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Born: July 28, 1929
Died: May 19, 1994
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Jacqueline
Lee Bouvier was born into New York society, the eldest daughter
of John "Jack" Vernou Bouvier III (1891-1957), a playboy
stockbroker of French descent, and his wife, Janet Norton Lee
(1906-1989), a bank president's daughter. Her maternal great-grandfather,
a potato-famine Irish immigrant, was a superintendent of New
York City public schools, though Janet Lee Bouvier preferred
to tell people that he was a Maryland-born veteran of the United
States Civil War. Her parents divorced when she was young and
her mother remarried the wealthy Hugh D. Auchincloss, who had
previously been married to the mother of novelist Gore Vidal.
She
had a younger sister, Lee Radziwill Ross, who was married three
times: to publishing executive Michael Canfield, to Polish prince
Stanislas Radziwill, and movie director Herbert Ross. Through
their father, the Bouvier sisters were descended from the Van
Salees, a merchant family of Dutch/African ancestry that settled
in New Amsterdam in the 17th century.
As
a child, Kennedy Onassis was a well-trained equestrian and loved
horses (and always would, even as an adult). She won several
trophies and medals for her riding and the ample land in Hammersmith
Farm gave her something to appreciate at the home of her stepfather.
She loved writing poems and apparently adored her father. Her
mother was said to be old-fashioned and strict, instilling in
her children a strong sense of etiquette, manners, dress, and
upper-class customs. While she and her father had a warm and
affectionate relationship, her mother was apparently more controlling.
After
being named "Debutante of the Year" for the 1947-48
season, she was educated at Miss Porter's School, Vassar College
and George Washington University, and spent time studying in
France. Her stay in France was, it seems, one of the most enjoyable
of her life: she learned a great deal and developed a deep love
for France and its culture, a love that would later be reflected
in many aspects of her life, such as the menus she chose for
White House state dinners and her taste in clothing. She spoke
French and Spanish fluently, and her name was pronounced in
French fashion as JACK-leen. She then moved on to her first
real job as a photographer (nicknamed "the inquiring camera
girl") for The Washington Times-Herald, which is how she
came to meet many Washington politicians, including her first
husband.
Kennedy marriage
After an engagement to stockbroker John Husted, Jr. (they were
to have married in June 1952), she married Senator John F. Kennedy,
one of the Democratic Party's rising stars, on September 12,
1953, at Newport, Rhode Island. They had four children: Arabella
(stillborn, 1956) Caroline Bouvier Kennedy (b. 1957), John Fitzgerald
Kennedy Jr. (1960–1999), and Patrick Bouvier Kennedy (born and
died in August 1963). Their marriage had its difficulties as
her husband was allegedly a womanizer and had serious health
problems, but she apparently overlooked many of his affairs.
They spent their first years of marriage in a Georgetown townhouse.
She
was fond of her father-in-law, and the affection, it seems,
was returned. He also saw the great PR potential of her as a
politician's wife. She was also close to her brother-in-law,
Robert (Bobby). Yet she was not fond of the competitive, sporty,
and somewhat abrasive nature of the Kennedy clan. She was quieter
and more reserved. The Kennedy sisters nicknamed her "the
deb," and Kennedy Onassis was always reluctant to join
in the traditional touch-football games of the Kennedy clan.
First Lady of the United States
Kennedy narrowly beat Richard Nixon in the 1960 presidential
election, becoming the 35th President of the United States in
1961. Kennedy Onassis became one of the youngest First Ladies
in history.
As
First Lady (a title she wasn't fond of, saying it sounded like
the name of a horse), she was forced into the public spotlight
with everything in her life under scrutiny. She had a strong
preference for French haute couture designers who were expensive,
and wearing their clothes might be perceived as disloyalty to
American designers. She often got around such restrictions by
having American dressmakers like Chez Ninon in New York copy
or adapt contemporary French designs for her. For her state
wardrobe, there were many American designers she could have
chosen, such as Norman Norell, and she considered the designers
at Bergdorf Goodman, but chose the Hollywood designer Oleg Cassini.
During her days as First Lady, she would become a fashion icon
domestically and internationally.
On
February 14, 1962, she took American television viewers on a
tour of the White House. The redecoration of the White House
was her first major project. What inspired her were her visits
to there before she was First Lady and being disappointed by
what she saw as the lack of historical sense in the rooms. Being
an avid lover of history, she felt that the mansion that represented
her nation should represent it well. She hired a special commission
and raised funds. They worked hard at finding authentic furniture
and art that would fit the original design of the White House.
They searched for original portraits of people like Jefferson
and Franklin.
As
First Lady, she knew her children would be in the public eye,
yet she was determined to protect her children from the press
and give them a normal childhood.
She
and her husband planned many social events that brought them
to the forefront of the cultural spotlight. They were not like
presidential couples before them; they had an appreciation for
art, music, and culture. They invited artists and musicians
for dinner parties, hosted a special celebration in honor of
Nobel Laureates, invited celebrities over, and transformed White
House state dinners.
Kennedy assassination
The Presidential limousine before the assassination. Jacqueline
is in the backseat to the President's left.Kennedy Onassis was
sitting next to the President when he was shot and killed on
November 22, 1963 in Dallas, Texas. Mrs. Kennedy testified to
the Warren Commission that she saw a piece of the President's
skull detached, yet as documented in the Zapruder film, her
head was not in a position to allow her to see the top of the
president's head until almost a second after he was shot. Within
seconds she climbed onto the left-center rear of the limousine
trunk, behind and left of the president, and quickly picked
up a piece of her husband's head, which she gave to a Parkland
Hospital doctor.
Her
courage in the aftermath of the assassination won her the admiration
of the world. She led the mourning for the president, holding
her two children's hands, kneeling at the bier along with her
daughter in the United States Capitol, walking behind the caisson
on foot from the White House to St. Matthew's Cathedral, where
the funeral mass was held, and finally, lighting the eternal
flame at her husband's grave at Arlington National Cemetery.
The London Evening Standard reported: "Jacqueline Kennedy
has given the American people ... one thing they have always
lacked: majesty."
A
week after the assassination, she was interviewed by Theodore
H. White of Life magazine. In that interview, she called the
Kennedy years the years of "Camelot."
She
made no public appearances for one year, and thereafter largely
withdrew from public life because of privacy and security concerns.
Onassis marriage and later life
On October 20, 1968, she married Aristotle Onassis, a Greek-shipping
tycoon, in Skorpios, Greece, thus losing her Secret Service
protection. When her former brother-in-law Robert F. Kennedy
was assassinated three months earlier, Kennedy Onassis decided
the Kennedys were being "targeted," and that she and
her children had to leave the U.S. So marriage to Onassis appeared
to make sense: he had the money and power to give her the protection
she wanted, while she had the social caché he craved.
He ended his affair with opera diva Maria Callas to marry her.
The
marriage allegedly was not a love match. The couple rarely spent
time together. Though Onassis got along with Caroline and John,
Jr. (his son Alexander introduced John to flying; both would
die in plane crashes), Kennedy Onassis did not get along with
her step-daughter Christina Onassis. She spent most of her time
traveling and shopping (a hobby that had exasperated President
Kennedy, who once asked a friend "Is there a 'Shoppers
Anonymous'?"). Though he was in the early stages of filing
for divorce, Onassis died on March 15, 1975, leaving his wife
a large inheritance.
When
a paparazzo photographed Kennedy Onassis nude on a Greek island,
Hustler publisher Larry Flynt bought the photos and published
them in the August 1975 issue, much to her and the Kennedy family's
embarrassment.
She
spent her latter years as an editor at Doubleday, living in
New York City and Martha's Vineyard with Maurice Tempelsman,
a Belgian-born married industrialist and diamond merchant. In
1994, she was diagnosed with lymphoma, a form of cancer. She
died from this at her Fifth Avenue apartment in her sleep on
May 19 that year.
Her
funeral on May 23 was televised around the nation, even though
it was private, the way she wanted it to be. She was buried
beside her assassinated husband at Arlington, which too, was
private, but it included remarks from President Bill Clinton.
During the service, the two Kennedy children laid flowers on
her flower-covered mahogany casket, bidding goodbye to a remarkable
era in American history.
Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacqueline_Kennedy
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JFK
Oliver
Stone's self-proclaimed "countermyth," JFK mocks
the doubtful veracity of the Warren Commission's
findings on the Kennedy assassination and summmarizes
some of the myriad theories that have been proposed
in its stead. Focusing on the investigation by New
Orleans district attorney Jim Garrison into the
activities of the FBI and other government agencies
as well as their attempted cover-ups, Stone weaves
fact and speculation into a compelling argument
for the reopening of the case files.
View
The Movie Trailer To Oliver Stone's "JFK"
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The
Men Who Killed Kennedy
A
medical technician who was at the autopsy states categorically
that the body he saw was not the one shown in the
official photographs. The mortician who buried Lee
Harvey Oswald reveals a startling discovery made 18
years later. A highly decorated Army officer says
he was trained to eliminate key witnesses... Forty
years after JFK was shot in Dallas, controversy rages
around his assassination. The Men Who Killed Kennedy,
an authoritative six-part series drawing on exclusive
interviews with highly placed government sources and
independent investigators, is the most comprehensive
examination of the case ever filmed.
The Complete Story in 6 Parts:
The Coup d'Etat - A medical technician casts doubts
on the official autopsy photographs, and photo analysis
undermines the lone gunman theory.
The Forces of Darkness - See two shadowy figures on
the grassy knoll, and find out about the "lost"
home movie that contained key evidence.
The Cover-Up - An FBI agent confirms that evidence
has been suppressed, and a notorious criminal is confronted
about his possible role.
The Patsy - Witness Oswald's reaction when charged
with the shooting, and the mortician who buried the
alleged assassin reveals what he discovered 18 years
later.
The Witnesses - The people who were there - but who
the government chose to ignore - tell their versions
of what happened at Dealey Plaza. The Truth Shall
Set You Free - See conclusive proof that the official
autopsy photos were faked, and hear from an Army Colonel
who says he was trained to eliminate witnesses to
the assassination.
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