October 21, 2009. Yesterday was a beautiful, sunny autumn day in New York.
New York is like this. I went down to Michael’s to lunch with my friend Emilia. Emilia and I have known each other since the mid-70s when I had a business in Pound Ridge, New York and she was a customer. After that I moved to Los Angeles, where I lived for fourteen years.
Returning to New York in the early 90s, Emilia and I would occasionally bump into each other, sometimes even on the street, and over time we’d lunch. Now all those years add up to a long friendship that has grown quite naturally with time and attention. Both Emilia and I have much closer friends, longer, more intimate relationships as well as significant others in our lives. She also has a husband.
But friendship that we all experience in our youth and young adult lives often loses its luster as time passes, and new friendships, developing friendships, after that early period in life, are actual phenomena. And a gift. I’m not talking about acquaintances, or people we know on a daily/weekly/ monthly/occasional basis. I’m talking about friendship. Knowing and caring.
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| A Tiffany window, 7:45 pm. |
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So what did Emilia and I talk about? Our opinions about the financials and Mr. Obama and some harmless gossip about a few other individuals in the community.
Last night the calendar in New York was overwhelming. For example: President Obama was in town speaking at a Democratic National Committee Healthcare Rally Event at the Hammerstein Ballroom.
Over in the Alexey Brodovitch Gallery of the Hearst Tower Glenda Bailey, Editor-in-Chief of Harper’s Bazaar, Stephen Gan, Creative Director of Bazaar, and Valerie Salembier, Senior Vice President and Publisher of Bazaar, hosted a preview of “Andy Warhol; The Bazaar Years – 1951-1964” with a catalogue introduction by Charlie Sheips.
Also, down at the Hilton, Asian Women in Business were holding their 14th annual Leadership Awards Dinner.
At the Plaza the Children’s Cancer and Blood Foundation was holding its 2009 Breakthrough Ball with Charles Grodin as emce and Jamie Niven of Sotheby’s conducting the auction.
At Cipriani Wall Street, the angel of the music business, Denise Rich was hosting her annual Gabrielle’s Angel Foundation for Cancer Research (in memory of her daughter Gabrielle).
At the Metropolitan Pavilion City Harvest was hosting its annual Bid Against Hunger Benefit.
At Cipriani 42nd Street, they were holding the First Annual Benefit Gala Dinner for the Norman Mailer Writers Colony, chaired by Tina Brown and David Remnick.
At W New York Eve Ensler and Whoopi Goldberg were hosting a “Women of the Congo” Benefit event.
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| Robert Lacey with his latest, Inside The Kingdom. Click to order. [2] |
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While down at “21” Audrey and Martin Gruss were hosting a cocktail reception in honor of Robert Lacey and the launch of his latest book “Inside the Kingdom.” The kingdom being Saudi-Arabia. Mr. Lacey has written about the kingdom before and not always in way that curried favor with the Saudi royal family. That breach has been repaired, and he told me last night that he enjoyed his visits to the modern desert kingdom.
And then there was the Royal Oak Foundation’s 12 Annual Timeless Design Award (specially designed by Audemars Piaget) and Gala at the Metropolitan Club honoring Jacob Rothschild, 4th Baron Rothschild, Lord Rothschild (as they put it on the program), which I attended.
Lord Rothschild oversees Waddesdon Manor which his cousin James inherited from a distant cousin earlier in the 20th century.
The property, which we visited last June (NYSD 6/9/09 [3]), was built beginning in 1874 by a distant cousin, Ferdinand Rothschild.
American are not as familiar with the Rothschilds as are Europeans. But the family bears a resemblance, lineage-wise to our Rockefellers -- large family now of several branches controlling massive financial assets and actively participating in the community politically and philanthropically.
The Rothschilds have been a financial force since the early days of Napoleon’s reign. Their origins began with Mayer Amschel Moses Rothschild in the last quarter of the 18th century. Mayer had five sons and the bright idea of positioning each in an important European country. (They established their interests in this country in the mid-19th century represented by August Belmont.) |