Nancy Davis Reagan was born on
In her early career, Nancy Davis worked as an actress in
stage, film, and television productions.
Her stage performances ranged from summer stock to road tours to
Broadway and, in 1949, she was signed to a seven-year contract with MGM. During this time, she met Ronald Reagan and
they were married on
Shortly
after her husband became Governor of California in 1967, Mrs. Reagan began
visiting wounded
While
First Lady of California, Mrs. Reagan made regular visits to hospitals and
homes for the elderly, as well as schools for physically and emotionally
handicapped children. During one of
these hospital visits in 1967, she observed participants in the Foster
Grandparent Program, a program which brings together senior citizens and
handicapped children, and she soon became its champion. Later, as First Lady of the
Mrs.
Reagan’s special project is fighting drug and alcohol abuse among youth. To spotlight the problem, she has traveled
nearly 250,000 miles throughout the
In
April 1985 Mrs. Reagan expanded her drug awareness campaign to an international
level by inviting First Ladies from around the world to attend a two-day
briefing in
In each
Annual Gallup Poll from 1981 to 1989, the American public voted Mrs. Reagan one
of the ten most admired women in the world, and in 1981, 1985, and 1987, voted
her number one. Every year since 1981,
she has been named one of the ten most admired women in the world by readers of
Good Housekeeping magazine, and in 1984, 1985, and 1986 she ranked number one
in that poll.
After
leaving the White House on
In
October of 1989 Mrs. Reagan’s memoirs, entitled My Turn, were published by Random House.
In
recent years, Mrs. Reagan has devoted her time to projects related to the
Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California, where she serves
on the board of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation, a non-profit,
non-partisan organization dedicated to developing and fostering President
Reagan’s Four Pillars of Freedom:
preserving individual liberty, promoting economic opportunity, advancing
democracy around the world, and instilling pride in our national heritage. In addition, Mrs. Reagan is actively involved
with the national Alzheimer’s Association and its affiliate, the Ronald &
Nancy Reagan Research Institute in
Mrs.
Reagan is the only daughter of Dr. Loyal Davis and Mrs. Edith Davis of