As an unmarried woman, I was thought to be a danger.
Emancipation of women has made them lose their mystery.
For a woman, forty is torture, the end.
Getting angry doesn't solve anything.
I don't like yelling and fighting, and I can't quarrel.
I don't want to be married to someone who feels inferior to my success or because I make more money than he does.
I don't want to dress up a picture with just my face.
If anybody starts using me as scenery, I'll return to New York.
Other women looked on me as a rival. And it pained me a great deal.
The freedom of the press works in such a way that there is not much freedom from it.
Women's natural role is to be a pillar of the family.
Grace had a television movie dedicated to her life called "Grace Kelly". Grace was portrayed by Christina Applegate and Cheryl Ladd.
Grace is famously mentioned in many songs. She is mentioned in "Vogue" by Madonna, "We Didn't Start The Fire" by Billy Joel, and "Wrap Her Up" by Elton John.
Grace had hopes of returning to acting in Alfred Hitchcock's film "Marnie", but the people of Monaco didn't want their princess playing a thief and romancing Sean Connery.
The inscription at Grace's burial site in Monaco's cathedral, does not refer to her as a princess. It uses the title "uxor principis", which means "prince's wife", this is traditional in the House of Grimaldi.
Grace was born at 5:31 AM EST.
Grace's films were banned in Monaco by the command of Prince Rainer of Monaco.
The car accident which caused her death was reportedly caused by a stroke.
Her favourite flowers were roses. After her death, Prince Rainier of Monaco created a public rose garden in Monaco in her honour.
She starred in the 1952 western, High Noon with Gary Cooper.
In 1955, she was nominated for a British Academy of Film and Television Arts Award in the category of Best Foreign Actress in the 1954 movie Dial M for Murder.
She is mentioned in the Billy Joel song We Didn't Start the Fire as Princess Grace.
Her uncle George Kelly, was a, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright.
Her father and brother were both Olympic gold-medal winning rowers (scullers).
On January 1959 the Austrian government awarded her a medal of merit for aid to Hungarian refugees escaping Russian invasion, given through Monaco's Red Cross.
She was named #13 Actress on The American Film Institute's 50 Greatest Screen Legends.
In 1993, she became the very first actress to appear on a postage stamp.
She was 5 feet, 7 inches tall.(1.70 m)