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JH's video wrap-up of the five days in June when the world was in Venice ("Sotto le stelle del jazz" as performed incomparably by Paolo Conte).
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| During the first two weeks of this month NYSD covered two major social/fund-raising events in Europe – the first was the Venetian Heritage Biennale in Venice and the second in France was staged by the American Friends of Versailles in Paris and at Versailles.
These events were created by Americans for Americans and for our European friends. Separately and together they raise millions for dollars to fund projects of restoration in their chosen areas. They also provide for their supporters the opportunity to learn about and partake in the great historical and cultural legacies of the last 1000 years of European civilization. These projects also provide the opportunity for people to rendezvous with old friends and acquaintances and make new friendships. Various events have different sizes. Some of the tours and luncheons involved only 30 or 40. Others, such as the Venetian Heritage’s dinner at the Palazzo Pisani-Moretta on the Grand Canal, or at the Palazzo Albrizzi, or the Bal de Marie Antoinette at Versailles involved hundreds of people. Many of these people know each other and many are newcomers. The Friends of Versailles especially, draws people from all over the United States. Although we’ve traveled among these groups before, and know a number of people from New York, there are many others we do not know, and have not met. I thought it would be interesting, however, to tell you just a little about some of the personalities and individuals behind the names and faces.
In the center of the photo is Larry Lovett, the chairman of Venetian Heritage and one of the major forces in bringing people together and raising funds. Mr. Lovett, an American who has lived much of his adult life in Europe, for years, up until recently, was the proud owner of a palazzo on the Grand Canal. He has long been actively involved in restoration not only in Venice but all over the world. On the right: Betsy Lovett, widow of Larry’s brother. A very outgoing and gracious woman, Mrs. Lovett is a longtime resident of Jacksonville although she has lots of friends in New York, and has been involved in the restorations for many years also. While some of us are slow to warm to “new” people, Betsy Lovett is quick to warm and to spread that warmth.
Garden (and which was later sold at auction for more than $1 million) was carrying 10,000 Swarovski crystals.
Mme. Dandois is also a famous Parisian antiquaire with a shop on the rue Faubourg Saint-Honore, almost directly across from the Elysee Palace where the President of France lives. She is a much discussed personality, known for her beauty, her shrewdness, her temperament which has ready access to hauteur of the most Parisienne kind, and now her beautiful daughter. The young Mlle. de Rothschild came to the US to study at Princeton and it was then that she took her father’s name – not a common occurrence in France. The child, however, had absorbed some of that good ole American can-do. She’s been involved with her mother’s business for several years. They are frequently on the scene in New York, London, Paris, etc, almost always together and notable for their presence. The daughter is long (she must be six feet) and willowy and reminds me in looks and bearing of a combination of Princess Diana and the late Lady Sarah Churchill as a young woman. The mother is shorter than the daughter and while no longer willowy, she carries herself and dresses with an off-hand chic.
The Countess de Ribes. Jacqueline de Ribes has dominated the annals of French fashion for the past five decades. It was a look that was all hers, both cool and elegant and grand. Like a French countess. Off camera, however, although as elegant and cool, she wears none of the grandness but is a rather friendly woman interested in the world about her. A charter member of 20th century international society, she’s frequently been on the scene in New York. The countess is one of the great Proustian-like characters of Paris society. Kree (nickname for Karenna) Bakic --pictured here with Larry Lovett – is a California native who went to New York in her late teens to become a very successful Ford model. One of her bookings took her to Europe and to Germany where she met a young designer businessman named Dieter Bakic.
Patricia Patterson and Prince Michael of Greece. Mrs. Patterson is a longtime member and hostess on the Southampton/Palm Beach/New York social axis. She’s been a member of Venetian Heritage since its inception and a traveler to Venice at least once a year for the past twenty-five. In New York she maintains a full schedule of dinner and party-going, chairing benefit committees, weekends either in Locust Valley or Southampton (in the warmer weather) and is also a broker with Sotheby’s Realty for high end residential real estate. Here she is talking to Prince Michael, the prolific historian of royalty and novelist. Prince Michael is directly related to almost every royalty family on the European continent including the Romanovs (his great-grandmother Olga was Empress of Russia). He is directly-related to both the Bourbons and the Orleans families of France as well as the Windsors in England, including Prince Philip. This particular royal, however, is firstly an historian. To read what he writes or hear what he has to say about all of his royal ancestors and their histories is to be fascinated. Prince Michael (or Michel as he is known to his friends) is married to the sculptress Marina Karella. They have two daughters, Princess Olga and Princess Alexandra, both of whom have old family names. Wanna guess which family?
Another aspect of the European social tradition is the matter of the “title,” another marker which reflects lineage, past, history, tradition, heritage to everybody. With few exceptions, the European titled ones that we meet are very relaxed and casual people who nevertheless take a certain pride in their titles – because it reflects family, a bond with history.
Despite the social connections, the inherited fortune and the European high life, Ms. Karella is almost totally focused on her work, as her husband is on his. Parisian art dealer, Jean-Gabriel Mitterand. Mitterand’s father was an elder brother of the late French President Francois Mitterand. Judy (Mrs. A. Alfred) Taubman. Mrs. Taubman, who lives in New York, Southampton and Palm Beach, is a frequent visitor to England and France where she and her husband have many friends. She’d arrived in Venice from London where the Taubmans have an apartment, and returned to London after the tour ended where she met her husband for a book party being given for him by some English earl or duke; after which they were traveling to Paris for yet another book party and weekends at friends’ chateau.
A graduate of Cornell and Harvard Business and well respected businessman in New York circles, he still retains the country boy’s ingenuousness in approach and manner. That is not to infer Mr. Miller is a hick or a hayseed. Cornell, Harvard Business? I don’t think so. But he retains that Midwestern grace and courtesy, not to mention shrewdness. His vivacious wife is the President of Venetian Heritage and by that very fact, something of an enthusiastic prominent executive herself. These safaris into European culture, with their highly active schedules can be a traffic director’s nighmare, not to mention the thousands of pieces of detail that go into organizing a people-moving endeavor. Mrs. Miller wears this responsibility with as much ease as she wears this emerald green ensemble. Furthermore it doesn’t end with the logistics or the receptions, concerts, tours and dinners. It ends with the finished product of the (a) restoration funded by Venetian Heritage.
Both Farias and Zilkha were in Venice for a combination of the Venice Biennale events and the Venetian Heritage main social events. Both move effortlessly in and out of the world of the arts and society. George Farias is a Texas-born, Yale-educated New York investment advisor; single, lives on Park Avenue, travels extensively to Europe and spends his Augusts either in the South of France or (more recently) at the Hotel Bel Air in Los Angeles where he’s made something of a name for himself entertaining the grandest of the town’s dames including Mrs. Reagan. He is an exceptionally gracious and kind-spoken fellow who conducts himself impeccably and coolly at all times. Ms. Zilkha, younger daughter of the Iraqi-born international banker, Ezra Zilkha, is a very well known face and presence on the New York social scene. And like George Farias, she is likely to be seen at the most social of celebrations across the world. |
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