In 1932 she married
Shane O'Neill, 3rd Baron O'Neill, who was both an aristocrat and a financier. Before Ann began an affair with the influential Esmond Cecil Harmsworth in 1936, the couple had two children: In 1940, Esmond Harmsworth became the 2nd Viscount Rothermere. Ann's husband went to war; she then appeared with Harmsworth, as well as having an affair with
Ian Fleming, at that time a stockbroker, who became an assistant to the Director of Naval Intelligence. Lord O'Neill was killed in action in 1944.
Second marriage Following Lord O'Neill's death in 1944, Ann married Lord Rothermere in 1945. Harmsworth was the heir to
Harold Harmsworth, 1st Viscount Rothermere, who owned the
Daily Mail. The couple entertained, and their social circle included the painter
Lucian Freud (who painted her portrait), the choreographer
Frederick Ashton and the artist
Francis Bacon. Meanwhile, Ian Fleming left the navy and became a journalist with
The Sunday Times. He had built
Goldeneye on land in the British
Colony of Jamaica and he had demanded three-month vacations from his employer to enjoy his holiday home. The two spent three months of every year together in Jamaica. Her new husband thought she was in Jamaica to visit
Noël Coward. In 1951 she was divorced by Lord Rothermere.
Third marriage at
Sevenhampton The year following her divorce from Lord Rothermere, she married Fleming. Ann was pregnant with her son when they married. They had one child: • Caspar Fleming (1952–1975), who died in London in October 1975 from an overdose of narcotics. Anxiety over his forthcoming marriage is said to be the reason that Ian Fleming wrote the first
James Bond novel,
Casino Royale. Ann had a £100,000 divorce settlement and Fleming sought additional sources of revenue to add to his salary from
The Sunday Times. The book and its sequels were immediate successes. Ann also had a long-term affair with the
Labour Party politician
Hugh Gaitskell. Her husband was not keen on the socialising, but their houses attracted
Evelyn Waugh,
Cyril Connolly and
Peter Quennell. Ian died in 1964 and their son, Caspar, died in 1975. Both were buried alongside Ian at the church of St James in Sevenhampton. ==References==