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Lee Radziwill
Lee Radziwill
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Princess Caroline Lee Radziwill (née Bouvier; March 3, 1933 – February 15, 2019), previously known as Lee Canfield and Lee Ross, was an American socialite, public relations executive, and interior designer. She was the younger sister of former First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy and sister-in-law of President John F. Kennedy.[1]

Key Information

Early life

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Caroline Lee Bouvier was born at Doctors Hospital in Yorkville, Manhattan, to stockbroker John Vernou Bouvier III and socialite Janet Norton Lee.[2][3][a] She attended the Chapin School, in New York City, Potomac School in Washington, D.C., Miss Porter's School in Farmington, Connecticut, and pursued undergraduate studies at Sarah Lawrence College.[5] In her birth announcement, and from her earliest years, she was known by her middle name "Lee" rather than "Caroline".

Career

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Considered by "New York's society arbiters and editors" as the city's leading debutante, Radziwill had her "coming out" party in 1950. A full-page photograph of her in her gown was featured in the "debutante" section of Life magazine (page 71) in the December 25, 1950 issue.

During the 1960s, Radziwill attempted a career as an actress. Her acting attempt was unsuccessful, if highly publicized. She featured in the 1967 production of The Philadelphia Story as the spoiled Main Line heiress Tracy Lord. The play was staged at the Ivanhoe Theatre in Chicago, and Radziwill's performance was much criticized. A year later, she appeared in a television adaptation of the 1944 movie Laura, which was also criticized.[6]

A London townhouse and a manor, Turville Grange (which she owned and shared with her second husband), had both been decorated by Italian stage designer Lorenzo Mongiardino and were greatly admired and frequently photographed by Cecil Beaton and Horst P. Horst. She worked briefly as an interior decorator in a style influenced by her association with Mongiardino. Her clientele were wealthy; she once decorated a house "for people who would not be there more than three days a year".[7] She frequented celebrity company, including travelling with The Rolling Stones during their 1972 tour of North America,[8] which she attended alongside the writer Truman Capote.[9]

Radziwill was named to the Vanity Fair International Best Dressed Hall of Fame in 1996.[10][11] Her Paris (49, Avenue Montaigne)[12] and Manhattan (160 East 72nd Street)[13] apartments were featured in the April 2009 issue of Elle Décor magazine. She was interviewed by director Sofia Coppola in February 2013 about her life as part of Radziwill's cover story for T: The New York Times Style Magazine as well as about Coppola's movie The Bling Ring and the loss of privacy.[14][unreliable source?] She was listed as one of the 50 best-dressed people older than age 50 by The Guardian in March 2013.[15]

Family

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Radziwill hired documentary filmmakers Albert and David Maysles in 1972 to work on a movie about the Bouvier family. At the outset, the brothers filmed two eccentric and reclusive members of the extended family, Radziwill's aunt and cousin, Edith Ewing Bouvier Beale ("Big Edie") and her daughter Edith Bouvier Beale ("Little Edie"). The Beales lived in a rambling, decaying home in East Hampton, New York, and were funded by other members of the family.[16]

Radziwill's original movie project was suspended, and she retained the footage of the Beales. However the Maysles brothers saw the cinematic potential of the two women and their peculiar lives, and after raising funds for film and equipment of their own, returned and recorded many hours of new footage with Big Edie and Little Edie—the resulting 1975 film Grey Gardens is widely ranked among best of the documentary genre. The film was adapted as a 2006 musical of the same name, where the characters Lee and Jackie Bouvier appear as visiting children in retrospect. HBO produced the 2009 television movie Grey Gardens based on the lives of the Beales.[17]

Surviving footage of Radziwill's 1972 visit to the Beales was included in the 2017 film That Summer.[18][19]

Personal life and death

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Lee Radziwill with President John F. Kennedy and other family on Christmas Day 1962 in Palm Beach, Florida

Radziwill was married three times. Her first marriage, in April 1953, was to Michael Temple Canfield, a publishing executive. They divorced in 1958, and the marriage was declared annulled by the Sacred Rota in November 1962.[20] According to the memoirs of Loelia, Duchess of Westminster, Edward VIII believed that Canfield was actually the biological son of his brother Prince George, Duke of Kent (the fourth son of King George V and uncle of Elizabeth II) and Kiki Preston.[citation needed]

Her second marriage, on March 19, 1959, was to the Polish aristocrat Prince Stanisław Albrecht Radziwiłł, member of the House of Radziwill, who divorced his second wife, the former Grace Maria Kolin (Grace later married William Ward, 3rd Earl of Dudley as his third wife. Dudley's second wife was Viscountess (Frances) Laura Long née Charteris who later married Michael Temple Canfield, Lee's first husband) and received a Roman Catholic annulment of his first marriage to re-marry. (His second marriage had never been acknowledged by the Roman Catholic Church, so no annulment was necessary.)[20] Upon her marriage, she began to use the title of Her Serene Highness Princess Caroline Lee Radziwiłł and was sometimes referred to as Princess Radziwill in the American press.[21][22] However, the Second Polish Republic had abolished the legal recognition of noble titles in the March Constitution of 1921 (article 96),[23] with the effect that the Radziwills were pretenders to the title. They had two children, Anthony (1959–1999) and Anna Christina (b. 1960).[24] Their marriage ended in divorce in 1974.[25]

In 1976, The New York Times reported Peter Francis Tufo, a lawyer and real estate developer, was a "frequent escort" of Radziwill.[26]

On September 23, 1988, Radziwill married for a third time, becoming the second wife of American movie director and choreographer Herbert Ross.[27] Their divorce was finalized during 2001; he died later that year, and she returned to using Radziwill, the transliteration of her children's name, Radziwiłł.

Lee Radziwill died on February 15, 2019, aged 85, in her apartment on the Upper East Side of Manhattan.[28][29][30]

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Books

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  • Happy Times. New York: Assouline. 2001. p. 168. ISBN 978-1614280545.
  • Lee. Foreword by Peter Beard, introduction by Richard David Story. New York: Assouline. 2015. p. 184. ISBN 978-1614284697.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)

Notes

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References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Caroline Lee Bouvier Radziwill (March 3, 1933 – February 15, 2019), commonly known as Lee Radziwill, was an American , style icon, interior designer, actress, and executive, recognized for her elegance and associations with , including her marriage to Polish prince Stanisław Albrecht Radziwiłł and her role as the younger sister of . Born in to stockbroker and Janet Norton Lee, Radziwill pursued diverse ventures, including a brief acting stint in the 1960s and work as an interior decorator for clients such as , alongside a successful tenure in for fashion designer from the 1980s to 1990s. In 1959, she wed Radziwiłł, a real estate developer and descendant of Lithuanian-Polish nobility, gaining the title of princess, though the union ended in separation by 1974 without formal divorce until later; the couple had two children, Anthony and Anna Christina. Inducted into the International Best Dressed List Hall of Fame in 1996, Radziwill embodied mid-20th-century sophistication but often navigated public perception shaped by her sibling's prominence, pursuing independent acclaim in design and fashion circles amid personal and familial dynamics.

Early Life

Family Origins and Childhood

Caroline Lee Bouvier, later known as Lee Radziwill, was born on March 3, 1933, at Doctors Hospital in the Yorkville neighborhood of , . She was the younger daughter of (1891–1957), a nicknamed "Black Jack" for his dark hair and swarthy complexion, and Janet Norton Lee (1907–1989), a socially ambitious from a prosperous real estate family. Her older sister was Jacqueline Lee Bouvier (1929–1994), future ; the sisters also had a younger sibling named Caroline who died in infancy. The Bouvier family's paternal lineage traced to French, Scottish, and English roots, with John Vernou Bouvier III descending from Major John Vernou Bouvier Jr. and Maude Frances Sergeant; the clan's American progenitor was Michel Bouvier, a French cabinetmaker who immigrated to Philadelphia around 1815 and established a line of bankers and brokers. This heritage positioned the Bouviers as established members of New York high society, though John III's career volatility—marked by successes and setbacks in stockbroking—contributed to financial instability amid the Great Depression. On her mother's side, Janet Lee's ancestry was Irish, stemming from second-generation immigrants; her father, James Thomas Aloysius Lee (1877–1968), was a self-made millionaire developer who built significant properties in and amassed wealth through strategic investments. , the middle of three daughters, embodied her family's upward mobility, marrying into the more pedigreed Bouviers in 1928 despite perceptions of calculated social ascent. Radziwill's early childhood unfolded in apartments and summers at the family's East Hampton estate, , amid her parents' increasingly strained marriage, which ended in divorce in 1940 when she was seven; her father's charm masked and , while her mother prioritized social standing and equestrian pursuits, fostering a competitive environment for her daughters' poise and accomplishments. Following the divorce, Janet Bouvier remarried Hugh D. Auchincloss in 1942, relocating the family to his estate in , which exposed Radziwill to a blended household with half-siblings and further refined her upbringing in elite circles.

Education and Formative Years

Caroline Lee Bouvier, known as Lee from a young age, was born on March 3, 1933, in New York City to stockbroker John Vernou Bouvier III and socialite Janet Norton Lee, in a family of French descent with Wall Street ties and summers spent in East Hampton, Long Island. Her parents' marriage dissolved amid her father's alcoholism and infidelity, culminating in divorce in 1940 when Lee was seven, after which she and her older sister Jacqueline alternated residences between their father's New York apartment and their mother's properties, including a move to Washington, D.C., following Janet's 1942 remarriage to Hugh D. Auchincloss. This instability fostered Lee's early adaptability and social awareness, shaped by her mother's emphasis on high society etiquette and her father's favoritism toward the more academically inclined Jacqueline, leaving Lee to cultivate a rebellious, artistic streak amid familial tensions. Lee's formal education began at the in for primary years, followed by the Potomac School in Washington, D.C., during her mother's remarriage period. At age 15, she transitioned to boarding school at in , graduating around 1950, where she was described as an average student who chafed against the structured environment, contrasting her sister's academic excellence there. She debuted in society that same year, marking her entry into elite social circles that her mother had groomed her for, though Lee's formative experiences increasingly drew her toward European culture and independence rather than rigorous scholarship. Post-graduation, Lee enrolled at near , opting against her sister's alma mater Vassar, but departed after three semesters, citing disinterest in academia and a pull toward and travel, including studies in . This abbreviated college phase underscored her formative pivot from conventional education to self-directed pursuits, influenced by transatlantic exposure and a desire to emulate stylish European over American institutional paths.

Marriages and Immediate Family

Marriage to Michael Canfield

Caroline Lee Bouvier married Michael Temple Canfield, a publishing executive and adopted son of Harper & Brothers chairman Cass Canfield, on April 18, 1953. The ceremony occurred at Holy Trinity Catholic Church in Washington, D.C., followed by a reception at her stepfather Hugh Auchincloss's Merrywood estate in Virginia. Canfield, born in 1926, had served in the U.S. Office of Strategic Services during World War II and later worked in publishing in London. The couple resided primarily in during their marriage, where Bouvier engaged in social activities and early work. They had no children. The marriage ended in civil in 1958. The Roman granted an via the Sacred Rota in November 1962, following a review process that addressed the prior civil dissolution. Canfield died in 1969 at age 43.

Marriage to Stanisław Radziwiłł

Caroline Lee Bouvier, following the of her first marriage, wed Polish aristocrat Prince on March 19, 1959. The union connected her to the historic , known for centuries of nobility in Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth territories. Upon marriage, she adopted the style of Her Serene Highness Princess Radziwiłł, reflecting the family's traditional titular privileges. The couple resided primarily in at Turville Grange, an estate near , while maintaining transatlantic social ties. They had two children: Stanisław Albert Radziwiłł, born August 4, 1959, in , , who later pursued a career in television production before dying of cancer on August 10, 1999; and Anna Christina Radziwiłł, born August 18, 1960. The marriage lasted until divorce in 1974, after which Radziwiłł retained the Radziwiłł surname professionally and socially in association with her children. Stanisław Radziwiłł died on December 10, 1976. No public details emerged regarding specific causes for the dissolution, though the period coincided with Radziwiłł's expanding career in public relations and design.

Marriage to Herbert Ross

Lee Radziwill married American film director Herbert Ross on September 23, 1988, at her residence in New York City, in a civil ceremony officiated by Justice E. Leo Milonas of the New York State Supreme Court's Appellate Division. Ross, known for directing films such as The Goodbye Girl (1977) and Steel Magnolias (1989), had been widowed the previous year following the death of his first wife, actress Nora Kaye, from cancer. The couple had begun dating prior to the marriage, connecting through overlapping social and entertainment circles in New York. A followed the ceremony, attended by close family and friends, including Radziwill's sister , with some reports placing the event at Onassis's nearby home. The marriage represented Radziwill's third, following her unions with Michael Canfield and Stanisław Radziwiłł, and aligned with her continued involvement in cultural and artistic spheres, as Ross's career in Hollywood and direction complemented her own interests in and . No children resulted from the union. The marriage lasted approximately 12 years before the couple separated, with divorce proceedings initiated around 1999 and finalized in May 2001. Ross died of heart disease on October 9, 2001, shortly after the divorce, with associates attributing emotional strain from the contentious split—marked by disputes over assets and lifestyle differences—to exacerbating his health decline. Radziwill cited incompatibilities in their professional and personal rhythms as a factor, though public accounts emphasized the acrimony rather than mutual consent.

Children and Family Dynamics

Lee Radziwiłł and her second husband, Stanisław Radziwiłł, had two children during their marriage: a son, Anthony Stanisław Radziwiłł, born on August 4, 1959, in , , and a daughter, Anna Christina Radziwiłł (also known as Tina), born on August 18, 1960, in , . The couple resided in , on a street adjacent to , during the early years of raising their family. Anthony Radziwiłł pursued a career in as a television executive and , earning an and a for excellence in reporting. He married journalist on August 27, 1994, but was diagnosed with cancer and died on August 10, 1999, at age 40 in . Anna Christina Radziwiłł worked as a and appeared in projects including True Colors (1991) and (1999). Family dynamics centered on the children's upbringing amid Radziwiłł's high-society lifestyle and transatlantic moves, with the parents maintaining a stable household for over a decade before separating in 1974. Lee Radziwiłł maintained close ties with both children into adulthood; following Anthony's death, her relationship with daughter-in-law Carole Radziwill "waxed and waned," influenced by shared grief but diverging personal paths, as Anthony and Carole had no children. In her 2007 memoir Happy Times, Lee reflected on her own childhood expectations of a large family—contrasting her mother's prediction of "twelve children"—yet expressed contentment with her two. Upon Lee's death in 2019, she bequeathed the bulk of her estimated $50 million estate to Anna Christina, underscoring enduring maternal bonds amid the family's losses.

Professional Pursuits

Fashion Public Relations and Promotion

In 1986, Lee Radziwill began her professional career in by joining Giorgio Armani's New York office in a title-less executive role focused on special events and brand promotion. This position capitalized on her established reputation for elegance and high-society connections, allowing her to infuse the Italian designer's collections with an air of exclusivity and sophistication during Armani's expansion in the American market. Radziwill served as director of special events for until mid-1994, a tenure of approximately eight years marked by successful orchestration of high-profile s, parties, and client engagements that elevated the brand's visibility among clientele. Her efforts included coordinating events such as 's 1988 at the Museum of Contemporary Art in , where her personal involvement helped bridge the designer's aesthetic with influential social circles. later described her as "an extremely elegant woman" whose contributions enhanced the company's prestige. Prior to her role, Radziwill's exposure to fashion promotion dated to the , when she worked as a special assistant to editor at Harper's Bazaar, assisting with styling and editorial features that honed her understanding of trend dissemination and designer advocacy. She later contributed to Vogue's office through writing and editing, further immersing her in the promotional aspects of European couture during the post-war fashion boom. These early experiences, though more editorial than strictly , laid the groundwork for her targeted PR strategies at , where she shifted from observer to active promoter without affiliation to other major fashion houses in a formal capacity.

Interior Design Practice

In February 1976, Lee Radziwill established Lee Radziwill Inc., her professional firm, marking her entry into commercial decoration amid personal financial pressures. The firm focused on creating elegant, layered interiors drawing from historical influences, often incorporating rich textiles, custom furniture, and a blend of high-end and accessible elements reflective of Radziwill's personal aesthetic. Her inaugural major commission came from Americana Hotels, for which she designed two private suites: one at the Americana Hotel in , and another at a New York property, emphasizing sophisticated yet approachable luxury suited to hospitality settings. Radziwill collaborated frequently with Italian architect and decorator Renzo Mongiardino on projects, leveraging his expertise in opulent, period-inspired schemes that aligned with her vision of timeless elegance over modernist . The practice attracted a limited number of corporate and affluent private clients, benefiting from publicity tied to Radziwill's social prominence, though it did not achieve widespread commercial longevity and appears to have wound down by the late 1970s as she pursued other endeavors. Her work during this period underscored a preference for pattern-drenched rooms, floral motifs, and elements, influencing perceptions of her as a tastemaker despite the firm's modest scale.

Acting and Entertainment Attempts

In the mid-1960s, Radziwill sought to establish herself as an actress, a pursuit heavily influenced by her friendship with author Truman Capote, who envisioned her as a potential star despite her lack of formal training or prior experience. Capote, leveraging his connections, secured her the lead role in a 1968 television adaptation of Vera Caspary's novel Laura, a remake of the 1944 film noir classic. Billed as Lee Bouvier, Radziwill portrayed the enigmatic Laura Hunt, with the script co-written by Capote and Thomas Phipps, and directed by John Llewellyn Moxey; the cast included seasoned actors such as Farley Granger as detective Mark McPherson, George Sanders, and Robert Stack. The production, aired on ABC Stage 67, was promoted with significant publicity tied to Radziwill's socialite status and Kennedy family ties, but it failed to translate into critical or commercial success. Critics universally panned Radziwill's performance, highlighting her stiffness, amateurish delivery, and inability to convey emotional depth, which underscored the limitations of transitioning from to professional acting without substantive preparation. Reviews described her as "miscast" and the effort as a vanity project, with Capote's script alterations unable to compensate for her evident shortcomings; for instance, noted the adaptation's failure to capture the original's tension, attributing much of the disconnect to Radziwill's portrayal. This debacle, combined with the era's competitive landscape, effectively curtailed her acting ambitions by late , as subsequent opportunities dried up amid perceptions of her as unqualified rather than a serious talent. Radziwill made no further credited acting appearances in major productions, though unverified reports suggest minor or uncredited involvement in early 1970s films such as (1971), (1972), and (1972), none of which advanced her career. Her brief foray into entertainment highlighted the challenges faced by social figures attempting Hollywood breakthroughs, where pedigree alone proved insufficient against demands for skill and resilience. Later, her 1988 marriage to director —known for films like The Turning Point (1977) and (1989)—did not revive these interests, as Ross cast established professionals rather than his wife in his projects.

Other Ventures and Business Roles

Radziwill's early professional endeavors included work in journalism and promotional activities. After graduating from in 1951, she joined the Washington Times-Herald as a reporter and photographer, contributing to the newspaper's coverage during her brief tenure there. She subsequently assisted in advertising efforts at under editor and managed the American fashion pavilion at the 1958 Brussels World's Fair, coordinating exhibits that promoted U.S. design and commerce internationally. In the realm of , Radziwill authored Happy Times in , a blending personal anecdotes with photographs from her life, issued by as a luxury volume that leveraged her social cachet for commercial appeal. The , shaped through collaborative discussions with publisher Prosper Assouline, reflected her curatorial eye and served as a branded extension of her aesthetic influence, though it did not spawn ongoing business lines. Occasional design contributions, such as custom Indian tablecloths bearing her original patterns, appeared in her personal collection but did not formalize into independent product ventures. These activities underscored her opportunistic engagement in media, promotion, and selective commercialization, often intersecting with but distinct from her core and pursuits.

Social World and Personal Relationships

High Society Connections

Lee Radziwill's 1959 marriage to Polish aristocrat Prince Stanisław Radziwiłł, a member of one of Europe's oldest noble families tracing lineage to the 16th century, elevated her status within international high society and bridged American and European elite circles. This union positioned her among jet-setting aristocrats and socialites, facilitating connections across London, Paris, and New York social scenes where she hosted and attended exclusive gatherings. Radziwill formed close ties with prominent American socialites, including Barbara "Babe" Paley, wife of CBS founder , whose marriage exemplified media-old money alliances in Manhattan's upper echelons. She also associated with , a Long Island horsewoman and fashion muse whose friendships extended to the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, providing Radziwill indirect access to abdicated British royalty through shared social orbits. Her circle included , a twice-divorced socialite linked to Hollywood and political figures like General Dwight D. Eisenhower, reflecting Radziwill's navigation of transatlantic networks blending , media influence, and cultural tastemakers. These relationships underscored her role in mid-20th-century , characterized by private jets, couture events, and discretion among the ultra-wealthy.

Association with Truman Capote

Lee Radziwill first met author in 1962 during an intimate lunch at a New York restaurant, where they quickly formed a close friendship marked by mutual confidences and shared social circles. Radziwill, seeking to establish her own identity apart from her sister Jacqueline Kennedy, confided in Capote about personal matters, including feelings of jealousy toward her sibling's prominence, which she publicly denied but privately expressed to him. Capote, in turn, viewed Radziwill as one of his favored "swans"—elegant, high-society women he cultivated as muses and friends—integrating her into his inner circle alongside figures like and . Their bond peaked publicly at Capote's on November 28, 1966, held at the in , which drew over 500 guests from elite society and featured a strict black-and-white dress code. Radziwill attended prominently, posing and dancing with Capote, who positioned the event as a celebration of his social connections, with her presence underscoring their alliance amid New York's glittering milieu. The gathering, often hailed as the party of the decade, highlighted Capote's influence over such figures, though it also foreshadowed tensions as he drew inspiration from their lives for his writing. The friendship deteriorated in the mid-1970s following Capote's publication of excerpts from his unfinished novel Answered Prayers in Esquire magazine, starting with "La Côte Basque, 1965" in November 1975, which thinly veiled scandals and indiscretions of his socialite acquaintances, leading to widespread ostracism. Although Radziwill was not as directly excoriated as others like Paley—whose marital infidelities were fictionalized under aliases everyone recognized—the disclosures exacerbated existing strains, including Capote's portrayals of the Bouvier sisters as "a pair of Western geisha girls" in the work, alienating Radziwill and contributing to their drift apart. They did not fully reconcile before Capote's death on August 25, 1984, with Radziwill reportedly remaining upset by the betrayal of trust inherent in his exposés.

Rivalry and Tensions with Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis

Lee Radziwill experienced significant jealousy toward her older sister Jacqueline Kennedy following the latter's ascension to First Lady after John F. Kennedy's election in November 1960. According to author Laurence Leamer, Radziwill confided to writer Truman Capote during their first meeting in 1962 that she was "obsessively jealous" of Kennedy, a sentiment that dominated her thoughts and conversations. Leamer, drawing from Capote's accounts, described the envy as one-sided, noting Kennedy had little reason for reciprocal jealousy given her prominence, while Radziwill struggled to reconcile her own ambitions with her sister's overshadowing status. Tensions manifested in Radziwill's unsuccessful bids for involvement in Kennedy's tenure. Radziwill proposed assisting with interior decoration for the family's pre-inauguration N Street residence and later expressed interest in contributing to the redesign, but Kennedy opted for established professionals such as and Stéphane . During a state visit to and , Radziwill accompanied Kennedy but remained in a subordinate role, observing thousands applaud her sister while feeling eclipsed. The sisters' relationship deteriorated further after Kennedy's 1968 marriage to . Radziwill had maintained a close friendship with Onassis since the early and reportedly entertained romantic interest in him, even contemplating leaving her husband Stanisław Radziwiłł at one point. Kennedy's union with Onassis, facilitated through mutual social circles, deeply wounded Radziwill, who viewed it as an intrusion into her personal sphere. Persistent strains culminated in Kennedy's will, which excluded Radziwill from despite prior financial support provided to her sister over decades. The document specified that such assistance had been ongoing, reflecting underlying resentments from earlier conflicts, including the Onassis marriage and reported familial disapproval from figures like Robert Kennedy. Though the sisters reconciled intermittently, including after Kennedy's widowhood, the underscored Radziwill's lifelong sense of being perpetually outshone.

Later Life, Death, and Estate

Post-Divorce Activities and Philanthropy

Following her divorce from Prince Stanisław Radziwiłł in 1974, Lee Radziwill launched her firm, Lee Radziwill Inc., in 1976. Her inaugural major commission came from Americana Hotels, for which she designed private suites; the company's president selected her after touring her New York apartment, which had been showcased in design publications. The firm garnered some corporate and affluent private clients, earning initial publicity for its elegant, understated aesthetic influenced by Radziwill's personal residences in New York and . In the mid-1980s, Radziwill shifted focus to fashion public relations, joining in a titular role as director of special events starting in 1985. She contributed to the designer's U.S. expansion by leveraging her high-society network to enhance brand prestige, often appearing in attire at events and serving effectively as an unofficial until around 1994. This position aligned with her earlier promotional experience and sustained her involvement in the fashion industry without formal design commissions. Radziwill's philanthropic engagements were primarily social, including co-chairing a 1975 charity auction with her sister to benefit the Lenox Hill Settlement House in . She also lent star power to fund-raising galas in the late 1980s, such as events in supporting various causes through her attendance and connections. No records indicate she established foundations or led major charitable initiatives, though her referenced family trusts with potential charitable elements.

Illness and Death

Lee Radziwill died on February 15, 2019, at the age of 85, in her apartment on Manhattan's . Her daughter, Anna Christina Radziwill, confirmed to media outlets that the was natural causes. Reports indicated that Radziwill had suffered from an age-related disease in recent years, though associates stated she appeared to be in good health during the week preceding her death. No further details on specific medical conditions were publicly disclosed by family members.

Estate Auction and Asset Disposition

Following Lee Radziwill's death on February 15, 2019, auction house conducted a sale titled "The Collection of Lee Bouvier Radziwill" on October 17, 2019, in New York, featuring over 150 lots of personal property from her residences in and . The encompassed jewelry, , , furniture, books, and memorabilia, including items reflective of her sensibilities and social connections, such as photographs and objects tied to her European and American homes. The sale realized approximately $1.26 million, with proceeds directed to her estate. Radziwill's broader asset disposition was governed by a revocable living trust established in 2018, supplemented by a pour-over will filed in New York Surrogate's Court, which transferred any non-trust assets into the trust upon her death to facilitate private administration outside of . The trust designated her only surviving child, Anna Christina "Tina" Radziwill, as the primary of the estimated $50 million estate, encompassing financial assets, interests, and residual holdings not liquidated in the auction. Specific bequests in the will included personal effects distributed at the executor's discretion, but the trust's structure ensured Tina's inheritance of the bulk, excluding other relatives such as niece Schlossberg. This arrangement prioritized privacy and efficiency, avoiding public disclosure of detailed asset values beyond the auctioned items.

Legacy and Influence

Contributions to Style and Design

In 1976, Lee Radziwill established an interior design firm in New York, leveraging her experience decorating her own residences despite lacking formal training. The firm secured a contract to design hotel suites for the Americana Hotels chain and attracted select corporate and affluent private clients, garnering positive media attention. However, the venture proved short-lived and unsuccessful in sustaining long-term operations. Radziwill collaborated closely with Italian architect and decorator Renzo Mongiardino on several personal projects, including the opulent drawing room of her 1960s London townhouse at 4 Place, which featured exotic Indian block-printed textiles and faux finishes evoking historical grandeur. Her Manhattan apartments, such as the 1975 residence and the 1982 duplex, were documented in for their layered eclecticism blending Eastern motifs, custom textiles, and , including . She also created original designs like an Indian silk tablecloth, reflecting her affinity for global influences in home furnishings. As a fashion tastemaker, Radziwill influenced her sister Jacqueline Kennedy's wardrobe by introducing her to designers such as and in the early 1960s, contributing to the First Lady's polished public image. Her personal style—characterized by sleek silhouettes, bold colors, and a mix of couture and —served as inspiration for later designers including , for whom she provided informal advisory input, and others like , who drew from Radziwill's botanical prints for collections. This curatorial eye extended to her advocacy for emerging talents, blending European elegance with American accessibility in mid-20th-century aesthetics.

Portrayals in Media and Culture

In Truman Capote's unfinished novel (published posthumously in excerpts starting 1975), Radziwill served as a thinly veiled inspiration for characters depicting high-society figures, with Capote describing and Radziwill collectively as "a pair of Western girls" in the chapter "La Côte Basque, 1965," drawing from their real-life social orbits and sibling dynamics despite using pseudonyms. The work's scandalous revelations about elite betrayals and personal flaws, including those mirroring Radziwill's circle, contributed to her rift with Capote, as the excerpts alienated his "swans" by exposing private indiscretions under the guise of fiction. The 2024 FX miniseries : Capote vs. The Swans, created by Ryan Murphy and based on Laurence Leamer's book Capote's Women (2021), prominently features Radziwill as a central figure among Capote's elite female confidantes, portrayed by in a role emphasizing her elegance, ambitions in design and acting, and eventual fallout with Capote over . The series dramatizes her friendship with Capote in the 1960s–1970s, her brief marriage to director (1972–1975), and tensions with sister , though critics noted its heightened emotional arcs and speculative dialogues as typical of Murphy's stylized approach rather than strict biography. Documentary films have also examined Radziwill's life, such as That Summer (2017), directed by Göran Hugo Olsson, which incorporates archival footage of Radziwill alongside and references to the Bouvier sisters' summers in 1962, contextualizing her within pre- cultural snapshots of East Coast . Similarly, Jackie: A Tale of Two Sisters (2017), narrated by and available on , contrasts Radziwill's socialite pursuits and design career with her sister's public role, using interviews and photos to highlight without fictional embellishment. These portrayals underscore Radziwill's cultural archetype as a stylish arbiter of taste, often secondary to her Kennedy ties yet emblematic of post-war American glamour's undercurrents of competition and reinvention.

Authored Works and Memorabilia

Lee Radziwill authored Happy Times, a published in 2001 by Assouline, featuring 208 pages of her personal photographs, handwritten notes, drawings, and anecdotes depicting key episodes from her life, such as childhood travels with her sister Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis to in the 1950s and gatherings in , during the early 1960s. The book, which sold for approximately $75 per copy at release, emphasized selective "happy times" amid her high-profile existence, avoiding deeper personal controversies. Radziwill co-authored One Special Summer with Jacqueline Bouvier in 1974 (Delacorte Press), a slim 52-page illustrated volume originally penned as teenagers in 1951 to commemorate their European vacation funded by their stepfather Hugh Auchincloss; it included watercolor illustrations by their mother Janet Lee Bouvier Auchincloss and detailed daily itineraries from to , printed in a limited edition of about 500 copies initially before wider release. Memorabilia linked to Radziwill's authored works includes first-edition copies of Happy Times, often signed and valued at $200–$500 in the as of 2023, prized for their inscribed personal messages reflecting her curated . Related collectibles encompass original photographs and sketches from the book's content, occasionally auctioned alongside her jewelry and design artifacts, which highlight her influence on mid-20th-century aesthetics but are distinct from broader estate sales.

References

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