As first lady of the US, Nancy Reagan’s sole aim was backing ‘Ronnie’ | World News - Hindustan Times
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As first lady of the US, Nancy Reagan’s sole aim was backing ‘Ronnie’

AP | By, Los Angeles
Mar 07, 2016 12:46 AM IST

Nancy Reagan, the controversial First Lady to the even more controversial Ronald Reagan, has died at the age of 94.

US First Lady Nancy Reagan swept into the White House in 1981, in a swirl of designer gowns and pricey china, and was summarily dismissed as a pre-feminist throwback concerned only with fashion, decorating and entertaining. She needed a less frivolous image if she was going to survive the next eight years next to the most powerful man in the free world. And she got it.

This file photo taken on August 15, 1988 shows US First Lady Nancy Reagan and her husband, US President Ronald Reagan, at a luncheon in New Orleans honouring her for her work to combat drug abuse.(AFP Photo)
This file photo taken on August 15, 1988 shows US First Lady Nancy Reagan and her husband, US President Ronald Reagan, at a luncheon in New Orleans honouring her for her work to combat drug abuse.(AFP Photo)

By the time she packed up eight years later, the former movie actress was fending off accusations that she’d become a “dragon lady,” wielding secret, unchecked power within Ronald Reagan’s administration — and doing it based on astrology to boot.

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Read: Former first lady Nancy Reagan dies at 94 in California

All along she maintained that her only mission was to back her “Ronnie” and strengthen his presidency.

“I’m a woman who loves her husband,” she said, “and I make no apologies for looking out for his personal and political welfare.”

Mrs. Reagan died Sunday at her home in the Bel-Air section of Los Angeles of congestive heart failure at the age of 94.

She was Ronald Reagan’s closest adviser and fierce protector throughout his journey from Hollywood actor to governor to President — and, finally, during his decade-long battle with Alzheimer’s. She served as his full-time caregiver as his mind melted away, and after his death in 2004 dedicated herself to tending his legacy through his presidential library in Simi Valley, California.

First Lady Nancy Reagan holding the Reagans' pet Rex, a King Charles spaniel, as she and President Reagan walk on the White House South lawn. (AP Photo)
First Lady Nancy Reagan holding the Reagans' pet Rex, a King Charles spaniel, as she and President Reagan walk on the White House South lawn. (AP Photo)

She also championed Alzheimer’s patients, raising millions of dollars for research and breaking from her fellow conservative Republicans to advocate for stem cell research.

Her dignity and perseverance in these post-White House roles smoothed out earlier public perceptions of Nancy Reagan that had been fickle as far back as her days as first lady of California.

If Reagan was the Teflon president, family friend and former aide Michael Deaver wrote, then Mrs. Reagan was the “flypaper First Lady.” Controversies always stuck to her.

It may have been because hers was the pricklier personality. While Reagan was amiable and easygoing, Mrs. Reagan was direct and demanding. He was an optimist, she was a worrier. He was overly trusting; she watched for disloyalty from close aides. Reagan hated to fire anyone or even exert discipline; his wife played the heavy, whether with their children at home or the president’s staff in the White House.

Their differences complemented each other, to the President’s advantage.

Read: Reagan son: Alzheimer’s seen during presidency

“She took on the tough jobs that Reagan wouldn’t or couldn’t handle: particularly staff decisions that were sure to make enemies,” Deaver wrote in a sympathetic memoir of working with Mrs. Reagan.

James Baker, chief of staff in Reagan’s first term, told PBS that the First Lady “was in all the major personnel decisions. I would never have been in the Reagan White House had it not been for Nancy Reagan.”

The couple’s mutual devotion over 52 years of marriage was legendary. They were forever holding hands. She watched his political speeches with a look of such steady adoration it was dubbed “the gaze.” He called her “Mommy” and penned a lifetime of gushing love notes. She saved these letters, publishing them as a book, and found them a comfort when he could no longer remember her.

In announcing his Alzheimer’s diagnosis in 1994, Reagan wrote, “I only wish there was some way I could spare Nancy from this painful experience.” Ten years later, as his body lay in state in the US Capitol, Mrs. Reagan caressed and gently kissed the flag-draped casket.

This file photo taken on June 11, 2004 shows former US First Lady Nancy Reagan kissing the casket containing the remains of her husband, former US President Ronald Reagan, at the Capitol rotunda in Washington, DC.T (AFP Photo)
This file photo taken on June 11, 2004 shows former US First Lady Nancy Reagan kissing the casket containing the remains of her husband, former US President Ronald Reagan, at the Capitol rotunda in Washington, DC.T (AFP Photo)

Anne Frances Robbins, nicknamed Nancy, was born July 6, 1921, in New York City. Her parents separated soon after she was born and her mother, film and stage actress Edith Luckett, went on the road. Nancy was reared by an aunt until 1929, when her mother left show business and married Dr. Loyal Davis, a wealthy Chicago neurosurgeon. He gave Nancy his name and a socialite’s home. She majored in drama at Smith College and found stage work with the help of her mother’s connections.

In 1949, MGM signed 5-foot-4, doe-eyed brunette Nancy Davis to a movie contract. She was cast mostly as loyal housewives and mothers. She had a key role in “The Next Voice You Hear ...,” an unusual drama about a family that hears God’s voice on the radio. In “Donovan’s Brain” she played the wife of a mad scientist possessed by a disembodied, glowing brain.

Acting was never a career, she said, just something to do until she got married. It led her to Ronald Reagan in 1950, when he was president of the Screen Actors Guild, and she was seeking help with a problem — her name had been mistakenly published on a list of suspected Communist sympathisers. They discussed it over dinner, and she later wrote that she realized on that first blind date “he was everything that I wanted.”

She was 30 years old when they wed two years later, on March 4, 1952. Daughter Patti was born in October of that year and son Ron followed in 1958. Reagan already had a daughter, Maureen, and an adopted son, Michael, from his prior marriage to actress Jane Wyman. (Later, spats and breaches with her rebellious grown children would become a frequent source of embarrassment for Mrs. Reagan.)

The couple made one movie together, “Hellcats of the Navy,” but Mrs. Reagan’s career tapered off as she embraced her homemaker role. “My life began with Ronnie,” she liked to say later, a line that irked feminists across the country.

She was thrust into political life when her husband ran for governor in 1966, and found it too rough. “The movies were custard compared to politics,” Mrs. Reagan said.

As the nation’s First Lady, she ran into controversy even before her husband was sworn in. After Reagan’s 1980 landslide, his transition team dropped hints that Mrs. Reagan wanted Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter to vacate the White House before Inauguration Day so she could begin redecorating — considered an unseemly request by many.

Mrs. Reagan raised more than $800,000 from private donors to redo the White House family quarters and to buy a $200,000 set of china bordered in red, her signature colour. She was criticised for financing these pet projects with donations from millionaires who might seek influence with the government, and for accepting gifts and loans of designer dresses worth thousands of dollars. Her lavish lifestyle — in the midst of a recession and with her husband’s administration cutting spending on the needy — inspired the mocking moniker “Queen Nancy.”

But her admirers credited Mrs. Reagan with restoring grace and elegance to the White House after the austerity of the Carter years.

Michael Jackson, centre, stands with President Ronald Reagan, left, and First Lady Nancy Reagan on the south lawn of the White House prior to receiving an award from the President for his contribution to the drunk driving awareness program. (AP Photo)
Michael Jackson, centre, stands with President Ronald Reagan, left, and First Lady Nancy Reagan on the south lawn of the White House prior to receiving an award from the President for his contribution to the drunk driving awareness program. (AP Photo)

She won better press coverage by spoofing her clotheshorse reputation with a comic song at Washington’s annual Gridiron roast. And her travels across the US promoting the “Just Say No” anti-drug campaign for kids and teens helped develop a more serious, sympathetic conception of the First Lady.

Her substantial influence within the White House came to light only slowly in her husband’s second term and afterwards. Her familiar stare and frozen smile, formerly disparaged as Barbie-doll vacant, began to be described as steely. She famously helped drive out chief of staff Donald Regan after the Iran-Contra scandal broke under his watch in late 1986.

Although the feud between the First Lady and the chief of staff had spilled into the papers, the President dismissed reports that it was his wife who got Regan fired. “The idea that she is involved in governmental decisions and so forth and all of this, and being a kind of dragon lady — there is nothing to that,” a visibly angry Reagan assured reporters.

Years later Mrs. Reagan herself and other insiders confirmed that she had rounded up support for Regan’s ouster and persuaded the President that it had to be done.

She felt it was proper for the First Lady to advise the president on anything, and she did: She urged Reagan to finally break his long silence on the AIDS crisis. She nudged him to accept responsibility for the Iran-Contra arms-for-hostages affair. And she buttressed advisers pushing Reagan to thaw relations with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, over the objections of the administration’s “evil empire” hawks.

When accused of overstepping her bounds, and possibly causing the aging President to appear weak or indecisive, the First Lady deflected the criticism with humour.

Raisa Gorbachev (L) wife of Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, accompanied by US First Lady Nancy Reagan (R) attend a welcoming ceremonies for Gorbachev at the White House in Washington, DC. Nancy was constantly accused of overstepping her authority and influencing her husband’s decisions. (AFP Photo)
Raisa Gorbachev (L) wife of Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, accompanied by US First Lady Nancy Reagan (R) attend a welcoming ceremonies for Gorbachev at the White House in Washington, DC. Nancy was constantly accused of overstepping her authority and influencing her husband’s decisions. (AFP Photo)

“This morning I had planned to clear up the US-Soviet differences on intermediate-range missiles,” she told an audience of publishers, “but then I decided to clear out Ronnie’s sock drawer instead.”

Near the end of Reagan’s presidency, ex-chief of staff Regan took his revenge with a memoir revealing that the First Lady routinely used a San Francisco astrologer’s forecasts to guide the president’s daily schedule. “Virtually every major move and decision the Reagans made” was first cleared by the astrologer, Regan wrote. The revelation caused a sensation.

Mrs. Reagan, who had a longtime interest in horoscopes, maintained that she used the forecasts only in hopes of predicting the safest times for the President to venture out of the White House. She turned to the astrologer “as a crutch,” she said, after the shock of almost losing her husband to an assassin less than three months into his presidency.

Former first lady Nancy Reagan stands next to to an image of the President Ronald Reagan commemorative postage stamp during a ceremony at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum in Simi Valley, California . (REUTERS)
Former first lady Nancy Reagan stands next to to an image of the President Ronald Reagan commemorative postage stamp during a ceremony at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum in Simi Valley, California . (REUTERS)

She spoke frequently of how terribly she missed her husband in her final years. In 2009 she told Vanity Fair magazine how she’d pressed evangelist Billy Graham for reassurance that they would be reunited after death.

“I said to him, ‘Just tell me if I’m going to be with Ronnie again. Just tell me that and I’ll be OK.’

“He said, ‘You are.’ And I said, ‘OK.’”

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