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  1. Alexandre-Athenase Noghès (15 June 1916 – 16 February 1999) [1] was an international tennis champion, married Marinette Bastel, having one son Lionel (racing driver), best known as the first husband of Princess Antoinette of Monaco, whom he married as his second wife on 4 December 1951.

    • 16 February 1999 (aged 82), Monaco
    • .mw-parser-output .marriage-line-margin2px{line-height:0;margin-bottom:-2px}.mw-parser-output .marriage-line-margin3px{line-height:0;margin-bottom:-3px}.mw-parser-output .marriage-display-ws{display:inline;white-space:nowrap}, Marinette Bastel ​(before 1946)​, Princess Antoinette, Baroness of Massy, ​ ​(m. 1951; div. 1954)​, Margaret James
  2. Alexandre Athenase Noghès (Mónaco, 15 de junio de 1916 – Los Ángeles, California, 16 de febrero de 1999) [1] fue un abogado monegasco, campeón internacional de tenis, más conocido por ser el primer marido de la princesa Antonieta de Mónaco, baronesa de Massy, con la cual se casó en segundas nupcias, el 4 de diciembre de 1951 en Génova.

  3. 16 de fev. de 1999 · Biography. Alexandre was born on the 15 June, 1916 in Monte Carlo, Monaco, France. The son of Antony Noghes and Marie (unknown). He married Princesa Antoinette Louise Alberte Suzanne Grimaldi on the 4 December, 1951 Genoa, Genova, Liguria, Italy. Alexandre and Antoinette had three children.

    • June 15, 1916
    • February 16, 1999
    • Early Life
    • Children
    • Marriages
    • Life Account
    • Death
    • Patronages
    • Honours
    • Bibliography

    Princess Antoinette was born on 28 December 1920 in Paris, during the reign of her great-grandfather Prince Albert I, Prince of Monaco. She was the elder child and only daughter of Princess Charlotte of Monaco and her husband Count Pierre de Polignac. Her mother was the only child of Prince Louis, Hereditary Prince of Monaco. She was named Antoinet...

    Princess Antoinette had a long-term liaison with Alexandre-Athenase Noghès, a Monegasque-born attorney and international tennis champion, in the mid-1940s. The couple had three children born out-of-wedlock who were legitimated by their parents' subsequent marriage (on December 4, 1951) and, henceforth, included in the line of succession to the Mone...

    Princess Antoinette and Alexandre-Athenase Noghès subsequently married at the Monaco consulate in Genoa on 4 December 1951 (her first, his second) and divorced in 1954. On 15 November 1951, Antoine...
    She married her second husband, Dr. Jean-Charles Rey (Monaco, 22 October 1914 – Monaco, 17 September 1994), president of the Conseil National (the Parlement of Monaco) in The Hagueon 2 December 196...
    Her third and last husband was John Brian Gilpin (Southsea, Hampshire, 10 February 1930 – London, 5 September 1983), a British ballet dancer, whom she married in Monaco on 28 July 1983. He died sud...

    Having divorced Noghès, she and her lover Jean-Charles Rey hatched a plan to depose her brother Rainier III, Prince of Monaco, and declare herself regent on the basis of having a son who would one day inherit the throne. This led to the breakup of the relationship. Rainier's marriage to Grace Kelly in 1956 and the arrival of his heirs, Princess Car...

    On 18 March 2011 Princess Antoinette died at The Princess Grace Hospital Centre, aged 90. Her funeral took place on 24 March 2011. She is buried in the Chapel of Peace in Monaco beside her parents, her daughters Elizabeth-Ann and Christine-Alix, her last husband John Brian Gilpin and her nephew by marriage, Stefano Casiraghi.

    President of the Society for the Protection of Animals and Refuge of Monaco.
    President of the Canine Society of Monaco.
    President of the “Monaco Interviews on Energy Medicines”, which became, the “Monaco International Interviews”.
    President of the Monegasque Tennis Federation.

    Palace: My Life in the Royal Family of Monaco by Baron Christian de Massy & Charles Higham (1986, Atheneum, ISBN 0-689-11636-5)

  4. Antony Noghès (13 September 1890 in Monaco – 2 August 1978 in Monte Carlo, Monaco) was the founder of the Monaco Grand Prix. He also helped create the Rallye Monte-Carlo in 1911. He suggested the international adoption of the checkered flag to end races.

  5. Elizabeth-Ann (Noghès) de Massy (3 July 1947 – 10 June 2020) was the daughter of Princess Antoinette of Monaco and Alexandre-Athenase Noghès. She was a first cousin of the reigning Prince Albert II and niece of Prince Rainier III. She was the godmother of her first cousin once-removed Princess Stéphanie of Monaco .

  6. A princesa Antonieta teve um caso de longa-data com o procurador e campeão internacional de tênis monegasco Alexandre-Athenase Noghès, no meio dos anos 1940. Três filhos nasceram desta união: Elizabeth Ann de Massy (1947-2020)