Actress Diana Douglas, mother of Michael and ex-wife of Kirk, dies at 92

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Michael Douglas Receives Honorary Award in Jerusalem
Michael Douglas Receives Honorary Award in Jerusalem



Actress Diana Douglas, the first wife of Kirk Douglas and the mother of Michael Douglas, died Saturday. She was 92.

Douglas, who was married to the legendary actor from 1943 until their divorce in 1951, then starred in two films with her ex-husband, died at the Motion Picture and Television Home in Woodland Hills, said Donald Webster, her husband of 15 years.

In the 2003 film It Runs in the Family (2003), about a dysfunctional New York clan, Diana played devoted matriarch Evelyn Gromberg opposite Kirk as her husband, Michael (who also produced the movie) as her son and Cameron Douglas (Michael's son with Diandra Douglas) as her grandson. Joel Douglas, her other child with Kirk, served as an associate producer. It was her last film.

Kirk, now 98, married Anne Buydens in 1954, and they recently celebrated their 61st wedding anniversary. In 1956, Diana wed Bill Darrid, a Broadway producer and novelist who helped raise her two young boys; their marriage ended with his death in 1992.

"I've always enjoyed Kirk's sense of humor, even when I was angriest at him," Diana said in a 2011 interview. "He could always make me laugh, somehow, which annoyed the hell out of me. But then I think we both decided too, when the time of divorce came, that we had to maintain a certain amount of civility because of the children.

"I know Michael has said since being an adult that he was always very grateful that we never did badmouth each other. Sometimes we probably wanted to. And also, I think that after [Kirk] got married to Anne, [she] made it very much easier, because she and I cooperated very much in terms of bedtimes and what they could watch on television and that kind of thing."



Reflecting on her marriage to the mercurial Douglas proved "useful" during the making of It Runs in the Family, she noted, "particularly the scene where we were dancing together. I think there were all sorts of things that we could call on. Actors are always looking for intense memories to call on."

Years earlier, Douglas called on her to appear opposite him in The Indian Fighter (1955), the first film made by his production company, Bryna.

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Born Diana Love Dill in Devonshire, Bermuda, where her father was the attorney general of the British territory, she moved to New York and worked as a Powers Agency model, landing the cover of Life magazine in May 1943, dressed in "frilly Gibson Girl spring fashions," according to the magazine.

She met Kirk while they were studying acting at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. When he was in the service, he saw her Life cover and vowed to marry her, and they marched down the aisle under crossed swords during their navy wedding in New Orleans. But their marriage began to fray just as he was preparing for his star-making turn in the fabled Ring Lardner boxing drama Champion (1949).

"After Joel was born [in 1947], she and I realized that we were not right for each other, and we divorced amicably," Kirk wrote in his 2007 book, Let's Face It: 90 Years of Living, Loving, and Learning.

Chaperoned by her sister, Ruth, she had moved to California to sign a contract with Warner Bros. for $200 a week and made her film debut in George Cukor's Keeper of the Flame (1942), starring Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn. After a couple of years, she returned to New York.

Her résumé of 22 films also includes The Sign of the Ram (1948), Joseph L. Mankiewicz's House of Strangers (1949), Storm Over Tibet (1952), Monsoon (1952), Loving (1970), The Star Chamber (1983) and Planes, Trains & Automobiles (1987).

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Diana portrayed the widowed rancher Annie Andersen on the 1974 ABC series The Cowboys (her character's husband was played by John Wayne in the 1972 film on which the show was based). She was seen as Red Cross volunteer Mrs. Denman on The Waltons and as the headstrong Professor Tyler (and love interest of John Houseman's character) on another CBS drama, The Paper Chase.

She also guest-starred on such series as The Web, Naked City, Flipper, Kung Fu, the Michael Douglas-starring The Streets of San Francisco, Barnaby Jones, Lou Grant, Cagney & Lacey, The West Wing and ER, and she did a few stints as Martha Evans on the soap opera Days of Our Lives.

On Broadway, she starred in Dore Schary's The Highest Tree and in Edward Albee's Everything in the Garden, and one of her favorite roles was playing Queen Gertrude opposite David Birney in Hamlet.

Asked by Michael to put her memories on paper for her grandson Cameron, she wrote 1999's In the Wings: A Memoir, which included the revelation that she once dated the swashbuckling star Errol Flynn.

In her memoir, she revealed her personal philosophy: "Be courageous, be compassionate, and, for God's sake, have fun!"

Survivors also include grandchildren Dylan and Carys; her daughter-in-law, Michael's wife, actress Catherine Zeta-Jones, and many nieces and nephews in the U.K., Bermuda and the U.S. A memorial service will be held in Los Angeles at a date to be announced.

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