Brenda Dean Paul

Brenda Dean Paul
Born Brenda Irene Isabelle Frances Theresa Dean Paul
(1907-05-08)8 May 1907
Kensington, London
Died 26 July 1959(1959-07-26) (aged 52)
London, England
Occupation Actress, socialite
Years active 1925–1938

Brenda Irene Isabelle Frances Theresa Dean Paul (8 May 1907 – 26 July 1959),[1] generally known by her stage name Brenda Dean Paul, was a British silent film actress and socialite, and a member of the Bright young things in the 1920s. Her use of illegal drugs landed her in court and in the tabloid press of the day. She served time in Holloway Prison and had many stints in hospitals in efforts to shake her addiction.[2]

Early life

Dean Paul was the daughter of Sir Aubrey Edward Henry Dean Paul, 5th Bt and the Belgian-born pianist and composer known as Poldowski, the daughter of the Polish violin virtuoso Henryk Wieniawski. Her elder brother was Napier "Napper" Dean Paul, also involved with the 'Bright young things'.[3][4]

She played minor roles in touring theatre companies and ventured to Berlin to build her film career, but she was quickly drawn into Berlin's hectic nightlife and failed her screen test in 1927.

Bright Young Thing

On her return to England she became a fixture of London's bohemian youth culture, the Bright Young Things, and socialised with such celebrities as Evelyn Waugh and Cecil Beaton at the group's fancy dress parties.[5] Following a miscarriage (which some claim was an abortion) she became chemically dependent on morphine, which led to her lifelong battle with drug addiction and made her one of the most talked-about young women in London.[6]

Later life

In February 1931 Brenda Dean Paul made her first court appearance, having been charged with bouncing a cheque. The following decades saw her in and out of various courts, receiving sentences of up to six months in prison for possession of dangerous drugs, obtaining goods on false pretences, and theft of services (refusing to pay taxi drivers). With each court appearance her name appeared in the papers, which added to her notoriety.

In 1932 she was sent to Holloway Prison, where she developed bulimia, dropping to five stone (70 lb). Over the next few years she was in and out of nursing and care homes.

In 1935 she quit drugs and her ghost-written memoir, My First Life, was published. Her acting ambitions never came to anything and she again fell victim to drug addiction. In 1939 she was evicted from her flat because she "walked about naked" and "answered the door in the nude", and in 1940 she was tried for buying goods on other people's accounts.

In the mid-1950s the young artist Michael Wishart, sitting in a restaurant, watched her take a syringe of heroin from her handbag and fill it "from a vase of flowers on the table". In 1951 she assured a reporter that she was cured and was preparing to open her own addiction clinic,[7] but this was untrue. In 1952 a former flatmate wrote to the police to tell them that she "augmented her income by allowing sadists to whip her". Worn down by addiction but still beautiful, she finally realized her ambition to act when she got the leading role in Ronald Firbank's play The Princess Zoubaroff. Neville Phillips reports “the role of the Princess was played by the always newsworthy, once ravishing now ravaged, oft arrested society blonde lesbian drug addict, Brenda Dean Paul, who, owing to her addiction, was not able to do all the performances, giving the ones she could manage the extra frisson of wondering if the police might burst in at any moment and make an on-stage arrest.”[8]

In 1957 she was admitted to a psychiatric hospital in Rome with a parcel of cocaine in her possession. She died in London of "natural causes" on 26 July 1959. She was 52.

References

  1. william1.co.uk
  2. Brenda Dean Paul - 1920s "society drug addict"
  3. Dylan Thomas: A New Life, Andrew Lycett, 2014, pg 1809
  4. Life After Dark: A History of British Nightclubs and Music Venues, Dave Haslam, 2015
  5. The Independent, 19 October 2007
  6. Barnes and Noble
  7. Brenda Dean Paul
  8. The Stage Struck Me! A Sort of Memoir (Leicester: Matador, 2008), 243.
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