Princess Stéphanie of Monaco
Photo of a 48-year-old Stéphanie
Princess Stéphanie in 2013
Born (1965-02-01) 1 February 1965
Prince's Palace, Monte Carlo, Monaco
Spouse
(m. 1995; div. 1996)
    (m. 2003; div. 2004)
    Issue
    Names
    Stéphanie Marie Elisabeth Grimaldi
    HouseGrimaldi
    FatherRainier III, Prince of Monaco
    MotherGrace Kelly

    Princess Stéphanie Marie Elisabeth of Monaco (born 1 February 1965) is the youngest child of Rainier III, Prince of Monaco, and American actress Grace Kelly. She is the younger sister of Albert II, Prince of Monaco, and Caroline, Princess of Hanover. Currently 14th in the line of succession to the Monegasque throne, she has been a singer, swimwear designer and fashion model.

    Early life and education

    Princess Stéphanie walking with her mother in 1969

    Stéphanie was born to Prince Rainier III and Princess Grace on 1 February 1965 at Prince's Palace in Monaco. She is the youngest of their three children. She has two older siblings, Caroline and Albert. Her godparents are her maternal uncle John B. Kelly Jr. and paternal first cousin Elisabeth-Anne de Massy.[1] Her mother, who described Stephanie as a "warm, bright, amusing, intelligent and capable girl" and a "good athlete", lovingly called her "wild child" (French: enfant terrible).[2]

    On 13 September 1982, while returning home from their farm in Rocagel, France, Stéphanie and her mother had a car accident. Grace died the next day, on 14 September, while Stéphanie sustained a hairline fracture of a neck vertebra.

    Although the official report of the incident was that Grace suffered a stroke while driving, rumors began that Stéphanie, who had to miss her mother's funeral due to her recovery, was the one actually driving. Stéphanie herself refused to speak publicly about her mother's death until 1989, when she gave an interview to the author Jeffrey Robinson, insisting that the story was untrue. She said, "There was a lot of pressure on me because everyone was saying that I had been driving the car, that it was all my fault, that I'd killed my mother... It's not easy when you're 17 to live with that."[3]

    She did not discuss the subject again until a 2002 interview with the French magazine Paris Match in which she repeated her earlier denial, and discussed the trauma of being beside her mother at the time of the accident. She said, "Not only did I go through the horrible trauma of losing my mother at a very young age, but I was beside her at the moment of the accident. Nobody can imagine how much I've suffered, and still suffer."[4][5]

    Princess Stéphanie was educated at the Dames de Saint-Maur in Monaco, and then at the école and collège Dupanloup in Boulogne-Billancourt, France. Stéphanie earned her baccalauréat from the Cours Charles de Foucauld in 1982.[6] During her school years, she studied classical dance and piano, and competed in gymnastics and horse riding. She also attended Camp Oneka, an all-girls' summer camp in the Pocono Mountains, in the United States, where her sister and mother both had previously attended.[7]

    Career

    Fashion

    In 1983, after her physical recovery from the accident that killed her mother, Stéphanie started an apprentice programme at Christian Dior under the direction of head designer Marc Bohan.[8] The following year, she debuted as a model on the biannual haute couture special published by Spanish magazine ¡Hola!, a venture that she repeated in 1990. In 1985, Stéphanie appeared on the cover of German Vogue magazine and the American publication Vanity Fair.[9] She also became the spokesman of the Swiss beauty line La Prairie, for which she was photographed by Horst, and she appeared on the cover of French Vogue, photographed by Helmut Newton in September 1986.

    Dignitaries gather at the National Portrait Gallery in October 1986 for the presentation of a portrait head of Princess Grace of Monaco by her family. Includes (l-r): Stefano Casiraghi, Princess Stephanie, Princess Caroline, Prince Ranier III, First Lady Nancy Reagan and Secretary Robert Adams.

    In 1986, Stéphanie launched a swimwear line Pool Position with Alix de la Comble, whom she had met during her internship at Dior. The fashion show to present the line, held at the Sporting Club in Monaco and attended by her father, Prince Rainier, and siblings, Caroline and Albert, was a major event covered by the worldwide media.[10] In 1989, Stéphanie launched her own self-titled perfume.[11]

    Stéphanie co-owns Replay cafes and stores in both Monaco and Barcelona. In December 2008, she was guest-editor of Vogue Paris and appeared on the magazine's cover.[12][13]

    Musical career

    Stéphanie in 1986

    In February 1986, Stéphanie self-produced and released her first single with the French label Carrere, under the production of Yves Roze. The song "Ouragan" and its English version "Irresistible" were both international hits, reportedly selling more than 2 million copies. The full album Besoin, released as Stéphanie in some countries, sold more than 1.5 million, with 100,000 in France.[14] The single "Flash", as well as its English version "One Love to Give," also achieved success throughout Europe. In January 1987, Stéphanie released the single "Young Ones Everywhere" to benefit UNICEF.

    The same year, Stéphanie moved to Los Angeles to record a new album. However, it took her five years to release it. The album Stéphanie, released in 1991, met with disappointing sales and negative reviews,[15] despite the promotional tour that included a performance on The Oprah Winfrey Show.[16] Stéphanie then ended her music career after recording "In the Closet" with Michael Jackson for his album Dangerous. The song became a worldwide hit and reached the top 10 in the United States but Stéphanie was credited on the single under the alias "Mystery Girl" and her involvement in the song was not revealed until a few years later. She made a brief return to singing in 2006, when she recorded "L'Or de nos vies", a charity single, along with her foundation Fight AIDS.[17]

    Philanthropy and patronages

    Stéphanie is the president of several associations, including Monaco Youth Centre and Princess Stéphanie Activity Centre, and is an honorary board member of the Princess Grace Foundation – United States. She has also been the patron of the International Circus Festival of Monte-Carlo, which she regularly attends,[18] and the World Association of Children's Friends (AMADE), which was founded in 1963 by her mother.[19] Since 1985, Stéphanie has been the president of the Monte-Carlo Magic Grand Prix and the International Festival of Amateur Theatre.[1] She is also the president of the Théâtre Princesse Grace.[20]

    In 2003, Stéphanie created her own Women Face the AIDS Association, which became Fight AIDS Monaco in 2004, in order to support people living with HIV and to combat the social stigma attached to the disease. Since 2006, Stéphanie has been a Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) ambassador. The same year, along with the group of singers, she released a charitable single "L'Or de nos vies".[17] On 26 June 2010, Stéphanie inaugurated, in the presence of Prince Albert, the House of Life (French: Maison de Vie) in Carpentras, Vaucluse, France, which offers both psychological and material aid to persons living with either HIV and AIDS and their families.[21] Stéphanie has organised numerous events, such as auction sales, concerts and galas, to support her foundation.[22][23][24]

    Personal life

    Royal monogram of Princess Stéphanie

    Stéphanie dated Paul Belmondo,[25] Anthony Delon,[26] Rob Lowe, Mario Oliver Jutard, and Jean-Yves Le Fur before she began a relationship with her bodyguard Daniel Ducruet in 1992.[27]

    The couple have two children, Louis and Pauline Ducruet, born in 1992 and 1994 respectively at Princess Grace Hospital Centre in Monaco. The children were included in the line of succession to the Monegasque throne when Stéphanie married Ducruet on 1 July 1995 at Monaco town hall.[28] The couple divorced on 4 October 1996.[29][30]

    Stéphanie gave birth to her third child, Camille Gottlieb, on 15 July 1998 at Princess Grace Hospital Centre.[31] Although she did not identify the father's name on the birth certificate, many suspected from the start, that Camille's father is her Head of Security Jean Raymond Gottlieb[32] and, indeed, Camille herself has acknowledged Gottlieb as her father.[33] As her parents never married, Camille is not included in the line of succession to the Monegasque throne.

    Stéphanie and her brother Albert (far left) in August 2013

    In 2001, Stéphanie began a relationship with married elephant trainer Franco Knie and moved, along with her three children, into Knie's circus caravan. However, that relationship came to an end in 2002, and Stéphanie and her family returned to Monaco.[29] On 12 September 2003, Stéphanie married Portuguese acrobat Adans Lopez Peres, a member of Knie's circus ensemble.[34] The marriage ended in divorce on 24 November 2004.[35]

    Stéphanie is the godmother to Andrea Casiraghi, the eldest son of her sister Princess Caroline, and to Alexandre Grimaldi-Coste.[36]

    Discography

    Studio albums

    Year Album Chart
    FR GER AUT SWE
    1986 Besoin[37]
    Released: 1986
    Label: Julisa/Carrere
    6 12 59 6
    1991 Stéphanie
    Released: 1991
    Label: WTG/Epic
    48

    Compilation albums

    Year Album Chart
    FR GER AUT SWE
    2011 Collection Référence 80 – Le meilleur des Années 80
    Released: 2011
    Label: LM Music

    Singles

    Year Single Chart Album
    FR SUI GER AUT SWE NOR UK
    1986 "Ouragan/Irresistible"[37] 1 11 2 5 84 Besoin
    "Flash/One Love to Give"[37] 4 28 10 1
    1987 "Fleurs du mal" 16
    "Live Your Life" 9
    1991 "Winds of Chance" 54 Stéphanie
    "You Don't Die from Love"

    Promotional singles

    Year Single Chart Album
    FR SUI GER AUT SWE NOR UK
    1987 "Young Ones Everywhere" Besoin
    Year Single Chart Album
    US Hot
    Dance
    Hot
    R&B
    UK AUS AUT BEL GER FRA ITA NL NOR ESP SWE SUI
    1992 "In the Closet" (Michael Jackson featuring Stéphanie) 6 1 1 8 5 23 14 15 9 9 9 10 2 29 25 Dangerous
    2006 "L'Or de nos vies" (as part of Fight AIDS) 14 5 43 Non-Album single

    Honours

    References

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    2. Hauptfuhrer, Fred (5 April 1982). "Aging Gracefully". People. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
    3. "Princess Grace's Fatal Crash: Her Daughter's Account". Chicago Tribune. 23 October 1989. Archived from the original on 21 January 2021. Retrieved 6 April 2022.
    4. "Princess Stephanie breaks her silence on the accident that killed her mother". Hello. 11 October 2002. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
    5. "Stephanie: 'I was not at wheel when Grace was killed'". The Guardian. 11 October 2002. Retrieved 8 August 2014.
    6. Englund, Steven (1984). Grace of Monaco: An Interpretive Biography. USA: Doubleday. ISBN 0385188129. Retrieved 31 January 2019.
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    9. "Princess Stephanie: Her Model's Portfolio". People. 15 April 1985. Archived from the original on 20 November 2012. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
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    11. "Latest news and profile of Princess Stephanie of Monaco". Hello. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
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