Catherine's mother took a house in
Paris and others on the
French Riviera. In 1891, she bought a house in
Nice which she called the Villa Georges, in the boulevard Dubouchage. In France the family was able to afford some twenty servants and a private railway carriage. On 18 October 1901, Catherine married at
Biarritz Prince
Alexander Vladimirovich Baryatinsky (1870–1910). They had two sons, Andrei (born in
Paris on 2 August 1902, died 1931) and Alexander (born at
Pau, in the
Pyrénées-Atlantiques, on 24 March 1905 died 1992). They lived at number 6,
Place des États-Unis. Baryatinski died in 1910, at the age of thirty-nine. Catherine's brother George died, after a long illness, on 13 September 1913 in
Marburg,
Hesse, and was buried at
St Elizabeth's,
Wiesbaden. On 6 October 1916, at
Yalta, Catherine married secondly
Prince Sergei Platonovich Obolensky (1890–1978), son of
General Prince Platon Sergeievich Obolensky. Her new husband, Obolensky, fought in the
White Army during the
Russian Civil War. Catherine's mother died in 1922, leaving only her house in Nice, the Villa Georges. The family's other houses, in Paris,
Neuilly, and Biarritz had been sold at a loss over the years. The same year, Obolensky left Catherine for
Alice Astor, the daughter of
John Jacob Astor IV. After divorcing him in 1923, Catherine became a professional singer, with a
repertoire of some two hundred songs in
English,
French,
Russian and
Italian. Her autobiography,
My book: some pages from my life, was published in London in 1924. ==England==