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 Fall-outs and family
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| Airing out. 6:00 PM. Photo: Jeff Hirsch. |
Tuesday, July 24, 2012. A very warm very humid mostly cloudy day in New York. After the six o’clock hour, the clouds grew darker and there was a spritz. Later in the evening, it came full force, cooling down the day.
This past Saturday afternoon, I got the following message from an NYSD reader here in New York:
Hi David,
I know how much you care about dogs and how they are treated, and I wanted to relate this incident which happened today.
On this beautiful morning I was walking over to the greenmarket on E. 67th St. when I came upon the scene of an accident at 75th & First Avenue. There was small, distraught crowd hovering over a motionless dog on the corner. It had just been hit by a car that was slowly pulling into a parking space. The dog was off leash and wore no collar, and it had run into the street. It was a small dog, maybe 15 lbs, and the driver didn't see it. The driver and his wife were very upset, shaken by what happened. Meanwhile, no one knew how to help the dog, whom to call, what to do. It died there on the street corner.
Apparently the dog had been in the care of a dog care service while its owners were away for the weekend. A young woman in her late 20s/early 30s was responsible for the dog. She was there but didn't seem to know what to do either. Eventually, a guy in a T-shirt showed up and the dog was gone. A passer-by tried to agitate the scene by accusing the driver of negligence, and said he should be shot. But the witnesses knew the driver was not at fault.
Everyone felt helpless including me. There was no reason for the dog to be off-leash, the young woman did not seem to have a leash or collar with her. It was an accident that easily could have been avoided and will not be forgotten by anyone involved. I can't imagine what the fall-out will be.
This message provoked all kinds of thoughts about people who have animals and don’t take care of them, or people who elect to care for animals and don’t properly care for them. Many people who are warned about this kind of thing, no matter how gently, reject even with anger. They’d rather be right at the expense of the animal’s life or well-being. Odd.
Our journal memory yesterday of Evita and Juan Peron and Betty Dodero and Alberto Dodero led me to contact Peter Evans in London about the story as Peter was the biographer of Aristotle Onassis and also wrote “Nemesis,” the sensational story of Onassis’ relationship with Jackie and with Robert Kennedy.
Peter was well aware of the important role Alberto Dodero played in the business success of Onassis who made his first big money in South America. Evidently the families remained close well into the second generation. Christina Onassis, the daughter of Ari, was a close friend of Dodero’s son, also Alberto, and his wife Marina.
It was while staying with the Doderos at their house in Buenos Aires that Christina decided she’d had enough of this life. She killed herself in the bath, having taken a fatal amount of something, with the room lit only by many candles.
In our research we also found a piece by Peter Evans that we published four years ago on the NYSD. Some readers may remember it (I didn’t), about Aristotle Onassis and his technique of showering his women with jewels.
Onassis had been dead for thirty years and his daughter Christina for twenty when Christina’s daughter and the sole heir to the Onassis estate Athina Roussel put her mother’s jewelry up for auction.
The sale created a lot of talk about why the very rich young heiress was selling as it certainly wasn’t for the money. Peter Evans makes an interesting theory, so we’re running it again.
The opening photograph of the piece, of the Christina, Onassis’ 324 foot yacht, slowly cruising into a Mediterranean port, with the Sun beginning to set, is a powerful reminder to me of the saga of the Greek shipping tycoon and how it has practically faded from public memory. |
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| The 325-foot Christina, named after his only daughter, was for years the main residence of Greek shipping tycoon Aristotle Onassis. The rich, famous and royal were often aboard as guests. Sir Winston Churchill often cruised as the man’s guest (often accompanied by his parakeet – who was lost during one fateful voyage). It was on this yacht in 1957 that he was accompanied by among others, Senor and Senora Battista Meneghini. Sra. Meneghini was known to the world as the already legendary diva, Maria Callas. That was the last time Onassis’ (first) wife Athina (always known as Tina) traveled aboard the boat with her husband. Callas and Onassis became an international romance, until ... in 1963 Onassis entertained the two most famous sisters in America, Jackie Kennedy and (Princess Stanislaus) Lee Radziwill aboard the Christina. An affair occurred according to Peter Evans in “Nemesis.” |
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by Peter Evans
Christina Onassis once told me that she wore diamonds at breakfast because ‘they look so pretty in the morning sun. You have no idea how erotic men find dew on the rocks,’ she smiled mischievously.
Jewels – and sex, of course – ran in the Onassis family as deeply and bitterly as scandal and feuds.
Her father, Aristotle Onassis, was an expert on all of them.
A man who approached every woman as a potential mistress, he believed that the diamond was the most reliable currency of love. ‘Even women who won’t take money to go to bed with a man will always settle for carats,’ he told me once.
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| The young Aristotle Onassis family – son Alexandros (Alexander), born in 1948, his mother Tina, daughter Christina, born 1950 and the man himself age 55. He survived the sacking of Smyrna by the Turks in 1922 by pretending to be 16 and befriended by an infatuated Turkish officer. After a life by his wits in Constantinople, Athens and Naples, he emigrated to Buenos Aires where his charm and business acumen brought him fortune (in tobacco) and international social connections through an Argentine shipping tycoon, Alberto Dodero. By 1940 he was a millionaire, living in New York, later briefly in Los Angeles (where he had a brief affair with Gloria Swanson). At 46, he married for the first time to Tina Livanos, daughter of Greek shipping tycoon Stavros Livanos. The marriage was a kind of revenge to the men who excluded him (including his new father-in-law) from their clubs and business deals. In the mid-50s, the young marrieds, the US Senator Jack Kennedy and his wife cruised aboard the Christina along with Winston Churchill. That time marked the beginning of the end of his marriage to his wife. |
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Although it was a view that not every woman appreciated, and many claimed to loathe, according to Onassis, there were few who did not succumb when presented with the opportunity.
Even the assumption of carats to come was often aphrodisiac enough for some women.
On the afternoon Jackie Kennedy became his lover while cruising aboard his yacht, the Christina, shortly before Jack Kennedy’s assassination in 1963, Onassis, noticing her open jewel case on her dressing-table, was surprised at how few pieces she had, and of how little value they appeared to be. (He had an appraiser’s experienced eye in these matters.) |
| The world's greatest and most glamorous diva, Maria Callas, inanamorata of the Greek shipping tycoon. |
The famous 1963 voyage of the First Lady, Jackie Kennedy and her sister Lee Radziwill where, according to Peter Evans' Nemesis, the tycoon's affections moved from Lee to Jackie, Mme. Callas notwithstanding. |
He immediately called Van Cleef and Arpels in Paris and told them to fly a suitably impressive gift to the yacht. They responded with an $80,000 ($541,716 in today’s money) gold and ruby bracelet.
Maria Callas, Onassis’s long-time mistress, who collected her share of Onassis diamonds, understood her lover better than most women. One evening in Paris, when I was writing his official biography, [Ari: The Life and Times of Aristotle Onassis. Summit/Simon & Shuster, 1986], she told me: ‘Ari’s total understanding of women comes out of a Van Cleef and Arpels catalogue.’
It was more than just a smart remark: it was heartfelt. |
| The new Mrs. Onassis, the most admired woman in America (up to that point) on a stroll in Capri. |
Daughter and father at the funeral of Alexander, who was killed in a plane crash. Many believe Alexander's death marked, in the tycoon's eyes, the beginning a fateful streak of bad luck, which he believed came to him with his second marriage. |
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These memories came back to me when Athina Onassis, the sole heiress to the Onassis fortune – dubbed ‘the richest little girl in the world’ when, in 1988, her mother, Christina, after four divorces, constant drug problems, and a rift as big as the Ritz with her stepmother Jackie Onassis, died at the age of 37 – recently sold the Onassis family trinkets at Christie’s in London for $16 million (twice the estimate).
Daughter of Christina’s third marriage, to Frenchman Thierry Roussel, Athina was just three years old when her mother was found dead in a bathtub in Buenos Aires, where she had gone to attend a friend’s wedding, and to trace her father’s footsteps – to the Teatro Colon, for example, where he had seen his first opera, La Boheme, and seduced his first famous lady, the Italian soprano, Claudia Muzio – in the city where Onassis had made his first fortune in the 1920s.
Christie’s European head of jewellery, Raymond Sancroft-Baker, said that Athina, now married to the Brazilian equestrian champion, Alvaro Affonso de Miranda, had decided to sell because the pieces were not suitable for her. ‘She’s a young girl and she just doesn’t wear them. She wants to feel comfortable in what she wears,’ he said.
The pieces that made her feel so uncomfortable included a pear-shaped 38-carat diamond, of the purest D color, a 15-carat heart-shaped diamond pendant, a Harry Winston sapphire and diamond necklace, a ring by Graff with a vivid yellow pear-shaped diamond of 4.5 carats, and a Van Cleef and Arpels ruby and diamond necklace. |
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But could it have been the history of the pieces, rather more than their design, that troubled Athina so much?
Her grandmother, Tina, Onassis’s first wife, after whom Athina was named, was a superstitious woman who believed that jewels possess contagious destinies. ‘With a freshly-cut diamond you don’t inherit somebody else’s life and fate; a new diamond has only the value and the destiny of the life you give to it yourself,’ she told me once.A deeply defensive woman, especially where Onassis was concerned, Tina Livanos Onassis Niarchos was responding to his claim that beautiful women could not bear moderation and always needed an inexhaustible supply of excess.
Although I knew, and liked, her mother and grandmother, I never got to know Athina at all. (The last time I saw her she was lying naked in bed, sucking her thumb. She was six months old.) But it would surprise me if some of her grandmother’s superstition about the contagious destiny of jewels hadn’t rubbed off on her.
Or maybe dew on the rocks just doesn’t do it for her man.
For more on the Onassis saga, click here (NYSD, July '04).
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