Jackie After O (22 page)

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Authors: Tina Cassidy

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As it does every August, New York's center of gravity shifts east, to Long Island. And Andy Warhol's oceanfront compound in Montauk was a special draw for celebrities. He had rented the property, known as the Church Estate, a cluster of bleached-out cottages, to Lee Radziwill beginning in 1972. This summer, he had kicked off the season by inviting the Rolling Stones to come and stay, to practice “Angie” and “It's Only Rock 'n Roll” for “The Americas Tour.” They blared their music beyond the bluffs and then took off. The estate, called Eoönen, or dawn, was located—conveniently for Lee—next door to the artist Peter Beard, whose place overlooked the very tip of Long Island. Beard, a handsome Yale graduate, spent time on Skorpios with the sisters and had been working on a book called
Longing for Darkness
about meeting
Out of Africa
author Isak Dinesen. When Random House had declined to publish the manuscript Jackie asked him what she could do to help. “Have a dance with Africans around a campfire in Newport?”
13
Instead, she wrote the afterword for the book, giving it an extra boost when it was finally published that summer:

What an extraordinary surprise and gift it was, when Peter Beard first showed me the fables and drawings of Isak Dinesen's beloved Kamante. I had not known he was still alive. To hold his drawings was like touching a talisman that took you back to a world you thought had disappeared forever
.

Maybe I was so affected because
Out of Africa
has always meant more to me than any other book. But then I watched my children respond to the fables with the freshness of young minds. My son started to make African drawings, some of which he asked Peter Beard to send to Kamante for him …

Peter Beard reveals the immediacy her philosophy can have for the young people of today
—
who are so passionately idealistic, so ready to be martyrs. This book can help them; show them that they had allies in an earlier time, who knew that courage was endurance as well as abandon …

How contemporary Isak Dinesen is; her prescience of how man would destroy his environment, her belief that his only hope was to get in tune with it again. It seems to me that so many of the movements of today, ecology, anti-materialism, communal living
—
they were all in
Out of Africa.

She was one of the first white people to feel that “black is beautiful.” She was the first to see how “all the dark forces of time, evolution, nature” were being disrupted in Africa. Cecil Rhodes saying “teach the native to want” so quickly became Galbraith's “Affluent Society.”

One of my favorite passages in
Out of Africa
is where Isak Dinesen asks: “If I know a song of Africa, of the giraffe and the African new moon lying on her back, of the ploughs in the fields and the sweaty faces of the coffee pickers, does Africa know a song of me? Would the air over the plain quiver with a color that I had on, or the children invent a game in which my name was, or the full moon throw a shadow over the gravel of the drive that was like me, or would the eagles of the Ngong Hills look out for me?”

This book is the echo she longed for. Yes, Africa does have a song for her. It is Peter Beard and Kamante who have made it for her
.

Kamante's drawings and Peter Beard's photographs share a purity
—
of a wild animal looking at the camera with free and vulnerable eyes
.

This book is a work of love
—
of a love that a young man, young enough to be her grandson, was struck with when he first read
Out of Africa.
The book changed his life. He went in search of that Africa she knew. He saves its memories, her memories, for us
.

Before it is too late?

Now, here they were, in Montauk, celebrating Beard's success and marveling over the fact that Jackie's body was a major spread in
Hustler
. There was only one thing to do with the centerfold. She pulled it out and signed it for Warhol:

For Andy, with enduring affection
,

Jackie Montauk

Leaving the beach behind for the city, Jackie wanted to check out a new Broadway production called
Chicago
. She went to the show with an old friend, the diamond merchant Maurice Tempelsman. He had first met her in the 1950s, when he had arranged a meeting for then senator Kennedy to discuss business interests in South Africa. During her White House years, Jackie had made frequent trips to New York, attending the theater with UN ambassador Adlai Stevenson, who had been Tempelsman's lawyer. Sometimes Tempelsman would tag along with them for dinner.

This time, it was just the two of them. But hardly anyone paid any attention. In many ways, Tempelsman was like many of Jackie's escorts, who fell into one of three categories: gay, married, or old. Tempelsman could appear a bit frumpy, but was merely middle-aged, born the same year as Jackie into a Yiddish-speaking Orthodox Jewish family in Belgium. He was definitely not gay. But he was married—with three kids.
14
That important fact aside, Jackie enjoyed him. Having fled Europe to America with his parents during World War II, he was fluent in French. He was also wise about finance and politics. He had joined his father's diamond business as a teenager, and now he was brokering deals directly with entire African governments. While Jackie was grappling with Onassis's declining health earlier in the year, Tempelsman was in Zaire (the former Belgian Congo), the biggest producer of diamonds in the world, negotiating with its corrupt President Mobutu.
15
Although he was no billionaire, Tempelsman—short and balding, with an elfish twinkle in his eye, an easy smile, and rosy cheeks—was wealthy and alluring.

Now that Onassis was dead, Tempelsman was keenly aware that Jackie was lonely, in need of some financial advice, and maybe even a date or two.

CHAPTER EIGHT

The Working Woman

A
fter Labor Day, Tom Guinzburg finally had to reveal to his staff the secret that he had carried all summer: he had hired the most famous person in the world. Like Epstein, he knew that there would be some editors and young employees who would view Jackie as competition, a distraction, an insult, or an unapproachable icon. He knew that some of them would inevitably think,
How could this chronic shopper, this socialite, this woman who has not had a real job in more than two decades, simply waltz in here and do what I'm doing
—
or take the position I wanted?

Before he told them, he turned to a young, friendly editorial assistant, Rebecca Singleton, who had arrived at Viking two years before, straight from college in Georgia, where she had majored in literature. She had impressed her colleagues from the start and Guinzburg had been nurturing her talent and ambition by allowing her to originate two nonfiction projects. He liked her ideas. He saw her potential and had noticed how grounded she was, a rare trait in the hothouse, sometimes backbiting atmosphere of New York publishing. Unlike many of her Ivy League coworkers, Becky, as many called her, was uninhibited by ideology. She was a single working girl in the big city, just like Mary Tyler Moore, but she approached her job with eagerness and practicality, not the feminist zeal that some of the other editorial assistants had, the kind that made them refuse to get coffee for anyone, or admit that they did not know something. There were already three female editors at Viking at the time, in Singleton's eyes a sign that the workplace “war” was over. Singleton stood out from the pack for other reasons: she already had had other job experiences, as a bookstore clerk, a waitress, and a nurse's aide in a psychiatric ward—all of which, oddly, would prepare her for what was about to happen.

Guinzburg knew that in order for Jackie to be successful, she needed an amanuensis to help her in the office. Singleton was resilient, had a sense of humor, and she was pretty well liked in the other departments. Perhaps she could help the staff warm to Jackie, too.

He called Singleton into his office.

There's a new editor about to start, he told her. Jackie Onassis. I want you to work for her. I know the last thing you want is another editor to report to. It won't be easy, but you have the qualities needed for such a challenge. You're going to have to handle a lot of stuff.

Guinzburg understood what that meant more than Singleton did.

While the young employee was shocked, she also knew immediately that there was no way she could turn down Guinzburg's request. It was not because she wanted to work for a famous person, but because she liked
him
. Period.

I understand, she told him.
1

She returned to her desk as Guinzburg called the rest of the editorial department into the conference room, hoping his publishing family would accept a new in-law.

When the meeting ended, two of the other editorial assistants came by Singleton's desk.

“Well,” said one, “I guess you're going to have a lot of extra work.”

That night, Singleton called a friend to tell her who her new boss would be.

There was a long silence on the other end of the phone as her friend contemplated the reason for someone so rich and famous to go to work at a publishing house.

“Why?”

On the fourth Monday of September, Jackie woke up and ate a boiled egg, fortifying herself for an important day. Over the weekend, as if it were one last fling before it was time to get serious, she had attended a Frank Sinatra concert—with Frank Sinatra. It was she who received the standing ovation.

Montauk was only a few weeks ago, but its memory was fading fast, overpowered by Manhattan's energized transition to fall. Instead of heading straight to Radcliffe, Caroline chose to break free of Massachusetts for a while and enrolled in a ten-month decorative arts program, which would start soon, on October 1, at Sotheby's in London. John was back at Collegiate, the exclusive boys-only day school on the Upper West Side, close enough to keep an eye on. Jackie had been putting the finishing touches on her country house in New Jersey and had signed on to the Shriver for President committee. It was a new beginning for her, too, and she must have had a few butterflies in her stomach that morning. She pulled on a gray shirtdress, grabbed her glasses, and allowed the doorman to hail her a cab.

“Six-twenty-five Madison Avenue,” she told the driver.

It was her first day on the job—her first day “working” since Jack had proposed. She was forty-six and, as the nastier gossip columnists like to point out, her face was starting to show it.

Besides Dorothy Schiff's proposal in 1964 to make her a columnist, Jackie had had other job offers. While she was still mourning JFK's death, some even joked that her “job” should be to marry Adlai Stevenson in order to turn him into a viable presidential candidate. Publicly, she shrunk from any suggestion about a second act, saying, “I'll just retire to Boston, and try to convince John Jr. that his father was president.” Understandably, her children became her sole focus.

September 18, 1975. Frank Sinatra escorts Jackie out of the Uris Theater in New York via the stage door, where he was performing, on their way to dinner.
(Bettmann/CORBIS)

In 1973 she had considered taking a lucrative gig anchoring an NBC television show about Venice and Angkor Wat. But Onassis had vetoed the idea.

“No Greek wife works,” he huffed.
2

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