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    The Fabulous Bouvier Sisters

    Page 32
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      marriage to Lee ends, 279–282, 283

      Roussel, Athina (Onassis’s granddaughter), 211–212

      Roussel, Thierry, 211–212

      Rubin, Harriet, 236

      Rucci, Ralph, 79, 154, 165, 241, 279, 285

      Rusk, Martha, 38–39

      Russian culture

      Jackie and, 3, 9, 33, 46, 67, 224–226

      Lee and, 3, 7, 9, 24, 46, 63–64

      Saint Laurent, Yves, 150, 151

      Salinger, Pierre, 95, 103, 134, 198

      Sally Hemings: A Novel (Chase-Riboud), 224

      Salyer, Dr. Kenneth, 122

      Sarah Lawrence College, 32, 52–53

      Sargent, John Sr., 229–230, 236

      Schaffner, Franklin J., 101

      Schiff, Dorothy, 160

      Schlesinger, Arthur M. Jr., 72, 94, 95, 103, 112, 120, 168, 174

      on Jackie, 83, 84, 85–86, 88, 210

      Kennedy’s assassination and, 128

      Vidal’s insult to Jackie in White House and, 95, 251

      Schlesinger, Marian, 103

      Schlossberg, Edwin, 255–258, 272

      Schlossberg, Rose, 262, 264

      Schon, Mila, 147

      Schonberg, Harold C., 214

      Schwarzenegger, Arnold, 255

      Scott, Aaron, 204

      Seferis, George, 221–222

      Seinfeld, Jerry, 282

      Seymour, Lynn, 69

      Shall We Tell the President? (Archer), 229

      Shriver, Eunice and Sargent, 272

      Shriver, Maria, 255

      Sifton, Elisabeth, 224

      Simon, Carly, 231, 257, 272

      Simon, Neil, 252

      Simpson, Wallis (Duchess of Windsor), 228

      Sinatra, Frank, 147, 228

      Singleton, Becky, 229

      Smith, Jean Kennedy, 129, 141, 168

      Smith, Liz, 248–249, 251–252

      Smith, Sally Bedell, 20–21

      Smith, Stephen, 141

      Smith, Willi, 255

      Snowdon, Lord Anthony, 228

      Solway, Diane, 67, 69

      Sontag, Susan, 226

      Sorel, Edward, 248

      Soulé, Henri, 248

      South, Hamilton, 285, 293

      Spalding, Charles “Chuck,” 80, 136

      Spencer, Abigail, 290

      Stapleton, Maureen, 155

      Stark, Ray, 259, 280, 281

      Steel Magnolias (Ross film), 258–259, 280–282

      Steinem, Gloria, 227

      Stern, Bert, 153

      Stolley, Richard, 124

      Stringfellow, Ethel Gray, 23

      Styron, William and Rose, 231

      Susskind, David, 153, 154

      Swanson, Gloria, 163

      Symington, James, 61

      Talley, André Leon, on Lee, 6, 7, 8, 63, 79–80, 290

      Tempelsman, Lily, 246

      Tempelsman, Maurice, 244–246, 256, 261, 267, 270, 271, 277

      Theodoracopulos, Taki, 217

      This Side of Paradise (documentary), 203–205

      Thousand Days: John F. Kennedy in the White House, A (Schlesinger), 83

      Thring, Joan, 68, 70, 161

      Thyssen-Bornemisza, Fiona von, 197

      Tiegs, Cheryl, 178–179

      Tierney, Gene, 153

      Time magazine, 90, 92, 101–102, 114, 154, 229

      Times to Remember (Rose Kennedy), 163

      Train, Aileen Bowdoin, 18

      travel, of Jackie and Lee

      to Antigua, 136

      to Europe, 31–48, 82–88, 105, 109–111, 218

      to Greece, 91–93, 104, 118–120

      to India and Pakistan, 6, 105–109, 153

      to Ireland, 152–154

      to Palm Beach, 74, 77–78, 81, 94, 105, 131, 214

      Trescher, George, 257

      Tuckerman, Nancy, 22–23, 129, 229

      Jackie’s illness and, 271

      Jackie’s marriage to Onassis and, 166, 167, 181

      Jackie’s move to New York City and, 140, 141

      Tufo, Peter, 237–240

      Turnure, Pamela, 84, 87, 101, 141

      Turville Grange (Radziwill country home), 62–63, 68, 70, 149, 172, 186, 200, 204, 235

      Twist (dance), 95, 107

      Two Sisters (Vidal), 227

      Tyrnauer, Matt, 207

      Valentino, 169

      Vanderbilt, Gloria, 191, 248, 250

      Vanity Fair, 225, 258, 267

      Vanocur, Sander, 159

      Vassar, Jackie at, 27, 28–29, 76, 84

      Vernou, Louise (great-grandmother), 36

      Vidal, Gore, 46, 227, 261

      on Bouvier, 11, 56

      on Canfield, 53–54, 275

      Capote and, 142, 244, 245, 253

      on Hugh Auchincloss, 20

      insulted Jackie at White House, 95, 251

      on Jackie, 2, 83

      Jackie and, 74, 94, 95–96, 152

      on Jackie and Lee, 7, 26

      on Onassis, 158

      Vidal, Nina (later Auchincloss), 7, 245

      Viking, Jackie as editor at, 222–229

      “Visiting Nureyev’s Grave” (Frigerio), 265

      Vogue

      Jackie and, 32–35, 41, 93

      Lee and, 60, 64, 143, 153

      Vreeland, Diana, 53, 75, 80, 153, 224–225, 237, 284, 289

      Waldrop, Frank, 49–52

      Walker, John, 100

      Walters, Barbara

      on Jackie and Lee, 9–10

      on Lee, 52–53, 105, 108

      Lee on, 216

      Warhol, Andy, 8, 186–187, 194, 207, 212, 218, 268

      Warnecke, John Carl, 233, 234

      Warren, Whitney, 239, 243

      Warren Commission, 124

      Washington Times-Herald, Jackie as “Inquiring Cameragirl” for, 49–52, 55, 97, 223

      Wear, Priscilla, 96–97

      Weckert, Christine, 235

      Weicker, Mrs. Lowell, 140

      Wenner, Jan, 191

      Wexler, Jerrold, 268

      What Remains (Radziwill), 276

      White, Theodore H., 133–134

      White House

      Jackie’s redecoration of, 97–101

      Jackie’s television tour of, 101–104

      Lee and Radziwill visit, 74–77, 94–95, 103

      Wicker, Tom, 137

      Wilde, Oscar, 15, 33

      Williams, Mona Harrison, 248

      Wilson, Edmund, 168

      Wilson, Woodrow, 98

      Winners and Losers (Emerson), 177–178

      Wohlfert, Lee, 234

      Women’s Wear Daily, 146, 181

      Woodword, Ann, 248

      Wrightsman, Charlie, 77–78, 94

      Wrightsman, Jayne, 77–78, 94, 100, 140

      You Can’t Take It with You (Kaufman and Hart), 27, 30, 150

      Zapruder, Abraham, 123–124

      Zaroulis, Nancy, 224

      Zelman, Sam, 217

      Zvorykin, Boris, 224, 225

      Photo Section

      John “Black Jack” V. Bouvier III. Jackie and Lee’s father lost his fortune and his wife, but his two daughters loved him till the end. “Style is a habit of mind . . . it’s what makes you a Bouvier,” he once said, which both daughters took to heart. 1930. Photo credit: Getty Images

      The Auchinclosses. Janet with her new husband, Hugh D. Auchincloss. Jackie [l., back row] and Lee [r., middle row] were plunged into a new life and a new family with three Auchincloss stepsiblings: Hugh (Yusha), Nina, and Thomas. Janet holds her newborn, also named Janet, and they would have a son, James. Photo credit: John F. Kennedy Presidential Library

      Jackie with her father, “Black Jack” Bouvier, who was at this point living in somewhat reduced circumstances and missing his daughters. East Hampton, July 23, 1947. Photo credit: Getty Images

      Jackie and Lee in ball gowns, photographed by Cecil Beaton for Vogue. Both sisters were named “Debutante of the Year”—Jackie in 1948 and Lee in 1951—by society columnist Cholly Knickerbocker (Igor Cassini). 1951. Photo credit: Cecil Beaton/Getty Images

      Michael Canfield, Lee’s first husband,
    rumored to be the illegitimate son of the Duke of Kent. She dated the adopted publishing scion from the age of fifteen. At twenty, Lee was the first to marry, but the union only lasted six years. Pictured here with Jackie. Photo credit: John F. Kennedy Presidential Library

      Photo booth snapshot of Jackie and her husband, Senator John F. Kennedy, possibly taken during their honeymoon in Acapulco and Beverly Hills in 1953. Photo credit: John F. Kennedy Presidential Library

      Lee with her second husband, Prince Stanislaw (Stas) Radziwill, whom she married in 1959. Her mother said, “Why, he is nothing but a European version of your father,” which delighted Lee. He was twenty years her senior, and they would have two children, Anthony and Anna Christina (Tina). Photo credit: Getty Images

      Jackie’s brief three and a half years as First Lady brought her closer to Lee. The Kennedys and the Radziwills spent holidays together, and Lee and Stas Radziwill were frequent guests of honor at the White House. Jackie with German shepherd Clipper, Lee, and the Radziwills’ daughter, Tina. January 1963. Photo credit: John F. Kennedy Presidential Library

      Turville Grange, Lee and Stas Radziwill’s eighteenth-century country estate in Oxfordshire, which Lee transformed into a magnificent retreat. Nureyev described Lee’s homes as “two of the prettiest houses in England.” Photo credit: Alamy

      Jackie appeared on the cover of LIFE more than thirty times. In 1961, she embarked on an ambitious restoration of “The People’s House,” with superb and historically accurate results. Her uncluttered, elegant style influenced a generation of women, bringing them out of the kitschy 1950s. Cover photo: © Mark Shaw/mptvimages.com Photo credit: Getty Images

      President Kennedy asked Jackie to make a diplomatic trip to India and Pakistan, and Jackie brought Lee along as her closest companion. The trip was a spectacular success, with thousands turning out to cheer “America’s Queen” and her “lady in waiting.” Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan, March 1962. Photo credit: John F. Kennedy Presidential Library

      Lee with her daughter, Tina, in the sumptuous drawing room at her London house at 4 Buckingham Place. She worked closely with the designer Renzo Mongiardino to achieve a richly layered, nineteenth-century décor. She would later be drawn to an airier, more minimalist style. Photo credit: Cecil Beaton Studio Archive/Sotheby’s Picture Library

      Presidential Library

      With Jackie’s help, Lee sought an annulment of her marriage to Michael Canfield, so her civil marriage with Radziwill could be sanctified in the Roman Catholic Church. Jackie looks serene and unknowable, as always. Lee looks distraught. At the Basilica of Saint Petrus, Rome, 1961. Photo credit: Alamy

      While living in London, Lee began her lifelong, passionate friendship with Russian dancer Rudolf Nureyev, pictured here in snake-skin jacket and boots. Both shared a love of living grandly in baroque style. Lee and Jackie had what Truman Capote described as “the sense of the right to luxury.”

      Photo credit: Alamy

      Lee invited Jackie to join her on a summer vacation in Ravello, Italy, the “jewel of the Amalfi coast.” She and Stas rented a beautiful cliff-side villa that overlooked the Gulf of Naples. Jackie’s Secret Service detail and flocks of paparazzi were the only things that marred their idyllic seclusion. 1962. Photo credit: Benno Graziani/Photo12

      Lee with shipping tycoon Aristotle Onassis, at the beginning of their affair. “Ari was charismatic,” she said, but the Kennedys asked her to end the relationship, worried about John F. Kennedy’s upcoming re-election. 1961. Photo credit: Getty Images

      Jackie and Robert F. Kennedy, mourning the death of President Kennedy. Jackie planned the obsequies along the lines of Abraham Lincoln’s state funeral. Jackie’s regal, veiled dignity elevated her to the iconic status of America’s First Widow. November 25, 1963. Photo credit: Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images

      A luminous Lee on the cover of LIFE on the occasion of her debut performance as Tracy Lord in The Philadelphia Story, as orchestrated by Truman Capote. “Principessa, you must go on the stage!” he insisted. July 1967. Photo credit: Pierre Boulat, Getty Images.

      Lee with Truman Capote at the Black and White Ball. It was a genuine friendship until his drinking, prescription drug abuse, and a feud with Gore Vidal put an end to it. Photo credit: Getty Images

      Onassis with his longtime mistress, the opera diva Maria Callas. An American-born Greek, Callas was married to Giovanni Meneghini, but her affair with “Aristo” was an open secret, and the two shared an intense emotional bond. She hated Lee and was devastated when Onassis married Jackie. Photo credit: Getty Images

      Jackie wed Onassis on October 20, 1968, on Skorpios, Ari’s private Greek island, upsetting many Kennedy loyalists and Americans who idolized Jackie. Ironically, many in Greece considered her the interloper and Maria Callas the rightful wife. Photo credit: Getty Images

      Jackie and Onassis in Capri. Like Lee, Jackie loved the Mediterranean and Greek culture, and she was very happy with the safety and security of her marriage in its early years. Photo credit: Settimio Garritano

      Jackie introduced Lee to the dashing photographer, adventurer, and conservationist Peter Beard, whom she invited to Skorpios to give Caroline and John Jr. art lessons.

      Photo credit: Ron Galella/Getty Images

      After Onassis’s death in 1975, Jackie began a relationship with the diamond executive Maurice Tempelsman. When asked what Kennedy, Onassis, and Tempelsman had in common, Lee answered, “success.” The couple shared a love of books and French culture. Photo credit: Getty Images Presidential Library

      Jackie at work in her office at Viking Press in 1975, as a consulting editor. She moved to Doubleday two years later.

      Photo credit: Getty Images

      Lee with her son, Anthony Radziwill. Photo credit: Jodie Burstein/Globe Photos LLC Presidential Library

      Lee with the A-list film director Herbert Ross, whom she married in 1988. He brought her the glamour of Hollywood; she delighted in his wit and style. Their thirteen-year marriage didn’t survive the devastating loss of her son, Anthony, who died of cancer at the age of forty. Photo credit: Getty Images

      Jackie passed away in 1994 at the age of sixty-four, from non-Hodgkin lymphoma. The world noted her passing, and throngs kept vigil outside of her Fifth Avenue apartment. Jackie’s will left generous bequeaths to all of her family members except Lee. Photo credit: Getty Images

      On July 16, 1999, John F. Kennedy Jr.’s small plane plunged into the Atlantic, killing him and his new bride, Carolyn Bessette, and her sister, Lauren. Jackie was spared this cruel tragedy, reminiscent of the death of Onassis’s son, Alexander. Photo credit: Getty Images

      About the Authors

      SAM KASHNER is the author of the comic novel Sinatraland and four nonfiction books, including the acclaimed memoir When I Was Cool. He has written extensively for Vanity Fair.

      NANCY SCHOENBERGER is the author of Dangerous Muse: The Life of Lady Caroline Blackwood; Wayne and Ford: The Films, the Friendship, and the Forging of an American Hero; and coauthor with Sam Kashner of Furious Love: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, and the Marriage of the Century. She has published three award-winning books of poetry and directs the creative writing program at the College of William & Mary.

      Discover great authors, exclusive offers, and more at hc.com.

      Also by Sam Kashner and Nancy Schoenberger

      Furious Love: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, and the Marriage of the Century

      Hollywood Kryptonite: The Bulldog, the Lady, and the Death of Superman

      A Talent for Genius: The Life and Times of Oscar Levant

      ALSO BY SAM KASHNER

      When I Was Cool: My Life at the Jack Kerouac School

      Sinatraland: A Novel

      Don Quixote in America (poetry)

      ALSO BY NANCY SCHOENBERGER

      Wayne and Ford: The Films, the Friendship, and the Forging of an American Hero

      Dangerous Muse: The Life of Lady Caroline Blackwood

      Long Like a River (poetry)

     
    ; Girl on a White Porch (poetry)

      Copyright

      THE FABULOUS BOUVIER SISTERS. Copyright © 2018 by Sam Kashner and Nancy Schoenberger. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

      “Ithaka” from C. P. Cavafy: Collected Poems, revised edition translated by Edmund Keeley and Philip Sherrard, ed. by George Savidis. Translation copyright © 1975, 1992 by Edmund Keeley and Philip Sherrard. Reprinted by permission of Princeton University Press.

      Excerpt from section I, “Shoes” from “Hospital 1” from Collected Poems by Robert Lowell. Copyright © 2003 by Harriet Lowell and Sheridan Lowell. Reprinted by permission of Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

      Excerpted from “The Last Day” in George Seferis: Collected Poems, 1924–1955, Revised Edition, translated, edited and introduced by Edmund Keeley and Philip Sherrard. Princeton University Press, 1995.

      FIRST EDITION

      Cover design by Joanne O’Neill

      Cover photograph © Horst P. Horst/Conde Nast/Getty Images

      Digital Edition SEPTEMBER 2018 ISBN: 978-0-06-236500-2

      Version 08262018

      Print ISBN: 978-0-06-236498-2

      About the Publisher

      Australia

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