August 1, 2024 | Dancy Mason

Seedy Facts About Doris Castlerosse, The Mistress Of Mayfair


Think Cara Delevingne is scandalous? Meet her great-aunt, Viscountess Doris Castlerosse.


1. She Was “The Mistress Of Mayfair”

It’s a rough life when you social climb your way into history, and no one knew that better than Doris Delevingne, the Viscountess of Castlerosse. Nicknamed the “Mistress of Mayfair” for the sheer number of beds she ruthlessly seduced her way into around London, Castlerosse was the most scandalous courtesan of her time.

The details of her lovers still shock people today, not to mention the sordid secrets of her marriage. But in the end, she paid an appalling price.

doris castlerosse

2. She Had A Scraps To Scandal Story

Although she came from humble beginnings (her father was a French hat maker in London), Doris Delevingne knew what she wanted early in life. At the age of 18, she began working just next to the high and mighty of England, selling used gowns to actresses. But for Doris, who was blonde, beautiful, and fine-featured, this was only a stepping stone.

She found her next step up very quickly.

Cara Delevingnelev radin, Shutterstock

3. An Actress Pulled Her In

While working in this dress trade, Doris met the person who would change her life. Actress Gertrude Lawrence invited Doris to room with her in the posh neighborhood of Mayfair, and it gave Doris a whole new perspective on life.

Lawrence was the mistress of a Cavalry Officer, and had fancy cars, elegant parties, and constant jewels at her command. Suddenly, Doris began to see just how cushy the world of a kept woman was. This wasn’t a good thing.

Gertrude Lawrence looking at the cameraABC Radio, Wikimedia Commons

4. She Was An Addict

There’s certainly no shame in a woman making it into society any way she could, but Doris Delevingne wasn’t most women. In short order, she became positively addicted to Lawrence’s kind of lifestyle. Around this time, she apparently liked to touch her head, then her neck, then her decolletage with the mantra “Tiara, brooch, clip, clip”.

She was ravenous for extravagance, and she knew just how to get it.

B&W photograph of Gertrude Lawrence and Noel Coward - 1931Vandamm Studio, Wikimedia Commons

5. She Became A Kept Woman

It wasn’t long before Doris took a page out of her friend Gertrude’s book and snagged herself a wealthy lover of her own. While trawling the uppity clubs in town, her first major conquest was the American millionaire Laddie Sanford. The terms of their relationship were very clear from the beginning.

Sanford gave Doris a new house, an allowance big enough for her to buy a Rolls Royce, and her own personal maid. And what did Doris give in exchange? Well…

Stephen SanfordTIME Magazine, Wikimedia Commons

6. She Was Good In Bed

Doris was an unabashed social climber, yes, but her determination wasn’t the only key to her success. She had a very dirty secret weapon. Not to be too delicate about it, but word got around fast that Doris was a dynamo in the sack. She even had her own signature move, ”Cleopatra’s grip,” though its details are unclear and probably best left to the imagination anyway.

Unfortunately, no matter how good she was in bed, she was also turning into a monster.

Cleopatra depicted in Rome in Egyptian clothesHBO, Rome (2005–2007)

7. She Was Cruelly Thoughtless

Doris’s bedroom appetites were only matched by her need for constant material comforts. On Sanford’s bill, she insisted on ordering Italian shoes 250 pairs at a time, since she believed it was “Idiotic to wear shoes more than three or four times”. She was even more flippant about her Parisian silk stockings; those she only wore once before chucking them.

But her gravy train was about to break down.

high heels shoesPexels, Pixabay

8. Her Lover Dumped Her Horribly

Whatever Doris’s carnal charms, Laddie Sanford didn’t stay captivated for long. One day, he inflicted a heartless insult. He not only struck up an affair with the beautiful—and noble, and rich—Edwina Mountbatten, he up and left Doris in the process. Sure, Doris still had her house and her fancy things, but she still needed a cash influx.

She came up with a shrewd but chilling solution.

Louis and Edwina MountbattenUnknown Author, Wikimedia Commons

9. She Went To The Dark Side

Around this time, Doris moved from being a kept woman to becoming a full-on courtesan of the demi-monde. She filled her schedule (and her four-poster) with a rotating stable of men, usually the profligate sons of the aristocracy. No less than Prince George, son of King George V, “got into trouble” for carousing at one of her raucous parties.

For Doris, the slide down to the underworld of London was soft as silk. That didn’t mean it wasn’t dangerous.

Prince George, Duke Of Kent wearing naval officer's uniform - 1934Bassano Ltd, Wikimedia Commons

10. She Developed Another Trademark

Doris now had to live on her wits and beauty alone, and that wasn’t as easy as it looked. She became a regular fixture at clubs like Café de Paris, hoping to attract rich men into her silken web. She even developed another trademark—people called her “The Girl With The White Gloves,” because she took to wearing classy white opera gloves wherever she went.

It was as good a calling card as any, and she soon landed her next meal-ticket, the Canadian stockbroker Sir Edward Edgar. She just didn’t land him for long.

Café de Paris, LondonAndy Mabbett, CC BY-SA 3.0 , Wikimedia Commons

11. She Ruined A Man

Doris now had permanently expensive tastes, and any man who wanted her had to pay through the nose. Of course, with a reputation like hers in the boudoirs, many a gentleman like Sir Edward Edgar were willing to pay this price of admission. It ended in his destruction. Before long, Edgar filed for bankruptcy, no doubt in partial thanks to Doris’s demands.

So Doris was alone again…and she was about to enter her truly infamous era.

Edward Elgar looking rightUnknown Author, Wikimedia Commons

12. She Met A Notorious Noble

At 28 years old, Doris met Valentine Browne, the Viscount Castlerosse. But don’t let his fancy name fool you—there was perhaps no noble more notorious in London than the Viscount. As a gossip columnist for the Sunday Express and lackey to the sly, oily press magnate Lord Beaverbrook, Castlerosse was an expert in sleaze.

Except that was just the beginning.

Valentine Browne, 6th Earl of Kenmare 1923Unknown author, Wikimedia Commons

13. Her Lover Was Ugly

Where Doris was all moon-faced beauty, the Viscount Castlerosse was…not. Don’t go picturing a romance hero swooping Doris off her feet. Instead, Castlerosse was overweight, balding, and generally considered something of a social failure in polite society. Which, well, you might have guessed from the whole “Viscount acting as a gossip columnist” thing.

Forgive me though, I know I’m being shallow. The Viscount’s personality was even worse.

Valentine Edward Charles Browne, Viscount CastlerosseHulton Archive, Getty Images

14. Her Relationship Was Terrifying

From the moment he saw Doris, the Viscount wanted to have her. Doris, knowing a paycheck when she saw one, obliged—but refused to make him her one and only. The Viscount’s reaction was chilling. When constantly sending expensive gifts her way didn’t tame her, Castlerosse pilfered the key to her house and let himself in whenever he pleased.

Doris, for her own bizarre reasons, didn’t seem to mind. Then the dysfunction truly hit.

Valentine Edward Charles Browne, Viscount Castlerosse (1891 - 1946), circa 1938.Hulton Archive, Getty Images

15. She Stormed Her Lover

Doris was no pushover, and Castlerosse was a man clinging hard to his failing sense of superiority. It was a very bad combination. When they fought, it often turned into something more like a blowout bar fight than a lovers’ quarrel, with Doris biting and scratching at her beau anywhere she could. Only, she never expected the Viscount’s savage retaliation.

Red Flag Wedding MomentsShutterstock

16. She Received A Brutal Punishment

The first time one of these fights happened, Doris was in for the shock of her life. For when she bit and clawed the Viscount, he hit back. With Doris walking around London visibly bruised, the Viscount’s boss Lord Beaverbrook had the decency to shame the man for it—but Castlerosse merely rolled up his trouser legs to reveal his own wounds, as if he were absolved.

Yet their other problems, though less visible, were more powerful.

Lord BeaverbrookYousuf Karsh, CC BY-SA 3.0 NL , Wikimedia Commons

17. His Mother Hated Her

Doris and her Viscount were a match made in the fires of Hades, but they just couldn’t seem to quit each other. This developed into a scandal. Castlerosse came from an uppity Irish Catholic family, and his battle-axe mother, Lady Kenmare, disapproved of Doris on the grounds that she was neither Catholic nor classy.

But, Doris being Doris and the Viscount being the Viscount, they had to go and spittle in everybody’s faces anyway.

Viscount and Viscountess Castlerosse looking at the cameraBettmann, Getty Images

18. She Kept A Ruinous Secret

In 1928, Doris and the Viscount went down to the Hammersmith Registry Office and made it official, marrying in a quick and dirty ceremony. It was a top-secret turn of events, especially since the Viscount didn’t want his mommie dearest finding out about it.

For a short time, they walked around town, smug and satisfied that they’d pulled one over on his family. But they paid the piper back tenfold.

grayscale close up photo of wedding ringsMegapixelstock, Pexels

19. Her World Fell Apart

Doris had her own kind of street smarts, sure, but the couple as a whole weren’t exactly geniuses. Of course the Viscount’s well-connected mother found out about the union, and of course her reaction was unhinged: She cut the Viscount off completely from his inheritance.

Suddenly, Doris, realized she’d backed the wrong thoroughbred. Her next decision was easy.

Valentine Browne in suitKeystone-France, Getty Images

20. She Betrayed Him With A Blink

For the newly-minted Doris Castlerosse, everything had a price. Even her marriage. So when the Viscount’s mommy greatly reduced his circumstances, Doris performed a cold-hearted act in an instant. She began taking right back up with a slew of other men—ones who had the means to fund the lifestyle she wanted.

And she debased herself further.

Couple getting married at courthouseElnur, Shutterstock

21. She Was An Awful Friend

Men weren’t the only source of Doris’s income. She also dabbled in other nefarious activities, including selling out her famous friends. See, the Viscount’s boss Lord Beaverbrook had gossip rags to run, and he paid Doris to be a “society spy” and spill the beans on the goings-on of the aristocracy. She happily took his money and performed the slimy duties.

It was a treacherous game…just not as treacherous as her husband.

Lord Beaverbrook in suit and hatH. F. Davis, Getty Images

22. She Dated Politicians

Soon, Doris seemed to be sleeping with half of London, and she was none too discreet about it. With so much gossip going on about her, it wasn’t long before her husband tracked all her movements and the members of her little black book. But when she took up next with the Conservative MP Sir Alfred Beit, the Viscount absolutely snapped.

Sir Alfred Beit and wifePA Images, Getty Images

23. Her Husband Made An Infuriating Discovery

At the climax—pun intended—of Doris’s affair with Alfred Beit, Viscount Castlerosse appears to have burst right into the room, catching them red-handed. His next actions were nearly beyond imagining. He began to beat Sir Beit so hard with his walking stick, Doris cried out “M*rder!” from the sidelines.

Maybe this was a turning point, because Doris moved on to a different breed of man entirely.

Portrait of emotive  shocked woman vintageAnton Vierietin, Shutterstock

24. She Thought She Could “Cure” Her Friends

Doris’s whole identity seemed to revolve around her bedroom prowess, and she even liked to proclaim, “There’s no such thing as an impotent man, just an incompetent woman”. This led her to a ridiculous conclusion: She began to believe she could “cure” a man’s homosexuality, just by being herself. As you might imagine, this had bizarre and sordid consequences.

Pride flagnancydowd, Pixabay

25. She Took Up With A Boy Toy

Obsessed with the idea of turning a man straight through her (admittedly impressive) sheet skills, Doris went to great lengths to “convert” the very gay Robert Herber-Percy, known around town as “Mad Boy”. Her methods were mind-boggling. As a 25th birthday present, Doris bought Herber-Percy a room at the Ritz. When he opened the door, his jaw dropped.

Robert Heber-Percy, Berners' partner, known as the 'Mad BoyFox Photos, Getty Images

26. She Gave Him A Disturbing “Gift”

Once in the room, Doris “presented” Herber-Percy first with a woman she’d hired off the streets, and then with a whip. Her next words were utterly chilling. As a part of her unorthodox cure, she wanted him to whip the woman until her last breath. How would this change things? Your guess is as good as mine. But Doris’s companion shocked her.

Hôtel Ritz ParisWolfgang Jung, CC BY-SA 2.0, Wikimedia Commons

27. She Was Vicious

Doris Castlerosse was not someone you said no to, but Robert Herber-Percy did try, bless his soul. He only made a half-hearted attempt at hitting the poor woman—and in turn had to witness a horrific sight. Frustrated, Doris snatched the whip from him and began to do the job herself, giving the woman a welt. She then snapped, “I haven’t spend my money for this”.

Yes, she was that terrifying. But she was about to meet her match.

Angry woman wedding guest with spread palms in clueless and questioned pose, wearing red dress in frontMix and Match Studio, Shutterstock

28. She Had Ridiculous Goals

In her constant quest to convert gay men, Doris fell in with the celebrity photographer Cecil Beaton. This time, she was as bizarrely tender with Beaton as she was shockingly cruel with Herber-Percy. In order to “seduce” Beaton, she left tuberoses on his bed, and told him to “think of his sister’s wedding” while in the act.

Still, she was about to learn that her lovers could be cruel right back to her.

Cecil Beaton in blackLafayette Ltd, Wikimedia Commons

29. She Got A Taste Of Her Own Medicine

Beaton would later admit that in this relationship, it was he who treated Doris badly, not the other way around. Although he gave her the memorable nickname “Doritzons,” he obviously wasn’t quite converted to her, er, way of life, and eventually dumped her.

This wasn’t something Doris was used to, and her ensuing conquest had more than a whiff of a rebound.

Artist Cecil Beaton in suitRon Galella, Getty Images

30. She Slept With Winston Churchill’s Son

Around this time, Doris struck up an affair with Randolph Churchill, who was the spitting image of his father Winston Churchill with none of the elder’s goodness or good sense. To everyone who knew him, Randolph was an oaf, a cad, and lush who drank double brandies from the age of 19. In other words, he was perfect for Doris, who adoringly nicknamed him “Fuzzy Wuzzy”.

As we’ll see, this relationship would get even more scandalous, but for now Doris had a quite different matter to deal with.

Randolph ChurchillCecil Beaton, Wikimedia Commons

31. Her Marriage Hit A Snag

I’m sure it will shock absolutely no one to hear that by the 1930s, Doris and her husband were estranged from one another. They were also in a huge bind. Divorce back then wasn’t so easy to come by. Though the courts needed adultery in play—which Doris had plenty of—they also needed her to prove it, along with evidence of their estrangement, which was more difficult.

Doris’s solution to all this was…unorthodox.

divorce proceedingsGAS-photo, Shutterstock

32. She Had To Fake Her Real Life

To “prove” her adultery, Doris first roped in many of her lovers to act as co-respondents in the divorce case. Ok, check. Then, she needed to show she’d been far away from the Viscount for a good long while. To fulfill this, she took a trip around the Orient, taking up with a man named Sir William Rootes for good measure. Only, Rootes was hiding a dirty little secret.

William Rootes, 1st Baron Rootes 1937Here, Wikimedia Commons

33. Her Husband Paid Off A Ringer

In the middle of her whirlwind affair with Rootes, there was something Doris didn’t know. He was a very good friend of her estranged husband, and many believe it was Viscount Castlerosse who put Rootes up to it, just to ensure the upcoming divorce proceedings were airtight.

Only, Doris seems to have found out about this, because her next act was pure vengeance.

Sir William RootersUniversity of Southern California, Getty Images

34. She Was Ruinously Spiteful

Doris was miserable in her marriage, yes, but she hated her husband so much she couldn’t resist some good old mutually assured destruction. After the Rootes debacle, she found out where the Viscount was staying, let herself into his room, and jumped into his bed—all so that they couldn’t prove to the courts they were estranged anymore.

Did this mean Doris had to stay married even longer to a man she despised? Sure. But, you know, revenge. And anyway, Doris had a new escape route…

Cheerful woman talking on phoneStokkete, Shutterstock

35. She Romanced A Woman

Doris had tried changing gay men to her team, and now she took up her own same-gender affair, becoming the kept woman of American millionairess Margot Hoffman. For years, Hoffman showered Doris with gifts ranging from a Palazzo in Venice to aristocratic portraits. And that wasn’t the only way Doris found herself on top.

woman in colorful venetian clothes and mask on bridgeAndrea Piacquadio, Pexels

36. She Had A Comeback

With Hoffman on her arm, Doris Castlerosse had another change in fortunes. In the thick of her marriage to the Viscount, Doris’s social cache fell, but with Hoffman she found herself the toast of the town again, and even attended King George VI’s coronation.

As she quipped of this time, “I much prefer the life I am leading. Takes half the effort and earns twice the money”. Well, be careful what you wish for.

Portrait of King George VI in official clothes - between 1940 and 1946Walter Stoneman, Wikimedia Commons

37. She Finally Got What She Wanted

At long last in 1938, Doris and the Viscount really, truly, actually divorced. They had been together nearly a decade—and had been trying to split for practically that entire time. Conveniently (for Doris), their official split coincided with WWII starting, and she took the opportunity to run to the safety of New York with Margot Hoffman.

It should have been a cushy way to wait out the conflict, but Doris had to go and ruin it.

Shutterstock 1617295129ADragan, Shutterstock

38. She Used Her Lover

Margot Hoffman was desperately in love with Doris, but Doris’s reasons were much darker. Like all her conquests, she cared first and foremost about Hoffman’s pocketbook. There is little evidence she loved Hoffman at all, or that she was a lesbian except via opportunism.

Eventually, this indifference wore even on the devoted Hoffman, and she made a devastating break.

Fashionable elegant confident redhead woman vintageVictoria Chudinova, Shutterstock

39. She Got What She Deserved

Soon after Doris came to Manhattan with Hoffman, her cash cow got some self-respect and dumped her, leaving her in the lurch. With no man to fall back on, age fast approaching—she was now in her 40s—and a foreign country all around her, Doris had to come up with a backup plan, fast. As it happened, that backup plan had a very familiar face.

Brooklyn and Manhattan BridgeNational Museum of the U.S. Navy,  Wikimedia Commons

40. She Couldn’t Quit Him

Vulnerable and lonely, Doris went back to that same old well: the Viscount Castlerosse. She had been corresponding with him for some time while over in America, and now applied all her charms to the missives. His letter in response made her heart race. Proving that the two them hadn’t learned a dang thing, the Viscount asked Doris to marry him again.

This, time, however, Doris didn’t have the upper hand. She just didn’t know it yet.

letters in the drawercottonbro studio, Pexels

41. She Was Getting Played

While Viscount Castlerosse was writing to his ex-wife, he was also romancing another woman—Enid, Viscountess Furness, an Australian heiress who was infamous in her own right. After all, if Doris could play the field, why couldn’t he? Perhaps, however, Doris sensed this in some way, because she began planning a hasty trip back to Europe to reunite with Castlerosse. A very hasty one.

scenery of an old European town surrounded by green treesurtimud.89, Pexels

42. She Called In An Infamous Favor

It was no cake walk to get back to Europe from America in the 1940s, especially in the middle of a battle. To help her along the way, Doris did two things—both of which were scandalous. First, she somehow managed to convince Prime Minister Winston Churchill to help her secure air passage over. How? Well…we’ll get to that shortly.

But it’s what she did next that was her downfall.

Winston Churchill wearing suit is looking at camera - 1941Yousuf Karsh, Wikimedia Commons

43. She Made A Desperate Choice

At this point, Doris had almost entirely run out of money. To supplement her non-existent income, she pawned some of her diamonds, though she hadn’t yet received payment for them when Churchill sent over her plane tickets.

Full of hope, she set off for her homeland of England and anticipated walking into the arms of her ex. That hope was gravely misplaced.

Winston ChurchillUnknown Author, Wikimedia Commons

44. She Tried To Hide The Truth

When Doris got off the train she took into London, Viscount Castlerosse was waiting to meet her in the darkened station. He then drove her to the Dorchester hotel, but when she stepped into the building his jaw dropped. Now that she was in the bright lights, he realized time had not been kind to the courtesan.

Her partying had turned her beauty—perhaps her only asset—into a cheap, haggard imitation of its former glory. The Viscount turned cold-hearted in an instant.

old steam freight train during dayPixabay, Pexels

45. Her Ex Abandoned Her

After seeing Doris’s current state, the Viscount stayed only for a perfunctory dinner, and then went right back to his Viscountess Enid, resolving never to see Doris again. It gets more depressing: Doris was no fool, and she knew that her ex-husband was high-tailing it out the door. This is where everything came full circle.

Photo of a old Metal door handleSuzy Hazelwood, Pexels

46. She Committed A Offense

With her future now so uncertain again, Doris naturally began to think of that money she was owed from the pawnbroker who took her diamonds. Unthinking, she telegraphed them about the cash—little knowing she had just sealed herself into a dark fate. In WWII, selling assets like diamonds was against the law, and the authorities was reading her telegrams with great interest.

They acted very quickly from there.

WWII Europe, FranceNational Archives and Records Administration, Picryl

47. She Hit Rock Bottom

With Doris so flagrantly breaking the law, officers were at her door in short order, questioning the socialite on what, exactly, she thought she was doing. Although they didn’t immediately charge her and left her rooms, Doris nonetheless began to panic. Visions of a drab, penniless life behind bars danced in her head.

With no friends she could call, and no lovers to manipulate, she believed she only had one tragic option left.

Funniest Military RecruitsShutterstock

48. She Met A Tragic End

On the 12 of December 1942, Doris Delevingne took a fatal dose of sleeping pills at the Dorchester Hotel. She was just 42 years old when she passed but left behind enough scandal for three lifetimes. In fact, her scandal still continues: Model Cara Delevingne is her great-niece.

But there is still one secret about Doris that historians hotly debate.

Dorchester Hotel in London MayfairUggBoy♥UggGirl, CC BY 2.0, Wikimedia Commons

49. She Slept With A Father And His Son

Doris’s steamy liaison with Randolph Churchill is practically a matter of public record. But her affair gets more sordid than that. According to a source close to the Churchill family, Doris also had a fling with Randolph’s father, Winston Churchill, when he was not yet Prime Minister. And though some scoff at this thought—many see Churchill as staunchly loyal to his wife Clementine—there is some big evidence.

Churchill With Children Randolph And DianaUnknown Author, Wikimedia Commons

50. She Had A Scandalous Portrait

Besides the fact that it was Winston who helped Doris get out of America and back into Europe, the future Prime Minister also painted two portraits of the courtesan—when he had previously only painted his wife. Some even say that Doris kept one of the painting as collateral, and that one of Winston’s aides had to sneak into her hotel room after her passing to find it and remove the evidence.

Winston ChurchillNational Archives and Records Administration, Wikimedia Commons


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