Los Angeles Times

A daughter’s tribute to a legendary life

- BY INGRID SCHMIDT image@latimes.com

A makeshift wooden sign propped at the base of an overgrown tree in front of the Venice home of Natasha Gregson Wagner, daughter of the late actress Natalie Wood and British film producer Richard Gregson, declares “Fairy House” in a child’s off-kilter lettering. It’s easy to miss, as is the fairy home, constructe­d of tiny wooden blocks perched in a nook of the tree. The whimsical work of 4-yearold Clover, Gregson Wagner’s daughter with actor-husband Barry Watson, seems a fitting introducti­on to Wood’s storied legacy as an actress and mother, which is often overshadow­ed by her untimely and controvers­ial drowning death in 1981 off Catalina Island.

Today Gregson Wagner, who was just 11 years old at the time, is taking a break from acting to focus on a new lifestyle brand dedicated to golden memories of her mother. Earlier this month, she sat down over coffee to talk about forthcomin­g products and to reminisce about her mother’s style.

“I’m 46 [years old] now, and she died when she was 43,” said Gregson Wagner. “So I feel like I’m her mom now in the way that I am shepherdin­g her legacy out into the world the way a parent would take care of a child. It’s come full circle and has been incredibly healing.”

The new biographic­al coffee-table book “Natalie Wood: Reflection­s on a Legendary Life” by Manoah Bowman with Gregson Wagner (Running Press: $35, 320 pp.; also available in an $85 limitededi­tion signed by Gregson Wagner, her half-sister Courtney Wagner, 42, and her 86-year-old stepfather-actor Robert Wagner at natalie fragrance.com) offers an in-depth look at Wood’s film career, while shining new light on her private life with many never-before-seen images and family commentary.

This spring marked the introducti­on of Natalie, a gardenia-focused fragrance ($95 for 1.7 ounces) that is a nod to Wood’s signature perfume, reinvented with fresh notes of orange flower and hints of freesia and rose. This month, a candle ($55) was added to the collection, as was a gift set featuring the eau de parfum, a purse spray and body cream ($125), exclusivel­y at Macy’s stores and macys.com.

Barbara Stanwyck, with whom Wood starred in 1946’s “The Bride Wore Boots,” first gifted the then-8year-old actress with a bottle of Jungle Gardenia perfume by Tuvaché. Wood proceeded to send bottles to friends who compliment­ed her on the scent.

“My memory is of her always wearing it,” said Gregson Wagner. “My mom’s birthday is July 20, and gardenias are a summer flower. So I remember on her birthday that my dad would send so many gardenias to our house [on North Canon Drive in Beverly Hills], and it would smell amazing. We also grew them in the garden.”

As for her own signature scent, Gregson Wagner gravitates toward orange flower. “I love Frederic Malle’s Bigarade Concentrée fragrance [with bitter orange notes], and there is an orange grove on the property next door to us in Venice. So in the springtime you can smell the flowers,” she said.

Gregson Wagner has partnered with perfumer Claude Dir of French fragrance house Mane to create the perfume. And there are more fragrances in the works, scheduled to be released in 2017 and beyond. One is a spicy rose scent inspired by Wood’s role as burlesque entertaine­r Gypsy Rose Lee, while another evokes the smoky scent of incense “because my mom was Russian, so we spent lots of time in Russian churches when I was growing up.”

“I have so many of her films, so I can hear her voice and I can see her, but the smelling of her is something I can only evoke through the scents that I am re-creating,” said Gregson Wagner. “When we were growing up, my mom burned Cypres candles by Rigaud [a blend of lavender, pine and cedar], so I love that smell too — mixed with the end of my parents’ dinner party, scents of cigarettes [smoldering] out and the wine that had been drunk. They entertaine­d a lot. I remember the sound of everybody laughing and telling stories and that smell of the house.”

When it comes to personal style and home decor, Gregson Wagner emphasized that she and her mother couldn’t be more opposite.

“In every way, my mom was Russian [Wood’s parents were immigrants],” said Gregson Wagner. “She was opulent. She had lots of objets. And she was a movie star. [Photos of Wood’s fussy, French Rococo-style interiors are featured in the book.] I’m definitely more minimal and cleaner and I like to have less stuff . ...

“I always wonder if she had lived, would she have evolved into something more modern and minimal?”

Gregson Wagner, however, does nostalgica­lly don her mother’s jewelry. Lately, she’s worn a Van Cleef & Arpels enamel butterfly necklace and a crocodile-textured gold Tiffany & Co. bracelet.

Courtney Wagner, daughter of Robert and Natalie, once designed fine jewelry with childhood friend Anita Ko under the label Wagner & Ko and is thinking of re-creating some of their mother’s pieces.

“You can imagine how very, very proud I am of the way they’ve done this and the legacy they’re creating for their mother,” Robert Wagner said.

A percentage of proceeds for every item the brand sells is donated to CoachArt, an L.A.-based nonprofit that offers free instructio­n in athletics and the arts to chronicall­y ill children and their siblings.

“An astrologer taught me that when you put your hands together [in the Buddhist culture], it represents heaven and Earth coming together,” said Gregson Wagner. “They’re not as far apart as we think.

“So when I see a butterfly [Wood loved them] or smell something that reminds me of my mother or somebody sends me a pair of her shoes, I think, ‘Oh, yeah, She’s right there.’ Right. There. Just in a different dimension.”

‘I feel like I’m her mom now in the way that I am shepherdin­g her legacy out into the world.’ — NATASHA GREGSON WAGNER, on her mother, Natalie Wood

 ?? Christina House For The Times ??
Christina House For The Times
 ?? Christina House For The Times ?? NATASHA GREGSON WAGNER, seen at top with daughter Clover, has created a lifestyle brand inspired by her mother, Natalie Wood, seen at middle left holding young Natasha. The brand includes a book about the late actress and the fragrance Natalie, with...
Christina House For The Times NATASHA GREGSON WAGNER, seen at top with daughter Clover, has created a lifestyle brand inspired by her mother, Natalie Wood, seen at middle left holding young Natasha. The brand includes a book about the late actress and the fragrance Natalie, with...
 ?? From Natasha Gregson Wagner ??
From Natasha Gregson Wagner
 ?? Christina House For The Times ??
Christina House For The Times

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