
        
         
        Val 
          Gielgud's Private Life
         
        Val Gielgud seems 
          to have had a rather adventurous private life with 5 marriages and on 
          the Internet there is a rather intriguing reference to his first marriage 
          at Oxford University to an 18 year old schoolgirl called 'Tata' at Cheltenham 
          Ladies College. Tata seems to have been the daughter of a family of 
          Baltic White Russian exiles. It is understood that he is survived by 
          his last wife who is still alive and in control of all his papers.
        An 
          autobiographical monograph mentioning Gielgud's early marriage
        "One added problem 
          with which she had to cope was as unexpected as it was distressing. 
          Tata, barely turned eighteen, and still at school, had secretly married. 
          Tata's husband was Val Gielgud, then an undergraduate at Oxford, later 
          head of BBC radio drama.* In 1921 what mattered was that Tata was a 
          schoolgirl, he a student, and both were far too young for marriage. 
          Natasha, when she found out about it, was at first disbelieving and 
          then enraged. 
        * The elder brother 
          of the actor Sir John Gielgud
        { Mamon-tov died 
          in December. 1939 - Natasha had met Val Gielgud earlier, when Tata introduced 
          him to her at Percy Lodge. Natasha had not been impressed. She paralysed 
          him by asking his intentions. When he told her that he wished to marry 
          me, and she found out that he had no money, he was more or less shown 
          the door, said Tata. 
        Natasha ordered Tata 
          not to see him again, threatening to cut off her pocket-money. Determined 
          to marry none the less, Tata wrote to her father Sergei Marnontov then 
          working for an opera company in Tallin, Estonia; Mamon-tov had not seen 
          Tata for some years, but he gave permission willingly, enclosing it 
          as a wedding present. 
        The wedding took place 
          on August 12, 1921, during the school holidays. Afterwards they celebrated 
          with a lunch and an afternoon at the cinema. Tata then returned to Percy 
          Lodge in time for dinner, her wedding ring strung around her neck on 
          a chain. Natasha found out about the marriage just before Tata was due 
          to return to Cheltenham Ladies College. 
        She was so furious 
          that she ordered Tata out of the house. Tata, with her husband away 
          in the country, ended up on the doorstep of a house in London's Primrose 
          Hill, the home of her old governess Miss Rata. With Tata gone, Natasha 
          moved again, this time to a fashionable apartment at 26 Bolton Gardens, 
          in South Kensington. 
        By now, all hope had 
          faded for Michael. There was no trace of him anywhere, and all that 
          was reliably known was that on the night of June 12/13 he had been abducted 
          from his hotel in Perm. The inescapable presumption was that he was 
          dead, even if the circumstances of his death were as yet a mystery." 
          
        "Tata was an added 
          cause for her distress. Her first marriage to Val Gielgud ended in 1923 
          her next husband was a distinguished writer and music critic, Cecil 
          Gray, by whom she had a daughter, Pauline, in 1929; her third husband, 
          Michael Majolier, had been a midshipman on the Agamemnon which had taken 
          Natasha and Tata to Malta. 
        As in Natasha's case, 
          Tatas third marriage to her Michael - by whom she would have another 
          daughter, Alexandra - would last for the rest of her life, though Natasha 
          would not know that.
        * Thinking about Tata, 
          Natasha had little reason for cheer; she rarely saw her, and because 
          of that absurd gypsy life you lead she often did not even know where 
          she was living. * Tata died in England, at Wanstead, Essex."
         
        
        