Early life Born in
Poltava in
Poltava Governorate of the
Russian Empire (present-day Ukraine), Moura was the daughter of Ignaty Platonovich Zakrevsky (1839–1906), a member of the
Russian nobility and
diplomat. In 1911, she married Johann (Ivan) Alexandrovich von Benckendorff (1882–1919), a member of the
Baltic German nobility, Second Secretary at the
Russian embassy in Berlin, and Gentleman of the Court. They had two children: Paul (1913–1998) and Tatiana (1915–2004), who later married Bernard Alexander and became the mother of the businesswoman
Helen Alexander. Benckendorff owned a large country house and estate in
Estonia, the
Jäneda (Jendel) manor. On 19 April 1919, he was discovered dead in his estate. The identities of the murderers were never found, but it is possible he was killed by local peasants who sought to divide the land of an aristocratic family.
Arrests Before the
October Revolution, Moura worked in the English embassy in
Petersbourg, where she became acquainted with British diplomat
R. H. Bruce Lockhart. Upon the assassination of her husband in 1919, she was arrested on suspicion of spying for the United Kingdom and was transferred to the
Lubyanka prison. Lockhart, who mentioned her under her given name in his 1932 book
Memoirs of a British Agent, tried to vouch for her but was detained as well for a couple of weeks. They had been lovers and she became pregnant by him, but the pregnancy miscarried. Lockhart's book was made into an American movie in 1934,
British Agent, starring
Leslie Howard as "Stephen Locke" and
Kay Francis as "Elena Moura". Before Lockhart's release and expulsion from Russia, in connection with the "
Lockhart Plot", Budberg was also released, under the condition that she would co-operate with the intelligence service if the need ever arose. After two more arrests and detentions in Petersburg, Budberg began to work for and publish in the review "World Literature", where she had met its director, the writer
Maxim Gorky through
Korney Chukovsky. She became the secretary and
common-law wife of Gorky, living in his house with a few interruptions from 1920 to 1933 when the writer lived in Italy, before returning to the Soviet Union. He dedicated his last major work, the novel
The Life of Klim Samgin, to her.
H. G. Wells In 1920, Budberg, still known as Mrs. Benckendorff, met British author
H. G. Wells when he made a celebrated visit to Moscow, and they had a
one-night stand. She was briefly married, on 13 November 1921, to Baron Nikolai (Rotger Emil Arthur Friedrich) von
Budberg-Bönningshausen (born 1896). It was a marriage of convenience, and they soon divorced. It provided her with a title and a passport, however, and thus an ability to leave Soviet Union to visit both her children in Estonia, and Gorky, who then lived near
Sorrento. Baron Budberg, a shady character, eventually moved for good to
Brazil. Moura's relationship with Wells was renewed in 1929 in Berlin and then in 1933 in London, where she had emigrated after Gorky moved back tò the Soviet Union. The close relationship continued until Wells's death in 1946. He had asked her to marry him, but Budberg constantly rejected the proposal.
Double agent suspicion Budberg was widely suspected of being a
double agent for both the
Soviet Union and
British intelligence agencies. She is known to have visited the Soviet Union several times after the 1920s: first overtly in 1936 for the funeral of Gorky (which made people call her an agent of the
NKVD), and again at the end of 1950, with a daughter of
Alexander Guchkov, in 1958, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1965, 1968 and in 1973, the year before she died. After becoming a British citizen in 1947, still under investigation, an
MI5 informant said of her, "she can drink an amazing quantity, mostly gin".
Writing career Among many other activities, Budberg wrote books and was the script writer for at least two films:
Three Sisters (1970), directed by
Laurence Olivier and
John Sichel, and
The Sea Gull (1968), directed by
Sidney Lumet. She translated Gorky's novel
The Life of a Useless Man (1908) into English in 1971. Moura Budberg maintained residences in London at
Ennismore Gardens and in
Cromwell Road. She had made her permanent home in England from the time she emigrated there in 1929 until shortly before her death (31 October 1974), when she returned to Italy. ==Family==