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Show business royalty: ‘Josie & Grace’ explores friendship between Baker and Kelly.

In September 2020, the Morris Museum mounted an outdoor production of “Josephine: A Burlesque Cabaret Dream Play,” starring Tymisha Harris as singer, dancer, actress and activist Josephine Baker. And this weekend — producing an indoor play for the first time since the start of the pandemic, at its Bickford Theatre — the museum is once again presenting Harris as Baker, in “Josie & Grace: A Mostly Historical Cabaret Dream Play.”

This isn’t a prequel or a sequel. “Josie & Grace” offers a complementary view of Harris, focusing on her longtime friendship with Grace Kelly, the Academy Award-winning actress who married Prince Rainier III of Monaco and became a princess. While the first play told the story of Baker’s entire life, from childhood, this one shows her only from the early ’50s (when she was already an established star) through the end of her life in the mid-’70s. But like that play, it gives a sense of her struggles and triumphs, and showcases Harris’ ability to sing in a commanding, Baker-esque style.

Kelly is first shown as an aspiring, little-known actress, attending a performance by Baker in New York. She is really just a star-struck fan. But after Baker storms out of her after-show dinner at the Stork Club, infuriated because of the poor service she receives as a black woman, Kelly leaves, too, and the two strike up a friendship.

Harris said after the show — onstage, after taking her bows — that the show is still in its workshop phase. Its biggest current flaw, I think, has to do with the next part of the show. Baker and Kelly, in their next scene together, are shown as fast friends. Beyond mentioning that Kelly had become successful as an actress (and had had affairs with some of her leading men), the play doesn’t really show how they got from Phase 1 (Baker’s a star and Kelly, 23 years younger, is a show-business neophyte) to their warm, sisterly Phase 2.

In any event, the good vibes don’t last for long. The relationship is strained when Baker is not invited to Kelly’s royal wedding. They remain estranged for years, writing polite letters but not actually seeing each other.

But they do eventually reconcile, and Kelly explains that since Baker had been “branded” a communist by the press, Rainier couldn’t afford, politically, to invite her. Baker remains suspicious, though, that racism had something to do with it, and is angry at Kelly for not taking a stand.

Kelly notes that she is always sitting back while Baker is always charging forward, which seems about right; Kelly may be a real princess, but it’s Baker who seems like a queen. (On the other hand, Kelly has a bit of a rebellious streak, too, which helps to explain why she idolized Baker in the first place.)

Baker lets bygones stay bygones, though, and they remain friends. Kelly even provides financial support for Baker, who has developed a desperate need for it. Their bond remains strong for the rest of Baker’s life.

As in “Josephine: A Burlesque Cabaret Dream Play,” Harris exudes diva-like charisma as Baker. Joining her and Comeau in the cast is Stephen Lima, who is never seen but is heard as several characters, including Rainier, Alfred Hitchcock (who directed Kelly in three films) and Kelly’s father.

Songs include the anthemic “Non, je ne regrette rien” (“I Regret Nothing”); catchy 20th century gems such as “I’m Feeling Like a Million,” “I Can’t Get Started” and “True Love”; and Bob Dylan’s “The Times They Are a-Changin’ ” (which Baker did, in fact, sing, and which was also featured in “Josephine: A Burlesque Cabaret Dream Play”).

Aradhana Tiwari directed, and Michael Marinaccio and Tod Kimbro (who worked on “Josephine: A Burlesque Cabaret Dream Play” as well) are credited with the concept, story and script. Kimbro also wrote the play’s two original songs.

In the show’s program, the creative team notes that not much is really known about the friendship between Baker and Kelly beyond that it was deep and long-lasting. To their credit, they have created a play about it that rings true, and certainly seems consistent with everything we know about Baker.

Source:NJ Arts.

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Princess Grace of Monaco talking to a young patient when she visited a Dublin hospital on June 13, 1961.

Princess Grace and Prince Rainier of Monaco leaving a grand ball before the wedding of the King of Greece on September 17, 1964.


Aristotle Onassis brought ashore his guests to swim at the Asteria Beach of Glyfada, near Athens on August 31, 1961.

Princess Grace of Monaco arrives at Glyfada beach, near Athens, for a lunch the day after the wedding of Prince Juan Carlos I of Spain and Princess Sophia of Greece on May 14, 1962.

Grace and Rainier of Monaco dancing at a party at the royal palace of Athens, Greece, before the wedding of Princess Sophia and Prince Juan Carlos of Spain in May 1962.

Princess Grace and Prince Rainier of Monaco arrive at Hotel Grande Bretagne of Athens, Greece, a day prior to the wedding of Prince Juan Carlos of Spain and Princess Sophia of Greece on May 12, 1962.

March 31, 1969: FIRST LADIES

Princess Grace of Monaco, followed by Prince Rainier enters the royal palace in Brussels with Queen Fabiola and King Baudouin. The Rainiers are on a state visit to Belgium.

From eBay.

Hollywood, CA. March 30, 1955:

Grace Kelly, nominee for best performance by an actress, is shown with screenwriter and director Don Hartman as they wait at The Pantages Theatre for announcement of the 1955 Academy Awards.

Princess Grace between an unknown lady and A. Onassis in Majorca, June 1961.

graceandfamily:

Grace Kelly and Louis Jourdan behind the scenes of The Swan in 1955.

gracie-bird:

Hollywood, CA. March 30, 1955:

Grace Kelly, nominee for best performance by an actress, is shown with screenwriter and director Don Hartman as they wait at The Pantages Theatre for announcement of the 1955 Academy Awards.

gracie-bird:

Princess Grace between an unknown lady and A. Onassis in Majorca, June 1961.

Preview of the film ‘Les Professionnelles’ in Monaco
Claudia Cardinale congratulated after the presentation of her film by Prince Rainier and Princess Grace, in Monaco on November 28, 1966.

Grace of Monaco, ca. 1967

Seville, Spain, April 1966

Princess Grace and Prince Rainier pictured during an event in Seville, Spain, in April 1966.

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