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・ Gloria Talbott
・ Gloria Tapia
・ Gloria Taylor
・ Gloria Taylor (patient)
・ Gloria Tew
・ Gloria Thato
・ Gloria Totten
・ Gloria transita
・ Gloria Trevi
・ Gloria Tristani
・ Gloria Ugarte
・ Gloria Union
・ Gloria Valencia de Castaño
・ Gloria Valenzuela García
・ Gloria Valerín Rodríguez
Gloria Vanderbilt
・ Gloria Vaughn
・ Gloria Victis
・ Gloria Victis (novella)
・ Gloria Victis (sculpture)
・ Gloria Victis Memorial
・ Gloria Victoria
・ Gloria Villamayor
・ Gloria Votsis
・ Gloria Warren
・ Gloria Whelan
・ Gloria Williams
・ Gloria Williamson
・ Gloria Wilson Swisher
・ Gloria Winters


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Gloria Vanderbilt : ウィキペディア英語版
Gloria Vanderbilt

Gloria Laura Vanderbilt (born February 20, 1924) is an American artist, author, actress, heiress and socialite, noted as an early developer of designer blue jeans. She is a member of the Vanderbilt family of New York and the mother of CNN television anchor Anderson Cooper.
==Early life==
Vanderbilt was born in New York City, the only child of railroad heir Reginald Claypoole Vanderbilt (1880–1925) and his second wife, Gloria Morgan (1904–1965). When Gloria was born, her father was heard to delightedly exclaim "It is fantastic how Vanderbilt she looks! See the corners of her eyes, how they turn up?"〔Vanderbilt II, Arthur T., "Fortune's Children: The Fall of the House of Vanderbilt". Morrow: 1989, 340.〕 She was christened in the Episcopal church by Bishop Herbert Shipman as Gloria Laura Vanderbilt. After her father's death, she was confirmed and raised in the Catholic Church, to which her mother belonged. From her father's first marriage to Cathleen Neilson, she had a half-sister, Cathleen Vanderbilt (1904–1944).
She became heiress to a half share in a $5 million trust fund upon her father's death from cirrhosis when she was 18 months old. The rights to control this trust fund while Vanderbilt was a minor belonged to her mother, who traveled to and from Paris for years, taking her daughter with her. They were accompanied by a beloved nanny - Emma Sullivan Kieslich,〔Vanderbilt II, Arthur T., 346.〕 whom young Gloria had named "Dodo" - who would play a tumultuous part in the child's life, and her mother's identical twin sister, Thelma, who was the mistress of The Prince of Wales during this time.〔 As a result of frequent spending, her mother's use of finances was scrutinized by the child Vanderbilt's paternal aunt Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney. A sculptor and philanthropist, Whitney wanted custody of her niece, which resulted in a famous custody trial. The trial was so scandalous that at times, the judge would make everyone leave the room so as to listen to what young Vanderbilt had to say without anyone influencing her. Some people heard weeping and wailing inside the court room. Testimony was heard depicting the mother as an unfit parent; Vanderbilt's mother lost the battle and Vanderbilt became the ward of her aunt Gertrude.
Litigation continued, however. Vanderbilt's mother was forced to live on a drastically reduced portion of her daughter's trust, which was worth more than $4 million at the end of 1937 ($65.2 million in 2014 dollars〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=CPI Inflation Calculator )〕). Visitation was also closely watched to ensure that Vanderbilt's mother did not exert any undue influence upon her daughter with her supposedly "raucous" lifestyle. Vanderbilt was raised amidst luxury at her aunt Gertrude's mansion in Old Westbury, Long Island, surrounded by cousins her age who lived in houses circling the vast estate, and in New York City.
The story of the trial was told in a 1982 miniseries for NBC ''Little Gloria... Happy at Last'', which was nominated for six Emmys and a Golden Globe.
Vanderbilt attended the Greenvale School in Long Island; Miss Porter's School in Farmington, Connecticut; and then the Wheeler School in Providence, Rhode Island, as well as the Art Students League in New York City, developing the artistic talent for which she would become increasingly known in her career. When Vanderbilt came of age and took control of her trust fund, she cut her mother off entirely, though she supported her in later years. Her mother lived for many years with her sister, Thelma, Lady Furness, in Beverly Hills and died there in 1965.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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