Her second husband was Dale Wilford Maher, the first Secretary of the U. S. Legation in Johannesburg, South Africa (died 1948).
As "Doreen English" she had a small role in the 1948 movie Uneasy Terms, which starred Michael Rennie.
[5] Using the name Drue Mallory, she was cast in three 1950 movies, Please Believe Me, starring Deborah Kerr, Three Came Home and Breakthrough.
[3] They also had an apartment in New York's Upper East Side, and a winter retreat in Hobe Sound, Florida.
The Heinz Italian home, called Villa Maresi, was on Lake Como in the town of Griante.
"She was very close to Tom Wolfe, Norman Mailer, Andy Warhol, Harold Pinter and Antonia Fraser," according to Daniel Halpern, founder of Ecco Press.
[3] Of her character, Teresa Heinz said "Drue was a very private person but she came to know an amazing group of people in her life.
"[2] Of her reputation, Jonathan Galassi, President, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, said Heinz died on March 30, 2018, at age 103, at Hawthornden Castle[6] in Lasswade, Scotland.
[3] In 1970, she restored an old movie theater into the Heinz Hall for the Performing Arts, which was the founding institution of what would later become the Cultural District, Pittsburgh.