
Reagan and Wyman met when they were both young, new contract players at Warner Brothers studios. In 1938, they were both cast in the military cadet film Brother Rat. Although they were very much attracted to one another, they were very different in personality. Reagan was a midwestern boy next door, affable, handsome and outdoorsy. Wyman was in the process of divorcing her second husband at the age of 21. She was pert, bubbly' had a cute button nose and loved to nightclub. They wed in 1940 and began their marital life in romantic bliss. Both popular and outgoing, their careers were thriving but on different levels. Reagan's star looked the brightest. He was a second lead in A pictures like Dark Victory (1939) with Bette Davis and had a key role as "the Gipper" in the successful football flick Knute Rockne, All American (1940). While Wyman worked steadily at Warners, it was usually as the blonde girlfriend of the film's heroine or a wisecracking chorus girl. In 1941, they had a daughter, Maureen, and in 1945 they adopted a son Michael. The perfect Hollywood couple had become the perfect Hollywood family and it wasn't just for the cameras, they were a sincerely stable family unit.
Ronald Reagan's interest in politics went way back. He became involved with the Screen Actor's Guild, or SAG, in the late 1930's. SAG was, and continues to be, a Hollywood labor union. His friendly personality and natural inclination to the political workings of the union gained him a place on its Board of Directors in the early 1940's. During World War II, he did his stint in the Army Air Force, working state side due to nearsightedness. After the war, differences between the Reagans began to accelerate. As Reagan's film career went, he never really reclaimed the momentum he started to gain before the war with his dramatic role in the 1942 classic Kings Row. Pre-war stars were returning to their studios to join new ones who had established themselves during those years. With no definitive roles lined up for him at Warners, Reagan had to wait it out. He became even more involved in SAG activities and was home less and less. When he was home, he would talk non-stop to Wyman about the political goings on at the Guild. On the phone with SAG concerns, at SAG meetings, discussing SAG business. Wyman, besides being bored out of her gourd, felt neglected. Her career on the other hand had seen a tremendous boost in the years immediately after the war. She was loaned out to Paramount to make The Lost Weekend (1945) in a very dramatic role opposite Ray Milland, who won an Oscar as a hopeless alcoholic. She followed it up with another loan out as the mother in MGM's The Yearling (1946), a part which she could better sink her teeth into and one that gained her a first of several Best Actress Oscar nominations.
In 1947, the marital spiral continued downward. In June, while shooting what Reagan called one of his least favorite films, That Hagen Girl, with an adult Shirley Temple, he developed acute viral pneumonia. Wyman was several months pregnant at the time. His malady became so severe he had to be hospitalized and was literally fighting for his life. Jane went into premature labor and was rushed to another Los Angeles area hospital. On June 26, she gave birth 3 months prematurely to a daughter, who she named Christine. The child died the next day. With Reagan gravely ill in another hospital, Wyman had to face the tragedy and trauma alone and as well had to return home alone. She became deeply despondent and withdrawn. Reagan recovered and upon his convalescence resumed shooting of That Hagen Girl. Between completing the film and his increased activities with the Screen Actors Guild (he had been voted in as president of SAG earlier that year), he was away from home even more.
Ronald Reagan's interest in politics went way back. He became involved with the Screen Actor's Guild, or SAG, in the late 1930's. SAG was, and continues to be, a Hollywood labor union. His friendly personality and natural inclination to the political workings of the union gained him a place on its Board of Directors in the early 1940's. During World War II, he did his stint in the Army Air Force, working state side due to nearsightedness. After the war, differences between the Reagans began to accelerate. As Reagan's film career went, he never really reclaimed the momentum he started to gain before the war with his dramatic role in the 1942 classic Kings Row. Pre-war stars were returning to their studios to join new ones who had established themselves during those years. With no definitive roles lined up for him at Warners, Reagan had to wait it out. He became even more involved in SAG activities and was home less and less. When he was home, he would talk non-stop to Wyman about the political goings on at the Guild. On the phone with SAG concerns, at SAG meetings, discussing SAG business. Wyman, besides being bored out of her gourd, felt neglected. Her career on the other hand had seen a tremendous boost in the years immediately after the war. She was loaned out to Paramount to make The Lost Weekend (1945) in a very dramatic role opposite Ray Milland, who won an Oscar as a hopeless alcoholic. She followed it up with another loan out as the mother in MGM's The Yearling (1946), a part which she could better sink her teeth into and one that gained her a first of several Best Actress Oscar nominations.
In 1947, the marital spiral continued downward. In June, while shooting what Reagan called one of his least favorite films, That Hagen Girl, with an adult Shirley Temple, he developed acute viral pneumonia. Wyman was several months pregnant at the time. His malady became so severe he had to be hospitalized and was literally fighting for his life. Jane went into premature labor and was rushed to another Los Angeles area hospital. On June 26, she gave birth 3 months prematurely to a daughter, who she named Christine. The child died the next day. With Reagan gravely ill in another hospital, Wyman had to face the tragedy and trauma alone and as well had to return home alone. She became deeply despondent and withdrawn. Reagan recovered and upon his convalescence resumed shooting of That Hagen Girl. Between completing the film and his increased activities with the Screen Actors Guild (he had been voted in as president of SAG earlier that year), he was away from home even more.

In March of 1949, Wyman did indeed win the Best Actress Oscar for her performance in Belinda and in July received her final divorce decree from Ronald Reagan. She was awarded custody of Maureen and Michael and child support in the amount of $500 per month. Reagan took the divorce very hard. He continued as the president of the Screen Actors Guild until 1952 at which time he had already met and married small time actress/ big time Reagan supporter, Nancy Davis. Wyman went on to more Oscar nominations and parts in polished Douglas Sirk melodramas. Both actors reached high levels of success, just not with each other.
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