Boat International US Edition — December 2017

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

Stalcawastheprecious,private80ftyachtthatPrincessGrace


ofMonacobuiltandusedasasanctuary.Clare Mahontalks
tohercurrentowners,whothinkshe’severybitasspecial

Opposite page: a young Prince Albert at the helm of the family yacht in Monaco in the late 1970s

Saving


Grace


hat would you do to get
away from it all if you were
not only Hollywood’s
highest-wattage star but
Europe’s most glamorous
princess as well? If
everywhere you went you were followed by
court protocol and a slew of unruly paparazzi,
how and where could you get some time alone
with your family? For Princess Grace of
Monaco those questions seem to have been
very pertinent. “I have many duties and
obligations of state along with my husband,”
she told an American newspaper in 1971, “but
my family comes first.”
In the early 1970s she and her husband, Prince
Rainier III, commissioned the Dutch shipyard
Visch Holland to custom build them an 80ft
yacht. The couple had already owned a yacht
together, the 145ftDeo Juvante II, a wedding gift
from Aristotle Onassis that they used for their
honeymoon and later sold.
But now they were looking for something
different. While other royal families were

cruising the seas in luxurious behemoths, with
ranks of crew and extra cabins to fill with guests,
turning heads everywhere they went,Stalca
seemed like a conscious decision to pare down
and hide in plain sight. An 80ft yacht was by no
means small by the day’s standards, but it would
have been too small for guests and would not
have required many crew. Most of all, it would
not have attracted unwanted attention.
Stalca, the Principality of Monaco’s royal
yacht, was much like a place where Grace Kelly
might have enjoyed a family vacation as a child
growing up in Philadelphia – a lodge in the
Adirondacks or a cabin in the Maine woods
perhaps. With four guest cabins – a master, a
VIP and two double bunk cabins – she had room
for family, albeit a royal family, and little else;
crew quarters could sleep two, everything and
everyone else would have to stay ashore. Even
the yacht’s name includes family and nothing
else – it’s an acronym of the names Stephanie,
Albert and Caroline.
Maybe the reason that there are so few
photographs ofStalcatoday is because the

PHOTOGRAPH: GETTY IMAGES

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