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- <text>
- <title>
- (1980) Four Reagans Used To Going Their Own Ways
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1980 Highlights
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 5, 1981
- MAN OF THE YEAR
- Four Reagans Used to Going Their Own Ways
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> "They build us to be independent, to think on our own."
- Maureen Reagan once said. And that is exactly what she and
- Ronald Reagan's other three children have always been and done.
- Maureen is the daughter of Reagan and former Wife Jane Wyman,
- the actress; Michael is their adopted son. Patricia and Ronald
- are Reagan's children by Nancy. Some family snapshots:
- </p>
- <p> Maureen, 40, is by far the most political. An active
- Republican when her father was merely a Democrat for Nixon, she
- was a conservative in the '60s, condemning the anti-war movement
- as Communist-inspired. A fine public speaker and ebullient
- campaigner for the man she sometimes calls "Dear Old Dad," she
- was his highly visible cheerleader at the G.O.P. Convention.
- She is also, to her father's chagrin, a campaigner for ERA, and
- will be, she vows, "until the day I die." Such unqualified
- enthusiasm and candor are typical of Reagan's animated and
- opinionated elder daughter. Like her siblings, Maureen attended
- boarding schools and dropped out of college (Marymount in
- Virginia). She married twice in her 20s: to a Washington, D.C.
- traffic policeman and to a California attorney. She struggled
- as an actress and singer long enough to give her stage-struck
- half sister Patti some advice, "I told her how to fill out
- unemployment forms." Though briefly successful as a TV
- talk-show host. Maureen left show business in 1978 to become
- an executive vice president of Sell Overseas America, an
- organization that promotes U.S. exports. Beginning this month,
- she will moonlight as host of a Saturday radio talk show in Los
- Angeles, and, who knows, she muses, in two years maybe run for
- Senator. A more definite post-Inaugural plan is to marry Dennis
- Revell, 29, who is now cramming for the California bar exam.
- This despite vows to "never marry again," but then the
- theatrical Maureen, as Reagan staffers know, sometimes
- overstates her positions.
- </p>
- <p> Michael, 35, is the settled sibling, the family square, and
- the low-key member of the quartet. Married for six years (to
- Colleen Sterns, an interior decorator), the father of the only
- Reagan grandchild (Cameron, 2), the owner of a house in the
- suburbs (Sherman Oaks, Calif.), he was a cheerful, popular and
- politically compatible weekend campaigner for his father. He
- admits, however: "It was a while before I found a direction."
- A preschool tot when Reagan and Wyman were divorced, Mike was
- bounced around three secondary schools. He played quarterback
- well enough to be offered a scholarship by Arizona State, but
- turned it down after deciding the college squad took football
- too seriously: "They were all 275-lb. Mean Joe Greene types."
- Instead, Mike turned to speedboating. He was married, and
- divorced, in less than a year, and meandered--working briefly
- as a trucker's assistant--before becoming a salesman of yachts
- and other pleasure craft in 1971. Last year he started a firm
- that markets gasohol equipment for farmers. More recently, Mike
- has become a stockholding senior vice president of the Southern
- Pacific Title Co., a Santa Ana firm that sells real estate title
- insurance, and is now negotiating to do a radio commentary show
- on current affairs. During the campaign, Mike sometimes
- critiqued the elder Reagan's style: "I'd tell him that he should
- come across strong more often." In turn, Reagan has given Mike
- some fatherly advice, warning him not to be exploited by those
- currying First Family favors.
- </p>
- <p> Patricia, 28, has strayed furthest from the parental nest.
- Tall (5 ft. 8 in.), slender and quiet in manner, she not only
- dropped out of Northwestern University but also the lives of her
- parents in the early '70s. She lived with Rock Musician Bernie
- Leadon of the Eagles, opposed the Viet Nam War and, for a time,
- ceased communication with the elder Reagans. "I was very
- rebellious and very feisty," she once explained. "The only place
- I wanted to go to was Haight-Ashbury in San Francisco." Patti did
- not go to the counterculture capital, but to Hollywood. There,
- using the professional name Patti Davis, she has won small roles
- in the likes of TV's Love Boat. Though she took no part in her
- father's campaign ("I'm antipolitical"), she is now reconciled
- with her parents: she appeared at Reagan's nomination, has
- bought a Dior gown for the Inauguration, and even returned to
- the family's Pacific Palisades home for a while before finding
- her own beachside apartment a few miles away. The election,
- admits Patti, "has done wonders for my career." TV and film
- offers are turning up, she has signed with the high-powered
- William Morris Agency, and last month she negotiated a one-year
- contract with NBC for an undisclosed six-figure sum. Now, she
- says, "I'm hoping for more dramatic roles," but not in
- real-life politics.
- </p>
- <p> Ronald, 22 is a dedicated and disciplined professional at an
- age when his siblings were still searching for direction. He
- is also impetuous. Last November Ron surprised his parents with
- his sudden wedding to live-in Girlfriend Doria Palmieri, 29, a
- literary researcher. Four years earlier he had stunned them by
- dropping out of Yale to become a ballet dancer. And last month
- he created a stir by informing New York magazine that he would
- not shake hands with Jimmy Carter at the Inauguration because
- the President "has the morals of a snake." Said Ron: "I will
- never forgive the way he called my father a racist and a
- warmonger," though he later regretted the outburst as an
- "unfortunate moment of candor."
- </p>
- <p> Of the four children, Ron was the closest as a youth to his
- father and the best student. He remembers being "seduced by
- dance movies from the time I was eight," but did not begin to
- study until age 19, when he entered Los Angeles' Stanley Holden
- Dance Center, which was recommended by longtime Reagan Friend
- Gene Kelly. Within two years he was offered a scholarship by
- the prestigious Joffrey school in New York City. Seven months
- later he became an alternate member of the Joffrey II troupe,
- and last fall made his debut as a regular member. "His
- improvement is phenomenal," says Company Director Sally Bliss.
- "Ron has no tension in his dancing and incredible concentration.
- I think he's really going to make it." Concurs Anna
- Kisselgoff, chief dance critic for the New York Times: "You
- don't have to be a Republican to tell that Ron Reagan is a very
- talented dancer." Yet Ron remains modest about his progress and
- cautious about his newly acquired notoriety. Says he: "You
- realize very fast that you could become another Margaret
- Truman."
- </p>
- <p>-- By Claudia Wallis. Reported by Laurence I. Barrett with
- Reagan
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-