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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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<text id=94TT0695>
<link 94TO0163>
<title>
May 30, 1994: A Profile in Courage
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
May 30, 1994 Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER STORIES, Page 28
A Profile in Courage
</hdr>
<body>
<p> The most private of public persons, Jacqueline Onassis radiated
restraint and strength
</p>
<p>By Martha Duffy--Reported by Sam Allis/Boston, Bonnie Angelo, Sharon E. Epperson,
Georgia Harbison and Daniel S. Levy/New York and S.C. Gwynne/Austin
</p>
<p> She was at her best in the crunch. When disaster struck in Dallas
on Nov. 22, 1963, those who saw her said she was tearless, perhaps
spacy, "with a 50-yard stare." But she knew what she had to
do to fulfill her commitment to her husband, her children and
her country. Her bright pink suit was soiled with blood and
gray matter, but she would not change it or leave John F. Kennedy's
body.
</p>
<p> Everyone present tried to get her away from a gory scene, but
there was nothing spacy, nothing at a 50-yard remove, about
her defiant resolve. When one of several doctors at Parkland
Memorial Hospital in Dallas urged her to leave, she said, "Do
you think seeing the coffin can upset me, doctor? I've seen
my husband die, shot in my arms. His blood is all over me. How
can I see anything worse than I've seen?"
</p>
<p> Often described as a mannequin, remote and elegant, she seemed
determined to underscore the bloody reality of death by gunshot.
At Parkland, where the President was taken by ambulance, every
time the Secret Service urged her out, she walked right back
in, circling the trauma room. Dr. Marion Jenkins, now 76, remembers
that in the minutes after the shooting, "I noticed that she
was carrying one hand cupped over the other hand. She nudged
me with her left elbow and then with her right hand handed me
a good-sized chunk of the President's brain. She didn't say
a word. I handed it to the nurse. Then they led her out of the
room again."
</p>
<p> After Kennedy was officially declared dead, the various tubes
and his back corset--all were removed. His wife approached
the body, and, as Jenkins recalls, "she started kissing him.
She kissed his foot, his leg, thigh, chest, and then his lips.
She didn't say a word." A wife's final anointment and farewell.
</p>
<p> When her father died, she put a bracelet he had given her into
the casket, to be buried with him. In Dallas she had nothing
but her wedding ring. She put it in. Then, turning to her husband's
close aide, P. Kenneth O'Donnell, she asked, "The ring. Did
I do the right thing?" O'Donnell told her to leave the symbol
where it lay.
</p>
<p> In the public eye, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis' heroism is imprinted
through indelible images: at L.B.J.'s side, with a gaze more
eloquent than any words, as he took the oath of office; gripping
Robert Kennedy's hand and then her children's; receiving the
flag that had covered J.F.K.'s coffin. But what of the woman
beyond the camera's range? There are no pictures of her heartbreak
and bravery at Parkland. Yet that was somehow her way.
</p>
<p> Last week she died as she had lived, the most private of public
persons, a delicate glow in the harshly lit landscape of American
celebrity. Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis radiated courage
and restraint, glamour and conspicuous shyness. What she thought
about her crowded life no one knows because, with the exception
of interviews granted to Theodore White and William Manchester
in 1963 and 1964 respectively, she never spoke about her experiences
after the assassination or revealed her reactions or opinions.
Tapes of these interviews exist; White's will be released next
year, but Manchester's are embargoed until 2064.
</p>
<p> If she set out to weave an elaborate mystery, she could not
have used a better tactic. But those who know her deny that
that was her aim. A friend since Vassar days says Jackie had
no idea how to answer questions and was scared of the press:
"People thought she was stuck-up, but she just didn't have much
confidence." Said author Manchester (The Death of a President):
"After Kennedy died, she was exposed to a pitiless spotlight,
and she did not know how to handle it." But another observer
from White House days claims that Kennedy himself engineered
the Garboesque stance: he knew that if she ever began talking,
she would reveal how little she knew or cared about politics
or public issues.
</p>
<p> In truth she was apolitical. She supported the campaigns of
Bobby and other Kennedys, but that kind of ambition was not
in her blood. After her second husband, the Greek shipping magnate
Aristotle Onassis, died, some would-be kingmakers got together
in New York and, hoping to advance Democratic Party prospects,
came up with a grand plan to have her run for the Senate. Her
reply said it all: "If I could do it three days a week."
</p>
<p> Her interests were always arty. During her senior year in college
she won Vogue's Prix de Paris, a contest that awarded the winner
a year in Paris and an internship with the magazine. Her essay
was on the great Russian ballet impresario Serge Diaghilev,
among others. Diaghilev was a shrewd, sophisticated choice,
bound to knock the glossy's one-upping editors back on their
heels. Says a Jackie watcher of impeccable credentials: "You
could talk with her about Baudelaire, but not about Cromwell."
</p>
<p> Jacqueline Bouvier's world was far from the wheel-and-deal politics
that her future husband cut his teeth on. Hers was a background
of manicured lawns, riding lessons and outings at the ballet.
The Bouviers were an old Catholic family entrenched in New York
society; her father, known as "Black Jack" because of his dark
good looks, lived recklessly both in the stock market and in
his dashing private life. Several of the men whom Jackie later
found attractive--her husband, her father-in-law Joseph Kennedy
and, later, Aristotle Onassis--bore some resemblance to her
glamorous papa. Her mother Janet was steelier, both more conservative
and more ambitious. Black Jack was an exuberant but careless
investor; the Wall Street crash of 1929 finished his market
ride. His marriage began to falter then, and it ended when Jackie
was nine. Janet then married into one of the richer branches
of the vast Auchincloss clan.
</p>
<p> It is possible that Jackie's quest for money--probably the
reason behind her unhappy marriage to Onassis--is rooted in
her father's financial troubles. But her stepfather, Hugh Auchincloss,
was generous; she headed off to Miss Porter's School, an ultra-posh
boarding school, with her own horse. Two years at Vassar followed,
but Jackie was too restless to thrive in the leafy confines
of a Poughkeepsie, New York, campus. She finished college at
George Washington University and, spurning the Prix de Paris
offers, began her job as the Inquiring Photographer for the
Washington Times-Herald.
</p>
<p> At 22, Jackie was in no way a journalist, what with her ineptness
at Q&A repartee and her whispery, little-girl voice, but still
she made a success of it. Image counted a lot. Who could resist
this willowy, wide-eyed girl with her clumsy hold on the camera
and her wavy hair pulled back into a businesslike bun?
</p>
<p> The next year she met her fate at a dinner party given by Charles
Bartlett, a Washington journalist and socialite, and his wife
Martha. The Bartletts were in a matchmaking mood and invited
their old friend Jack Kennedy, then 34, a handsome, ambitious
Congressman from Massachusetts. The introduction took. They
dated, and he proposed by telephone to London, where she was
snapping the coronation of Elizabeth II. "Jackie fell for him,"
says an old friend, "but she was amused by the situation too.
After the engagement, she said she never knew she had so many
friends."
</p>
<p> From the start, marriage to Jack was not easy for Jackie. There
were problems--his wandering eye, her clothing bills--but
mostly the trouble was that he was constantly running for President.
Jackie got what she wanted in that her husband was wealthy,
but she had hoped for a life of comfort and perfection in a
private world. Faced with a vast, unruly public, she may have
fallen back on her father's injunction that an attractive woman
should be mysterious, always holding something back to keep
people guessing. Jack would take her to parties and then leave
her alone while he worked the room. In response she developed
her famous I'm-here-but-I'm-really-not-here approach to the
world. More often than not, she answered questions with her
dazzling smile--period.
</p>
<p> She wanted children, and suffered through a miscarriage and
the birth of a stillborn baby. Caroline was born in 1957. John
Jr. was born in 1960. When she was later asked which First Lady
she admired most, her reply was surprising--Bess Truman. And
the reason: her sensible way of bringing up her daughter Margaret
in the White House glare.
</p>
<p> By 1960 there were visible cracks in the marriage and gossip
about J.F.K.'s supposed affairs. At one point Joseph Kennedy
offered Jackie a million dollars not to leave Jack, and reportedly
she took it. The presidency did not initially improve matters.
For one thing, she disliked the White House. "Like a hotel,"
she complained to TIME's Hugh Sidey, "everywhere I look there
is somebody standing around or walking down a hall."
</p>
<p> She made peace with the problem by asserting her own aesthetic.
She had a stage built and invited performers like cellist Pablo
Casals and the American Ballet Theatre--a glamorization of
politics that was unprecedented. More important, she redid the
place, replacing routine reproductions with authentic period
pieces and fabrics. In behalf of her cause, she was able to
put aside her shyness and skillfully persuade rich collectors
to part with their treasures in the name of history. The redecoration
was a triumph celebrated on TV when the First Lady led correspondent
Charles Collingwood through the rooms and explained her inspirations.
Eighty million people tuned in.
</p>
<p> "She had the most remarkable visual memory of anyone that I
have ever known," says Manchester. "When I interviewed her in
Georgetown in the spring of '64, she would describe a scene,
and she would even describe the configuration of the clouds
in the sky. Later I would look at the photographs of that time,
and she would be right."
</p>
<p> The First Lady was also instrumental in propelling the preservation
movement. In 1962 everyone, including the President and his
advisers, was resigned to the fact that the historic 19th century
town houses around Lafayette Square in Washington would be torn
down to make room for a large federal office building. "She
refused to give up," said John Carl Warnecke, an architect who
helped develop a plan to preserve the 19th century character
of the square. "She said this is `a last-ditch effort.' A lot
of other people have taken credit for Lafayette Square, but
she was the true savior." After leaving the White House, she
would help save New York City's Grand Central Terminal from
the wrecker's ball.
</p>
<p> She came to terms with bringing up Caroline and John in the
proverbial fishbowl. In her protectiveness of them can be found
early signs of how vigilant and tough she could be when her
family and her values were at stake. Still the camera images
of the kids are unforgettable, and the President was not above
promoting photo ops. One day he brought little John to the Oval
Office, and the cameras caught the toddler maneuvering between
his father's legs through the crawl space under the Executive
desk. And the nation's children came to envy Caroline her pony,
the redoubtable Macaroni.
</p>
<p> In time, Jackie's marriage grew more stable, though the couple
often separated on vacation. Initially appalled by the restrictions
of working and living under the same roof, Kennedy settled in.
He gained new admiration for his wife just by watching the world's
reaction to her grace and beauty. Jackie had been considered
a liability by Massachusetts pols when J.F.K. was a Senator.
She was, they said, too remote, too snooty. But as First Lady
she came into her own. Charles de Gaulle arrived in the U.S.
with his nose in the air; he considered Jackie empty and much
too beau monde. But he was attracted to her. What exquisite
French! Such sound Gallic genes!
</p>
<p> Later the Kennedys visited France, and the welcome was tumultuous.
It was a proud and happy hero who said, "I am the man who accompanied
Jacqueline Kennedy to Paris." Talking in French to De Gaulle,
the First Lady said, "My grandparents are French." Replied the
great one-up man: "So are mine, madame."
</p>
<p> During the 1,000 days of Kennedy's presidency, the First Lady's
greatest impact was on style. She revolutionized dress for a
female public figure. She loved slacks and shorts and riding
habits. What she did not do was overdress--ever. Gone were
the klutzy handbags, the fussy hats, the grim shoes, the clashing
colors and unphotogenic prints. The young Halston made her the
famous pillbox hat. For the rest she looked toward Paris--Jackie was a frank Francophile. The American designer Oleg Cassini
made her copies of current couture, and Jackie encouraged people
to believe she bought American. But she also shopped quietly
at Givenchy and Balenciaga. Because her elegant taste was always
restrained, it was very hard to tell the difference.
</p>
<p> Her husband sometimes erupted at the bills. Nixonites accused
her of spending $100,000 on her wardrobe. She snapped back in
a New York Times interview, "I couldn't spend that much unless
I wore sable underwear." But Jackie was really not just a clotheshorse.
She applied the same sense of style to herself as she did to
the White House. Says Richard Martin, associate curator of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute: "Her style was
not vanity but a way of living, not simply adorning herself
but expressing her vision of beauty in the world." The museum's
collections contain couture clothing from Onassis, all of it
donated anonymously.
</p>
<p> In 1963 a third child, Patrick, was born to the Kennedys, but
he lived only two days. His father went down to the hospital
boiler room and wept. But they were a real family now. After
the assassination, Jackie recalled to Theodore White the nights
when Jack would turn on the phonograph in their bedroom and
play the title song from the Broadway hit Camelot. Perhaps he
saw his presidency as a chimera, "that brief shining moment"
that must not be forgot. But the song was instead a premonition
of tragedy.
</p>
<p> The Kennedys went to Dallas on a political fence-mending trip
in a state the Democrats had barely won in 1960. The shots rang
out as they endured a hot motorcade trip across town. Afterward
many people tried to persuade Jackie to change her clothes,
but she insisted on wearing the stained pink suit. "I want them
to see what they have done," she said. She also refused to take
tranquilizers, fearing they would blunt her reactions and interfere
with her planning--because plan the funeral she did. The riderless
horse, the eternal flame, the wailing Irish bagpipe--all were
her idea. When the hearse rumbled past, she asked little John
to salute his father. The nation saw her then as a mother, first
and foremost.
</p>
<p> The next day she wrote a long letter in her own hand to the
new President, thanking him for walking along with the family
"behind Jack," for his kindness to her and even for tolerating
the shouts of the children playing in the White House nursery
school. It is signed, "Respectfully, Jackie." It is a letter
that commands infinite respect.
</p>
<p> She moved to a house in Georgetown, but life there proved impossible.
In that quaint, pricey village, houses are close to the street,
and tour buses were soon belching smoke in her windows. She
then sought out the relative anonymity and familiarity of New
York City. She bought an apartment on upper Fifth Avenue across
from Central Park. As a child, living two blocks away on Park
Avenue, she played in the park. She emerged from her doorman-protected
life to help Bobby Kennedy out on his presidential run. His
assassination stunned and depressed her. Frank Mankiewicz, Bobby's
press secretary, recalls meeting her the night he was killed.
"Jackie told me that some people are acquainted with death and
some are not," Mankiewicz says. Talking of women she had met
two months before at the funeral of Martin Luther King Jr.,
she said, "Those women know a lot about death. They see it all
around them. Now, Frank, so do we. And if it weren't for the
children, we'd welcome it."
</p>
<p> Not long after Bobby was assassinated, Jackie shocked the world
by marrying Onassis, the Greek shipping tycoon 29 years her
senior. How could she stoop so far from American royalty? She
was seen in all the trite celebrity camera shots: cruising the
Mediterranean behind her trademark shades, sunbathing on a Greek
isle, smiling broadly in nightclubs. Onassis had a magnetism
that had attracted many women before her, including the great
opera singer Maria Callas. But money was probably the largest
motivation. Jackie had no intention of not living very well.
</p>
<p> The union was not a success. The pair quarreled over her spending.
Onassis took to calling his wife "the widow." After his son
died in an air crash, he changed that to "the witch." Deeply
superstitious, he blamed her for the loss that broke his heart.
</p>
<p> But there was room in his world for many things, and he and
Jackie were sometimes happy and at peace. For one thing, he
liked the Kennedys. Jackie had had problems with them, especially
Jack's mother Rose, mostly about life-style and religious upbringing.
To the Kennedys, the Hyannis Port fracas was the only way to
live. Rose nattered about the church. But despite later gossip,
Jackie settled into a friendly relation with her former in-laws.
An old friend recalls a dinner in Paris with Onassis and the
elder Mrs. Kennedy, when the two ladies gossiped endlessly about
White House days. Then Jackie insisted that Ari take them on
to a nightclub. "You know," she told him, "Rose hasn't been
to a nightclub since Joe took her to the Lido in 1936." Evenings
like that kept the marriage going.
</p>
<p> There was still an unseemly coda: the financial settlement.
Through her lawyers she entered negotiations with her in-laws.
Eventually Christina Onassis, the shipper's daughter and his
only major heir, reportedly decided to get her hated stepmother
out of her life with a settlement of $20 million.
</p>
<p> And so Jackie was back in New York. Instead of endorsing a cause,
as many ex-First Ladies and underemployed princesses have done,
she took a job. First at Viking, then at Doubleday, she became
an editor, working three days a week. Until shortly before she
died, she was responsible for a dozen books a year, and she
gets straight A's from anyone who worked with her. Doubleday
chief Stephen Rubin says that "she was directly involved in
everything--line editing, trim size, jacket design, sales
and marketing. She would call up a big book chain to push her
books. And she was never grand. She would wait outside your
office if you were on the phone."
</p>
<p> She edited memoirs by Gelsey Kirkland and Michael Jackson as
well as obscure books she felt deserved attention, such as Diary
of a Napoleonic Foot Soldier, the manuscript of which was languishing
in a Kansas library until she took an interest. She made something
of a crusade for Edvard Radzinsky's The Last Tsar, getting what
Rubin calls her SWAT team of assistants to promote the book.
Most days she lunched at her desk on carrot and celery sticks.
Says Doubleday associate publisher Marly Russoff: "It was always
a shock for the first few times when you'd pass her in the hall.
She's sort of an icon. But she didn't put a distance between
herself and other people."
</p>
<p> Her put-downs were gentle. Says John Loring, design director
at Tiffany and author of several books edited by Onassis: "It
was always in very nice terms, but the moment she said what
was wrong, there wasn't any doubt. I'd say to myself, `Well,
silly me, why did I try that one on for size. It clearly wasn't
going to work.'" Loring found her an ideal sounding board:
"She had an extraordinary ability to be interested in the person
she was working with." He adds with a flourish, "She makes you
feel you could do almost anything. Any man married to Jackie
probably would have to become President of the United States."
</p>
<p> However, says Charles Daly, director of the Kennedy Library
Foundation in Boston, "she was not at all above giving very
direct criticism when warranted." He recalls the day she visited
the library building designed by her friend the architect I.M.
Pei as it was under construction. She saw an asphalt driveway
where lawn and trees should have been. "She called one of I.M.
Pei's guys out and pointed to the asphalt," says Daly. "She
nearly ate the guy for lunch. She could be very tough."
</p>
<p> She was also extremely tough about keeping her private life
resolutely just that. And, according to Mankiewicz, when Manchester
wanted to renege on the agreement giving her final approval
of the manuscript of Death of a President, Jackie fought him.
"When my children grow up, I don't want them to read all the
gruesome stuff about his brain and the way he looked," she said,
according to Mankiewicz. "She wanted those passages out, and
by God she got them out."
</p>
<p> A few glimpses of the private Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis are
available. For one, she was often seen at ballet intermissions
eating ice cream, something she loved. For another, she chain-smoked--out of the camera's range--until 1987, when she told Kitty
Dukakis, who had approached her for advice on being a political
wife, that she was quitting. She remained devoted to J.F.K.'s
memory. Over lunch with friends, she often began remarks with
"Jack used to say" or "Jack thought."
</p>
<p> Friends observed that she kept "an ostrich position" with regard
to stories of his infidelity in the White House. Indeed, she
professed to be shocked by similar allegations by Paula Jones
about Bill Clinton. But she had always been prim. Says Manchester:
"She was appalled by Lyndon Johnson's earthiness. At one time
he was talking about Adlai Stevenson, and Johnson said, `You
know, he squats to piss.' Jackie was horrified. She didn't know
what to say. She was stunned."
</p>
<p> She exulted whenever she met a White House veteran. A few years
ago, at a dinner party on Martha's Vineyard given by Katharine
Graham, then publisher of the Washington Post, she chatted animatedly
with Nancy Reagan. "They were riveted by each other," says one
of Graham's guests. "They compared notes on being First Lady,
the problems of running the White House. It was like two suburban
ladies talking about a good sale on V-8 juice."
</p>
<p> In the last dozen years, Carolina Herrera, who designed Caroline's
wedding dress, was Onassis' favorite designer. "Once," says
Herrera, "she was in my showroom, and I had some buyers from
Neiman Marcus. She was trying on a suit. She came out and she
saw all these people sitting there and she turned to them and
said, `Don't you think this is lovely?' And they almost fainted
when they saw who was modeling." Says Herrera: "We used to laugh
about it a lot."
</p>
<p> In the last 10 years of her life, Onassis kept company with
a married financier and diamond merchant, Maurice Tempelsman,
who reportedly multiplied his companion's wealth. (One source
says that in 1991 her holdings included $1.5 million in cash,
property--including her $3.5 million apartment--amounting
to nearly $8 million, and $15 million to $20 million in stock.)
An acquaintance of Jack Kennedy's, the Belgian-born Tempelsman,
64, eventually moved into her Fifth Avenue flat and shared her
life at her $2 million summer spread in Martha's Vineyard.
</p>
<p> Her children are now grown. In 1986, Caroline, a lawyer and
author, married Edwin Schlossberg, an artist and entrepreneur,
and is now the mother of three: Rose, 5, Tatiana, 4, and John,
1.
</p>
<p> John Jr., who has dated the actress Darryl Hannah on and off
for more than five years, is also a lawyer, and spent four years
working as an assistant district attorney in New York district
attorney Robert Morgenthau's office before quitting last summer.
His current projects include looking into starting a nonpartisan
magazine about politics. "He was very excited to introduce people
at the office to his mom," says a former colleague at the Manhattan
D.A.'s office. "He was like, `This is my mom!' It was cute.
I got the impression that he talked to her about things that
were going on at the office, things that were going on in his
life. This was not a distant relationship."
</p>
<p> With close relations to her children and grandchildren, a history
of good health, a job she loved and a congenial companion, she
had seemed set for a happy old age. She summered on Martha's
Vineyard in Massachusetts, where she had three traditional saltbox
houses side by side set on 350 beachfront acres, with two large
ponds and a bird sanctuary. There she would quietly entertain
old friends like the author William Styron and the influential
Washington lawyer Vernon Jordan and Lady Bird Johnson. Each
Labor Day weekend, Onassis would have all the Kennedys from
Hyannis Port over for a picnic. "It was like the old days at
Camelot," says one who was there. Did Onassis still feel like
a Kennedy? Michael Kennedy, the son of Robert, simply says,
"She was always open to our family."
</p>
<p> The links were warm but sensitive. Doris Kearns, a Kennedy biographer,
remembers long phone conversations with Onassis. "She would
talk about what it was like when she first met Joe and Rose
Kennedy, how she would listen to classical music on the porch
at Hyannis Port with Joe because they both liked classical music,
how she didn't play touch football with everyone else, how difficult
it was with Rose in the beginning. The whole Kennedy family
drew the married kids away from their wives, but she was determined
to create a nuclear family for Jack." Kearns relates how Onassis
felt about large families. "She went through the Kennedy children,
one by one, how each one was hurt and overshadowed by the one
before. It was all very perceptive. She was not sentimental
at all."
</p>
<p> The end came fast. friends say Onassis, who had prided herself
on her fitness, was shocked to discover that she had non-Hodgkin's
lymphoma, a treatable but tricky form of cancer that often strikes
people in their 60s and 70s. She announced in late February
that she was undergoing treatment. For once in her life, a private
event was public knowledge, because she still returned to her
beloved Central Park, where the photographers could train their
lenses on her. With Caroline, her baby John, and Tempelsman,
she could be seen walking the paths as best she could, passing
the places where she played as a child.
</p>
<p> As recently as last month she told a friend that things were
going well: "I'm almost glad it happened because it's given
me a second life. I laugh and enjoy things so much more." However,
the cancer had spread to her brain and her liver from her lymph
nodes. On Wednesday, after deciding that further medical treatment
would be fruitless, she went home. She died the evening after.
This week she is to be buried in Arlington National Cemetery
beside her husband and her son Patrick.
</p>
<p> Talking to reporters, John Kennedy Jr. said his mother had died
"surrounded by her friends and her family and her books. She
did it in her own way and in her own terms." Despite a lifelong
confrontation with death, that is how she lived and the example
she gave to the world.
</p>
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