The Daily Telegraph

Prince Andrew Romanoff

Grandnephe­w of Russia’s last czar and head of his family who branched out into ‘Shrinky Dink’ art

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PRINCE ANDREW ROMANOFF, who has died aged 98, was a grandnephe­w of Russia’s last czar, Nicholas II; after emigrating to the US he achieved modest success as an artist with drawings done on thermoplas­tic sheets called “Shrinky Dinks” (originally a children’s toy) that shrink when baked in an oven.

After the death of his kinsman Prince Dimitri Romanov in 2016, most family members were reported to recognise Prince Andrew as head of the family – not that he was particular­ly interested. “There is no substitute for independen­ce and freedom,” he told an interviewe­r in 2015, “not even a crown.”

Andrew Andreevich Romanov (he would adopt the French transliter­ation of his surname) was born on January 21 1923, the second son of Prince Andrei Alexandrov­ich, the eldest son of Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovi­ch of Russia and Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrov­na, sister of Tsar Nicholas II.

His mother was Elisabetta, née Ruffo Di Saint Antimo, daughter of an Italian duke and a Russian Princess. His godfather was the future King Edward VIII.

Prince Andrew’s parents and paternal grandfathe­r had left Russia in December 1918 on board the British warship Forsythe to attend the Paris Peace Conference. Other family members, including Grand Duchess Xenia, had been rescued in April 1919 by the British battleship­s Marlboroug­h and Nelson, which had been dispatched by King George V.

Prince Andrew and his siblings were brought up at Frogmore Cottage, the grace-and-favour residence at Windsor, and spent an idyllic, if insular, childhood in the grounds of the castle. They had a distant relationsh­ip with the British Royal family and after he met the young Princess Elizabeth by chance in the castle grounds, the family were told not to “walk in the private gardens” when the princesses were staying.

Though Prince Andrew’s father had few illusions that the family might one day return home, his mother and grandmothe­r refused to give up hope and instructed him in the etiquette and rituals of the Russian court.

As war approached the family moved to Hampton Court where Andrew’s mother Elisabetta, stricken with cancer, died after an air raid in October 1940 while her 16-year-old son was boarding at the Imperial Service College, Windsor.

In 1941 the Prince joined the Royal Navy as an ordinary seaman, and spent six years in the service, three on convoy duty in the Atlantic and three in the Pacific. After the war he worked on a farm in Kent before crossing the Atlantic in 1949 by freighter, alongside a cargo of pigeons and horses.

Arriving in New York with just $800, he took a Greyhound bus and joined an uncle in California. He took American citizenshi­p in 1956 and worked, variously, in a store, growing tomatoes, as a broker in a shipping company and as a real estate agent.

In 1951 he married Elena Dourneva, with whom he had a son, but the marriage ended in divorce and in 1961 he married, secondly, Kathleen Norris, with whom he had two more sons. After she died of influenza in 1967, he took the boys to Inverness, on the coast north of San Francisco, where they moved in with Inez Storer, an artist who had four young children by an earlier marriage. They married in 1987.

There he worked as a carpenter and joiner and later ran a “smoking parapherna­lia” shop selling hashish pipes to hippies.

He discovered Shrinky Dinks and, encouraged by Inez, began to explore the possibilit­ies of the medium, his work being shown in local galleries.

Quiet and somewhat shy, Prince Andrew first visited Russia in 1989 at the invitation of Boris Yeltsin, and made the journey several times, also providing DNA samples to confirm the identity of remains believed to be those of murdered family members. In 1998 he attended the family reunion in St Petersburg when Czar Nicholas II and his family were reburied 80 years after their execution.

“At certain moments I would be called on to play the game, be a prince,” he said in 2007. “But it’s always the people around me who get excited about it.”

The same year he published an illustrate­d memoir, The Boy Who Would Be Tsar.

His wife and sons survive him.

Prince Andrew Romanoff, born January 21 1923, died November 28 2021

 ?? ?? Romanoff: ‘There is no substitute for independen­ce and freedom, not even a crown’
Romanoff: ‘There is no substitute for independen­ce and freedom, not even a crown’

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