Nancy Reagan, former first lady and actress, dead at 94
She was number 129 on the list.
Former first lady Nancy Reagan, who joined her husband on a
storybook journey from Hollywood to the White House, died Sunday.
She was 94.
Reagan died at her home in Los Angeles of congestive heart
failure, according to her spokeswoman, Joanne Drake of the Ronald Reagan
Presidential Library.
"Mrs. Reagan will be buried at the Ronald Reagan
Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California, next to her husband, Ronald
Wilson Reagan, who died on June 5, 2004. Prior to the funeral service, there
will be an opportunity for members of the public to pay their respects at the
library," Drake said in a statement.
Political world mourns Nancy Reagan
The former first lady requested that contributions be made
to the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Foundation in lieu of flowers,
the statement said.
In a statement, President Barack Obama thanked Reagan for
her "warm and generous advice."
"Our former First Lady redefined the role in her time
here," he continued. "Later, in her long goodbye with President
Reagan, she became a voice on behalf of millions of families going through the
depleting, aching reality of Alzheimer's, and took on a new role, as advocate,
on behalf of treatments that hold the potential and the promise to improve and
save lives.
"We offer our sincere condolences to their children,
Patti, Ron, and Michael, and to their grandchildren. "
Republican leaders also paid tribute.
"With the passing of Nancy Reagan, we say a final
goodbye to the days of Ronald Reagan," wrote 2012 GOP presidential nominee
Mitt Romney on Facebook. "With charm, grace, and a passion for America,
this couple reminded us of the greatness and the endurance of the American
experiment. ... God and Ronnie have finally welcomed a choice soul home."
Former first lady Barbara Bush, whose husband George H.W.
Bush succeeded Ronald Reagan as president, said, "Nancy Reagan was totally
devoted to President Reagan, and we take comfort that they will be reunited
once more. George and I send our prayers and condolences to her family."
Former President George W. Bush and his wife, Laura, also
were moved by Reagan's death.
"Mrs. Reagan was fiercely loyal to her beloved husband,
and that devotion was matched only by her devotion to our country," Bush
said in a statement.
He observed that her influence on the White House was
"complete and lasting."
A fierce protector
As first lady during Ronald Reagan's eight years in the
White House, Nancy Reagan was known as the "Just say no" spokeswoman
of anti-drug campaigns and as a fierce protector of her husband, both
personally and politically.
When Ronald Reagan was shot in a 1981 assassination attempt,
Nancy Reagan never left the hospital where the president was treated until he
was released, according to her press secretary, Sheila Tate.
After she and her husband left Washington, she became his
protector again as he struggled with Alzheimer's disease until his death in
2004. Afterward, she remained a staunch guardian of his image and legacy.
"She was always the one who kept the flame alive,"
said CNN senior political analyst David Gergen, a former Reagan adviser.
Her official White House biography quotes Nancy Reagan as
saying, "My life really began when I married my husband."
A marriage made in Hollywood
She was born Anne Frances Robbins in New York City on July
6, 1921. Her mother and father separated before her birth.
Her mother, Edith, toured with a theater company while Nancy
lived with an aunt and uncle. Her mother married Chicago neurosurgeon Loyal
Davis when the future first lady was young. He adopted her and she settled down
in Chicago, before she adopted the stage name Nancy Davis and headed west to
Hollywood.
"She told me that MGM was like a big family, that when
she signed with MGM, she became part of that family. They took care of
her," Tate said.
As part of the MGM stable, Nancy Davis made 11 films from
1949 until 1956, but her career almost ended before it began. Her name appeared
on a list of people thought to have been communist sympathizers in 1949.
"She got a mailing that was for another Nancy Davis,
and this other Nancy Davis was in connection with one of those Hollywood
blacklists that were going on in the Hollywood red-hunting days," biographer
Lou Cannon said.
Upset, she turned to a friend for help and he set up a
meeting with the president of the Screen Actors Guild, a dashing leading man
named Ronald Reagan.
It would be the start of one of Hollywood's and Washington's
most enduring love stories. In fact, her final screen appearance was playing
opposite her future husband in a movie called "Hellcats of the Navy."
The two wed on March 4, 1952, in a private ceremony at a
small church near Los Angeles. She began her role as a wife of a politician
when her husband won the 1966 California gubernatorial race.
In politics
Ronald Reagan's two terms as California governor catapulted
him into the national spotlight, and he ran for higher office.
He swept into the White House and when he was inaugurated in
1981, Nancy Reagan brought to Washington a style and elegance that many loved.
But she was also criticized for wearing expensive designer
gowns and ordering expensive new china for White House state dinners -- even
though the place settings were paid for with private funds.
"Nancy Reagan was hurt by it, it bothered her because
people didn't understand," former White House Chief of Staff Kenneth
Duberstein said. "But the impact was more on him, because 'Somebody was
picking on my Nancy.' And that was unfair."
'A codependent presidency'
She had a sweeping influence on how the White House was run,
especially when it came to the people who worked for the President.
"They had a codependent marriage that became a
codependent presidency," CNN presidential historian Douglas Brinkley said.
"Ronald Reagan was the nice guy who liked to tell
everybody how wonderful they were. She was the judge of character, and if she
thought somebody didn't have her husband's interest in mind, she nixed them.
You can't overestimate how important she was for the Reagan revolution and
Reagan's eight years in the White House."
When President Reagan was shot in March 1981, only she and a
few others knew how badly hurt he really was.
"I remember sitting in the anteroom with her and we
were dealing with a few things that had to be dealt with, and there was this
pounding," Tate said. "And she said: 'They're pounding on his back.'
And it was really shocking -- bam, bam -- just to get everything moving. ...
"She never left that hospital."
After the assassination attempt, the president's safety was
Nancy Reagan's No. 1 preoccupation.
'I make no apologies'
Through it all, she had many admirers and critics.
Chief among the critics was her husband's former chief of
staff Donald Regan, who wrote a blistering book about her influence, claiming
that she used an astrologer to determine the president's schedule.
"I would have preferred it if he decided to attack
me," Ronald Reagan said at the time. "From what I hear, he's chosen
to attack my wife, and I don't look kindly on that at all."
A year after Reagan's final year in office, the first lady
fired back at Regan in her 1989 book, "My Turn: The Memoirs of Nancy
Reagan."
"I make no apologies for telling him what I
thought," the former first lady wrote, referring to her husband.
Gergen said Sunday that she was not a woman to cross when it
came to her husband.
"She thought her first and foremost duty was to be
there with him," he said.
'Her beloved Ronnie'
Indeed, when observers describe Mrs. Reagan, their stories
often involve the words "devoted" and "protective."
"Nancy was a powerful figure in the Reagan White House.
(She was a) most protective person," former CNN Washington bureau chief
Frank Sesno said Sunday. "Her agenda always, always, always was her
beloved Ronnie."
Added CNN chief political analyst Gloria Borger, "Her
real role was to protect her husband and to make sure everyone around him was
on the same page. ... Everything she did was in Reagan's interest. And like
most politicians' spouses she really had his ear."
She had other more traditional roles at the White House,
including as a spokeswoman for the anti-drug program -- which was reduced to a
phrase, "Just Say No." She even made an appearance on the 1980s
sitcom "Diff'rent Strokes" to deliver the message.
"When I said, 'Just say no,' it was an answer to a
question by a child in a classroom," she told CNN's Larry King. "Now,
I didn't mean that was the whole answer, obviously, but it served a
purpose."
Maintaining a legacy
Those closest to the former first lady said they were
concerned about her when her husband of 52 years passed away of Alzheimer's in
2004, but she remained in the public eye.
During the 2008 presidential campaign, she hosted two
debates for Republican candidates at the Reagan Library, according to her
biography on the National First Ladies' Library website.
In 2011, she attended a debate for the 2012 Republican
hopefuls at the library. She received a standing ovation.
But she believed some relationships were above politics.
When historian Brinkley told her he wasn't a conservative, she asked,
"What's your point?"
"She thought Ronald Reagan was an American president --
after all, Ronald Reagan voted for Franklin D. Roosevelt four times, he used to
be a Democrat," Brinkley said Sunday. "While the right in America
celebrates him almost like a patron Saint Ronald Reagan, Nancy Reagan is the
one that said my husband represented all of the American people, not just
Republicans."
'A pretty fabulous life'
She'd had her own medical challenges. She was diagnosed with
breast cancer in 1987 and underwent a mastectomy.
But she maintained an upbeat view -- even when it didn't
involve gazing adoringly at her husband, as she famously did in countless
pictures.
In a 2001 interview which took place on Ronald Reagan's 90th
birthday, CNN's Larry King asked the former first lady whether she felt that
fate had treated her badly.
"No, no. When you balance it all out, I've had a pretty
fabulous life," she said.
Nancy Reagan is survived by Patti Davis and Ron Reagan --
her two children with Ronald Reagan -- and Michael Reagan, a son from Ronald
Reagan's first marriage to Jane Wyman. Maureen Reagan, Ronald Reagan's daughter
with Jane Wyman, died in 2001.
Filmography
The Crippler
(1940) (Short)
Portrait of Jennie
(1948)
The Doctor and the
Girl (1949)
East Side, West
Side (1949)
Shadow on the Wall
(1950)
The Next Voice You
Hear... (1950)
Night into Morning
(1951)
It's a Big Country
(1951)
Talk About a
Stranger (1952)
Shadow in the Sky
(1952)
Donovan's Brain
(1953)
The Dark Wave
(1956) (Short)
Hellcats of the
Navy (1957)
Crash Landing
(1958)
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