Lady Georgiana Mary Curzon Kidston, Lady Starkey (7 January 1910 – 11 January 1976) was an English socialite, included in The Book of Beauty by Cecil Beaton.
In 1934, she met war-time hero Roger Bushell and they fell in love.[10] Curzon's father did not approve and forced her to marry the son of a family friend.[11] In November 1935, Georgiana Curzon married Home Ronald Archibald Kidston.[2][12] Before their divorce in 1943, they had one son:
The marriage was unhappy, Kidston apparently admitted adultery with Curzon's stepmother, and they eventually divorced in 1943. Bushell never forgot Curzon and it has been said that he was telling his fellow prisoners that "Georgie" was his true love and that he would one day marry her. Unfortunately, Bushell was killed by the Gestapo in 1944, his story life recounted in The Great Escape, in which his role is played by Richard Attenborough. For years after his death, Curzon placed an "In Memoriam" advertisement in The Times on his birthday signing "Love is Immortal, Georgie".[11] Words in similar vein are referred to in an article[14] in The Times in 2013, by Simon Pearson, about Bushell's lovers. He remarked that he had some years before, while working at The Times, come:
. . . across a memorial notice in the archive, which marked the anniversary of Roger Bushell's birth and celebrated his life. It quoted Rupert Brooke: "He leaves a white unbroken glory, a gathered radiance, a width, a shining peace, under the night." It was signed "Georgie".
On 1 November 1957 she married Lord Lewis Stanton Starkey (1906–1975),[2] a son of Lt.-Col. Lewis Edward Starkey and Mary Kathleen Starkey. Lord Starkey was previously married to Clare Désirée Blow (daughter of architect Detmar Jellings Blow).[12]
She died in 1976 at The Retreat, in York.[15] She is buried at Holy Trinity, Penn Street, and on the tombstone there are two lines by Tennyson: "Oh for the touch of a vanished hand, and the sound of a voice that is still".[11]
^"Howe, Earl (UK, 1821)". www.cracroftspeerage.co.uk. Heraldic Media Limited. Retrieved 19 December 2019.
^"Autumn Marriages". The Bystander: An Illustrated Weekly, Devoted to Travel, Literature, Art, the Drama, Progress, Locomotion: 160. 1907. Retrieved 19 December 2019.