On April 12, 1930, she eloped with the playwright and director
Preston Sturges (1898–1959). In 1932, she sought an annulment on the grounds that he was not legally divorced from his first wife when they eloped. Sturges' screenplay for the 1933 film
The Power and the Glory was loosely based on her stories about her grandfather
C.W. Post. On April 5, 1933, she married for the second time to Etienne Marie Robert Gautier (1907–1993) in the Chapel of Église Saint-Philippe-du-Roule in Paris. Gautier was a well-known polo player and was the nephew of the then mayor of
Compiègne. Their marriage lasted only a few months. son of Kobbé Rand and the grandson of George C. Kobbé, a lawyer with Roosevelt & Kobbé. Their apartment was designed by
Donald Deskey Associates and today, the plans are held in the collections of the
Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum. Alleging cruelty, Eleanor obtained a divorce from Rand on February 24, 1938, in
Reno, Nevada. On April 23, 1942, she married her fourth husband,
János Békessy (1911–1977), a writer also known as
Hans Habe. He was the son of Imre Békessy, a publisher, and was the author of
A Thousand Shall Fall, a novel about his life during
World War II including his capture by the Germans in 1940, imprisonment at
Dieuze transit camp and subsequent escape. Before their divorce in 1946, they had Antal "Tony" Miklos Post De Bekessy (1944–2015). On August 27, 1949, she married for the fifth time to Owen Denis de la Garde Johnson in Paris. He was on the staff of the
American Embassy in Paris, and was the son of
Owen Johnson, a prominent writer from
Stockbridge, Massachusetts. They divorced in 1953. In September 1954, she married her sixth and final husband,
Léon Eugene Barzin (1900–1999), a prominent
Belgian-born
American conductor and founder of the National Orchestral Association, and the founding musical director of the
New York City Ballet in combination with
Lincoln Kirstein and
George Balanchine. The couple moved to Europe in 1958 and lived in Switzerland. They remained married until his death in 1999.
Death Eleanor Close Barzin died in
Paris on November 27, 2006, and was buried in
Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, New York, after a service at
Hillwood Estate, Museum & Gardens. She was survived by her son and businessman
Antal Miklas Post de Bekessy, her granddaughter
Laetitia Allen Vere as well as her half-sister actress
Dina Merrill and two half-brothers Edward B. Close Jr., and
William Taliaferro Close. ==References==