She Survived the Titanic… Then Played Herself on Screen
I have been learning about the people who were on board Titanic, so today I want find out more about Dorothy Gibson.
She was born on the 17th of May 1889 in Hoboken in New Jersey, sadly her father died while she was still very young. Growing up at a time when opportunities for women were very limited, she found a way to by performing. By her late teens, she was working as a singer and a dancer and she appeared in theatre productions.
Around 1909, she became a model for the well-known illustrator Harrison Fisher. Her image was widely used, and she became known as one of his most recognisable “girls.” Her personal life was complicated, she married but sadly it did not last, like many women of her era, her private life did not always match the glamorous image that was presented to the public.
By 1911, she had moved into the world of film. She became one of the early actresses to be promoted as a star. Her natural acting style made her popular, and she seemed to be at the start of a long and successful career.
She married George Henry Battier Jr. in 1910, but the relationship did not last, and they separated not long after, and eventually divorced in 1913.
In April 1912, after spending a holiday in Italy, Dorothy and her mother boarded the RMS Titanic to return home to America. On the night of the 14th of April, she was relaxing with friends, then everything changed. When the ship hit the iceberg, the shock and confusion must have been immense. She and her mother managed to escape in Lifeboat 7, the first to boat be lowered into the sea.
Within weeks of arriving back in New York, she wrote and starred in a film based on her experience, Saved from the Titanic. She even wore the same clothes she had worn that night. It must have been difficult to relive her trauma so soon, maybe she felt torn between a professional opportunity and her trauma. She was hugely successful but not long after filming she stepped away from movies, turning instead to music and she later moved to Europe. She went on to have a highly publicised relationship with film producer Jules Brulatour, which brought her both support and unfortunately scandal, because he was already married. She was also in a fatal car accident, where she tragically killed a pedestrian. Looking to distance herself from the gossip, she eventually settled in Paris, trying to reinvent her life away from the spotlight.
During the Second World War, she was living in Italy for a time. Unfortunately she became entangled in political tensions. She was arrested, and even imprisoned for anti-fascism. She did however manage to escape along with two other prisoners, with the help of the Italian resistance.
She spent her final years in France, where she died on the 17th of February 1946 at the age of 56.
Do you think she ever found peace-or did the weight of those moments stayed with her for the rest of her life?