1945.
During the
1950s Ronald Reagan’s political views became more conservative. Although
a Democrat at the time, he supported the presidential candidacies
of Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1952 and 1956 and Richard Nixon in
1960. After switching his party affiliation to Republican in 1962, he
became cochair of California Republicans for Barry Goldwater in 1964.
Many people credit the influence of Nancy Reagan and her stepfather for his
shift to the right.
Ronald Reagan launched his political career in 1966, winning the election as governor of California by defeating incumbent governor Edmund G. Brown, Sr., by one million votes. During her eight years as the governor’s wife, Nancy Reagan developed the skills that later served her in the White House, but she also aroused controversy. She was criticized for her circle of wealthy, glamorous friends and her expensive, stylish clothing. Intensely protective of her husband, she also ran into conflict with journalists who wrote negatively about him and with staff members who, she felt, overscheduled him. Although she did not voice her opinions publicly and occasionally attempted to play down her influence, her husband and his staff took her seriously. When Ronald Reagan won the presidency in 1980, it was generally agreed that Nancy Reagan was one of his most trusted advisers.
A tour of
the White House with Nancy Reagan.
Unlike Rosalynn
Carter, her predecessor as first lady, Reagan often said that she
admired the style and elegance of Jacqueline Kennedy, and she
hired Letitia Baldrige, a Kennedy staff member, to assist her at the White
House. Designer dresses and costly caviar replaced the more modest attire and
fare of the Carters, and the guest list included many Hollywood celebrities. To
refurbish the White House, Reagan encouraged private donations, which
eventually exceeded $800,000 and included $200,000 for new China.
Nancy
Reagan’s first year in the White House was not successful. She often said that
the assassination attempt on President Reagan in March 1981 unnerved
her, and she resented criticism that she was extravagant. Her
association with the Foster Grandparents Program brought her little credit,
since many Americans had trouble connecting her glamorous image with volunteer
work by the elderly. To improve her image, advisers suggested that she play
down her contacts with celebrities and associate herself with a serious cause,
which prompted her to begin the antidrug campaign “Just Say No.” To win over critical journalists, she appeared at a Gridiron Club dinner in
March 1982 wearing old, unattractive clothing and sang about her “secondhand”
clothes; subsequently, her press coverage became more positive and her
popularity rose.
Despite
her protests, the view persisted that Nancy Reagan influenced her husband in
personnel matters and on important issues such as arms control and
relations with the Soviet Union. When television cameras caught her
whispering answers to reporters’ questions in the president’s ear, speculation
increased about her role. While Ronald Reagan convalesced after major surgery
in 1985, The New York Times concluded that a triumvirate was
in charge at the White House: the president, his chief of staff, and the first
lady. A year later, the paper described how she had “expanded the role of First
Lady into a sort of Associate Presidency.” This perception was bolstered by
the accounts of former staff members, including Donald Regan, the
president’s chief of staff, who publicly blamed her for his firing in 1987.
Regan also claimed that Nancy Reagan insisted that the president’s schedule
take into account her astrologer’s predictions and warnings. In her memoirs,
she admitted having access to her husband—“For eight years I was sleeping with
the president, and if that doesn’t give you special access, I don’t know what
does”—but insisted that Regan had exaggerated her influence: “Believe me, if I
really were the dragon lady that [Regan] described in his book, he would have
been out the door many months earlier.”
Later life
of Nancy Reagan
The
Reagans left the White House in January 1989, returning to their Bel
Air estate in California, and Reagan continued her anti-drug work under
the auspices of the Nancy Reagan Foundation. After her husband was
diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 1994, she devoted all her time to
caring for him and made very few political appearances. In 2000 she
published I Love You, Ronnie: The Letters of Ronald Reagan to Nancy
Reagan. In 2002 the Reagans were jointly awarded a Congressional Gold
Medal. Following his death in 2004, she became an advocate for stem cell research
because of its scientific promise in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
Elizabeth Kilbride is a Writer and Editor with forty years of experience in writing with 12 of those years in the online content sphere. Author of 5 books and a Graduate with an Associate of Arts from Phoenix University in Business Management, then a degree. Mass Communication and Cyber Analysis from Phoenix University, then on to Walden University for her master’s in criminology with emphasis on Cybercrime and Identity Theft, and is currently studying for her Ph.D. degree in Criminology. Her work portfolio includes coverage of politics, current affairs, elections, history, and true crime. Elizabeth is also a gourmet cook, life coach, and avid artist in her spare time, proficient in watercolor, acrylic, oil, pen and ink, Gouche, and pastels. As a political operative having worked on over 300 campaigns during her career, Elizabeth has turned many life events into books and movie scripts while using history to weave interesting storylines. She also runs 6 blogs that range from art to life coaching, to food, to writing, and opinion or history pieces each week.
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