Thursday, September 10, 2009
Jackie's Favorite Sandal--The Jack Rogers Navajo Thong AKA "The Palm Beach"
The Latest on the Kennedy Compound
HYANNISPORT — Friends and neighbors walked, jogged and lazed yesterday around the Kennedy family compound — something of a deep breath after three days, and 60 years, of suffocating in the national spotlight.
By noontime, the swarm of media representatives who had filled the streets earlier this week had moved on, and the police presence relocated. But even as the flood of visitors slowed to a trickle, rumors of plans to turn the compound into a museum or memorial site left residents wondering about the future of the neighborhood.
The homes in the compound which could comprise a museum include:
50 Marchant Avenue
Owned by: Michael D. Ford Trust
Purchased: Joseph and Rose Kennedy, 1928
Year built: 1915
Assessed value: $9.6 million
Number of rooms: 21
28 Marchant Avenue
Owned by: Robert F. Kennedy
Purchased: Edward Kennedy, 1955
Year built: 1921
Assessed value: $2.3 million
Number of rooms: 14
111 Irving Avenue
Owned by: Michael D. Ford Trust
Purchased: John F. Kennedy, 1956
Year built: 1925
Assessed value: $2.9 million
Number of rooms: 12
Spurred by a move from representatives of the Kennedy family to subdivide the property, speculation is rampant that the family, per the wishes of the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, could turn portions of the compound over to a nonprofit group for use as a museum, a memorial or an education center.
Kennedy representatives and associates could not be reached yesterday for comment.
"You hear all these rumors, and you're not sure what to think," said Deborah Converse, president of the Hyannis Area Chamber of Commerce.
"There's so much history to that place," she said. "It would be a fabulous place to visit. But I don't really know if the community is built for it. ... We'll have to see what happens."
Piece of American history
Some neighbors walking by the compound applauded the idea as an appropriate tribute to the fallen senator and his family, including brothers President John F. Kennedy and Sen. Robert Kennedy, both of whom had homes at the compound.
"That (compound) is a piece of American history," said Dennis Shea, of nearby Scudder Avenue. "People would like to know what's in there. I'd like to see inside myself."
But others, both neighbors and local community leaders, expressed concerns about taking the home from Kennedy hands.
The compound, in the family for more than 80 years, consists of three white clapboard master homes and two guest houses on 6 acres at the edge of Nantucket Sound.
Joseph and Rose Kennedy, parents to John, Robert and Edward, purchased the first home, at 50 Marchant Ave., in 1928. Ted Kennedy and his second wife, Victoria Reggie Kennedy, inhabited that home most recently.
Ted Kennedy added the second home, at 28 Marchant Ave., in 1955, selling it to his brother Robert and Robert's wife, Ethel, in 1961.
Residential neighborhood
"I just think it should stay in the family," Mick Carlon of Hyannisport said yesterday as he walked past the compound. "It has meant so much to the family for so long. It just wouldn't feel right" if it belonged to someone else.
A full-scale museum would not fit right, either, into the small, residential community that inhabits the seaside neighborhood, others said yesterday.
Any changes to the home would have to meet town zoning codes, but because the properties fall in the Hyannisport Historic District, changes also would have to go before the town historic commission, and possibly the Cape Cod Commission for approval, according to historic commission chairwoman Barbara Flinn.
"Hyannisport is a village, and it's a very small one," said Rebecca Pierce-Merrick, co-founder and curator of the John F. Kennedy Hyannis Museum on Main Street. "It doesn't have the roads, the parking. ... (A museum) doesn't really fit in a community like that.
"It'll be interesting to see what comes of it, but for now, it's a private home. I hope that people can respect that."
Never-Before-Seen Photos of Jacqueline Kennedy Released by "Life"
To see all 19 photos, use this link:
Make a "Jackie" Jewelry Pillow for a Beautiful--And Secure--Way to Showcase Your Gems!!!
TAKE THIS...........
JBK "Flower" Brooch
OR A FEW OF THESE........
Byzantine Cross
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
"Drop Kick Me Jesus (Through the Goalposts of Life)" Forges Friendship with Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis
Drop-kick Me, Jesus, Through the Goalposts of Life (by Paul Craft)
Drop-kick me, Jesus, through the goalposts of life,
End over end, neither left nor to right.
Straight through the heart of them righteous uprights
Drop-kick me, Jesus, through the goalposts of life.
Make me, Oh make me, Lord, more than I am
Make me a part of your master game plan
Free of the earthly tempestions belowI've got the will, Lord, if you've got the toe.
Chorus: Bring on the brothers who've gone on before
Bring on the sisters who've knocked on your door.
Bring on those sainted relations of mine......And put them up front in the offensive line.
In the latter years of her life, Jackie reached out to people who interested her--like Joe Armstrong, a young Texan from Abilene, who had rescued 'Rolling Stone' magazine from obscurity in the early 1970's. When Jackie heard the story of how he raised staff morale by putting on a song 'Dropkick Me Jesus (Through the Goalposts of Life)' and directing the speaker out of the window on to Park Avenue, "she broke into laughter so hard that she cried and said, 'Get me Joe Armstrong's telephone number!' says Armstrong. 'She just called me for lunch. She wanted the record and the only place I could find it was an antique record store in Dallas. And Jackie memorized all the words to that song.'"
Sunday, September 6, 2009
Thursday, September 3, 2009
The Jackie O Glow
Jackie O’s iconic minimalist doe-eyed look of the 1960s works for today too.
Start by evening out your skin-tone. Jackie reportedly has a ruddy complexion and used Elizabeth Arden Flawless Finish Foundation to create her perfect skin. For long wear and a beautiful finish, set with translucent loose powder.
Prep the eyelids with a little bit of concealer or eyeshadow primer. Pat and layer on a matte eye shadow similar to your skin tone all over the lids. Contour you eyes by sweeping a matte neutral shadow that is 2 or 3 shades darker than your natural skin tone into the crease.
Line the eyes with a precise line. Use black pencil or, if you are practiced, use black liquid liner to create an even more precise line. TIP: shu uemura’s Liquid Eyeliner Pen is notoriously wonderful.
Keep your brows full, but keep them groomed. Anastasia Brow Gel offers great hold with a natural look.
For cheeks, choose a rosey shade of blush just to the apples of your cheeks to create a radiant glow from within. According to “An Inspired Guide To Distinctive Living, What Would Jackie Do?” Jackie used Erno Laszlo pink cream blush.
For the lips, pick a nude, pink shade. Adrien Arpel Perfect Pink Lipstick was Jackie’s favorite. For a similar look, try Elizabeth Arden’s Color Intrigue Effects Lipstick in Pink Honey Pearl.
New Book?
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
Saturday, August 29, 2009
A "Compound" Problem--Kennedy Estate in Hyannisport May Become a Museum
Photo of Kennedy Compound--Senator Ted Kennedy home in forefront; Ethel Kennedy's next door; former President Kennedy's home, sold to Senator Kennedy by Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg, behind main house
HYANNIS PORT - For three generations, the Kennedy family has spent countless hours here tossing footballs on the beach, sailing near their collection of cottages, and producing iconic photos fit for Life magazine. They have mourned losses of loved ones in the most public fashion, and they have celebrated marriages, births, and political victories. But the death of Senator Edward M. Kennedy, who for decades has been the glue that held the family together, closes a chapter of a storybook Camelot tale that has flourished at the end of Marchant Avenue.
Much of the Kennedy compound will probably be turned over to a national nonprofit group, possibly to be opened up as a museum or retreat center.
“My understanding is the senator wants that property to go to the public,’’ said someone close to the Kennedy family, who asked for anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue. “He wants it to be a historic property, similar to Franklin Roosevelt’s home in Hyde Park.’’
It is where political campaigns and raceboat victories were hatched, where Senator Kennedy tossed tennis balls to his Portuguese water dogs, Sonny and Splash, where he set sail on his wooden schooner, Mya.
“It’s a place where he always gained strength,’’ said Paul G. Kirk Jr., a former Kennedy aide who is chairman of the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation. “If you want to use a naval analogy, that’s his anchor.’’
Joseph P. Kennedy began renting the house, with its wide veranda and ocean views, in 1926. He bought it three years later and enlarged it to fit the large family. Two of his sons, John and Robert, purchased their own homes next door when they got older, and for 80 years the rambling white houses by the sea have been the scene of numerous moments fit for the history books.
It was in Robert’s cottage that President Kennedy and his aides watched the returns on election night. The next morning he rode in a white Lincoln to give his victory speech from the Hyannis Armory. That afternoon, they played touch football on the lawn. (Bobby’s team beat Jack’s by a single touchdown.)
The family gathered here to grieve on Thanksgiving Day in 1963, days after President Kennedy was assassinated. Senator Kennedy returned to the compound in 1969 after the funeral of Mary Jo Kopechne, emotionally shattered and prepared to resign his Senate seat and give up politics.
It was during a walk on the beach that his most trusted aide, David Burke, persuaded him to remain in the Senate and try to put the Chappaquiddick incident behind him.
When John F. Kennedy Jr.’s plane crashed into the ocean off Martha’s Vineyard, three priests celebrated Mass under a white tent that had been installed on the lawn for the wedding of Bobby Kennedy’s youngest child, Rory. It was Senator Kennedy who held a chalice of Communion wine while one of the priests distributed Eucharistic wafers.
“You would go to the house to drop him off, and he would be in this big rambling home, essentially by himself,’’ said one former Kennedy aide. “There were all these pictures on the walls of his dead relatives, who died too early.
The aide added: “He’s lived variously in an apartment in the Ritz; he’s got a house in Marlborough Street [in the Back Bay in Boston]; he’s got the house in Washington. But this is clearly home.’’
Because of all that history, the place is half museum and half home. In the living room, there is a couch where Rose installed a plaque to note that Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli once sat on it; he later became Pope Pius XII.
“It’s absolutely the home base for all the Kennedy family, and I think it’s been enormously significant to them and to the country,’’ said Philip W. Johnston, a longtime friend of the Kennedys. “We all think of it in a historical context, but they think of it as simply home.’’
Every year at Thanksgiving - rain or shine, warm or cold - the family goes out to sail. A group of close family friends is invited over for a meal, often accompanied by a Christmas singalong.
“The Kennedys know how to have a good party,’’ Johnston said, “which is why everybody always go back.’’
Every year, tourists make the pilgrimage to Hyannis, hoping for a glimpse of the Kennedys, a taste of their way of life. They sail into the harbor for a better look at the home.
They stop by St. Francis Xavier Church and view the pew where a plaque marks where the president sat for Mass, at the end of the row, if a quick getaway was needed.
Before the stockade fence went up years ago, people would rip shingles off the sides of the houses. Visitors would grab dirt and grass.
“It just has this mystique,’’ said Paul Traub, a 58-year-old economist from Michigan who was visiting the John F. Kennedy Hyannis Museum, which showcases the family’s ties to Cape Cod. “Hyannis just sticks out in your mind, because of the family and the compound.’’
The guestbook at the JFK Museum along Main Street includes entries from Italy to Iowa, from Brazil to Boston. “You almost feel like you’re looking over the fence, to see these people and how they’re living,’’ said Jeff Cohen, a 47-year-old investment banker from Albany, N.Y. “It’s a living dynasty.’’
But with the death of the last son of Rose and Joe Kennedy, a piece of that dynasty ends. Ethel Kennedy, the wife of the late Robert F. Kennedy, still lives in a home on the compound. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger of California and his wife, Maria Shriver, own a home about a block away, as does her brother Robert.
But without Teddy - the freckle-faced little brother who became the patriarch known as the Grand Fromage (French for “the big cheese’’) - something will be missing.
“Obviously it will be a significant change for the family, because the family’s love for him is as much an attraction to a physical place as to the residents and its history,’’ Kirk said. “It’s going to be different; there’s no denying that.’’
Images of Jackie's "Favorite Things" in Her Dressing Room
- A "Look" magazine photo of her taking a tumble off her horse, "Bit of Irish"
Story Behind Warhol's Autographed Nude Jackie Photo
And how did Warhol come to possess a naked poster of Jackie O signed, "For Andy, with enduring affection, Jackie Montauk"?
As it happens, says Wrbican – who along with other researchers authenticated the signature through handwriting comparisons – Onassis was a frequent visitor to Warhol's Montauk, N.Y., beachfront estate.
So, after her second husband, Aristotle Socrates Onassis, got a paparazzi to take pictures of her skinny-dipping and it landed in the hands of Larry Flint, who turned it into a poster for his porn magazine, Hustler, Jackie O sent a copy – likely as a joke – to Warhol, Wrbican said.
"I really doubted it was her signature at first," he says. "But it really matches her writing."
The Ultimate Jackie Daiquiri--Her Recipe!
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Eulogy of Jacqueline Kennedy Given by Senator Ted Kennedy
Last summer, when we were on the upper deck on the boat at the Vineyard, waiting for President and Mrs. Clinton to arrive, Jackie turned to me and said:
"Teddy, you go down and greet the President."
But I said: "Maurice is already there."
And Jackie answered with a smile: "Teddy, you do it. Maurice isn’t running for re-election."
She was always there for our family in her special way. She was a blessing to us and to the nation -- and a lesson to the world on how to do things right, how to be a mother, how to appreciate history, how to be courageous. No one else looked like her, spoke like her, wrote like her, or was so original in the way she did things. No one we knew ever had a better sense of self.
Eight months before she married Jack, they went together to President Eisenhower’s Inaugural Ball. Jackie said later that that’s where they decided they liked inaugurations.
No one ever gave more meaning to the title of "First Lady." The nation’s capital city looks as it does because of her. She saved Lafayette Square and Pennsylvania Avenue. The National Cultural Center was her cause before it was The Kennedy Center. Jackie brought the greatest artists to the White House, and brought the arts to the center of national attention. Today, in large part because of her inspiration and vision, the arts are an abiding part of national policy.
President Kennedy took such delight in her brilliance and her spirit. At a White House dinner, he once leaned over and told the wife of the French Ambassador, “Jackie speaks fluent French. But I only understand one out of every five words she says -- and that word is "DeGaulle.”
And then, during those four endless days in 1963, she held us together as a family and a country. In large part because of her, we could grieve and then go on. She lifted us up, and in the doubt and darkness, she gave her fellow citizens back their pride as Americans. She was then 34 years old.
Afterward, as the eternal flame she lit flickered in the autumn of Arlington Cemetery, Jack[ie] went on to do what she most wanted -- to raise Caroline and John, and warm her family’s life and that of all the Kennedys.
Robert Kennedy sustained her, and she helped make it possible for Bobby to continue. She kept Jack[’s] memory alive and he carried Jack’s mission on.
Her two children turned out to be extraordinary: honest, unspoiled, and with a character equal to hers. And she did it in the most trying circumstances. They are her two miracles.
Her love for Caroline and John was deep and unqualified. She reveled in their accomplishments; she hurt with their sorrows; she felt sheer joy and delight in spending time with them. At the mere mention of one of their names, Jackie’s eyes would shine brighter and her smile would grow bigger. She once said that if you “bungle raising your children nothing else much matters in life.” She didn’t bungle. Once again, she showed how to do the most important thing of all, and do it right.
When she went to work, Jackie became a respected professional in the world of publishing. And because of her, remarkable books came to life. And she searched out new authors and ideas. She was interested in everything. Her love of history became a devotion to historic preservation. You knew, when Jackie joined the cause to save a building in Manhattan, the bulldozers might as well turn around and go home.
She had a wonderful sense of humor -- a way of focusing on someone with total attention -- and a little girl delight in who they were and what they were saying. It was a gift of herself that she gave to others. And in spite of all of her heartache and loss, she never faltered.
I often think of what she said about Jack in December after he died: "They made him a legend, when he would have preferred to be a man." Jackie would have preferred to be just herself, but the world insisted that she be a legend too. She never wanted public notice -- in part I think, because it brought back painful memories of unbearable sorrow endured in the glare of a million lights. In all the years since then, her genuineness and depth of character continued to shine through the privacy, and reach people everywhere.
Jackie was too young to be a widow in 1963, and too young to die now. Her grandchildren were bringing new joy to her life, a joy that illuminated her face whenever you saw them together. Whether it was taking Rose and Tatiana for an ice cream cone, or taking a walk in Central Park with little Jack as she did last Sunday, she relished being "Grandjackie" and showering her grandchildren with love.
At the end, she worried more about us than herself. She let her family and friends know she was thinking of them. How cherished were those wonderful notes in her distinctive hand on her powder blue stationary. In truth, she did everything she could -- and more -- for each of us. She made a rare and noble contribution to the American spirit. But for us, most of all she was a magnificent wife, a mother, a grandmother, a sister, aunt, and friend.
She graced our history. And for those of us who knew and loved her -- she graced our lives.
Dear Uncle Teddy, Will You Be My Godfather Now?
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Saturday, August 22, 2009
Mystery of Jackie's Black Bag Solved!
**Note: This is the outfit Carolyn was wearing when she gave "Suzy" the dollar bill from Jackie's purse. Unfortunately, I can't make out the purse in this shot but hope someone else will be able to locate it in different views from that night. The first photo shows the bag I think was Jackie's but I could certainly use some help! :-) Thank you!
From "W" magazine's article "Stealing Beauty," September 1999:
"W" columnist Suzy:
"This is the kind of caring woman Carolyn Bessette Kennedy was. Soon after her marriage, at a party at the Whitney Museum, she asked me to stay a few more minutes before I left. 'I want to talk to you,' she said. She was carrying a black velvet bag. 'This belonged to Jackie,' she said. 'When she carried it or any other of her bags, she always tucked a dollar bill inside. I'm told she never forgot. It was a ritual. Maybe she thought it was an amulet.' Carolyn reached in the bag. 'Here is that dollar bill,' she said. (It was carefully wrapped in cellophane). 'I want you to have it as a memento. You have always been so kind to all the Kennedy family. I know you loved Jackie, and I've been told how she felt about you. She would want you to have it.' I have it. I will always have it."
Sunday, August 16, 2009
Get the "Camelot" Jackie Makeup Look
Monday, August 10, 2009
"Sea Joy" Poem by Jacqueline Bouvier, Age 10
(Click on image for a better view)
Sunday, August 9, 2009
President Kennedy's Last Present for Jackie
The "Serendipity" Recipe Jackie Wanted But Could Never Get Has Been Revealed
This recipe from Stephen Bruce, Serendipity 3, New York, New York.
Montezuma, emperor of the Aztecs, poured his liquid chocolate over bowls of snow from nearby mountaintops before whipping the mixture into a chilled froth. Five centuries later, a trio of adventurous New York City restaurateurs concocted an icy, wickedly rich confection, keeping its formula a well-guarded secret and thus guaranteeing a faithful following for the legendary dessert. Stephen Bruce, who founded Serendipity 3 with two partners in 1954, was badgered and begged for his recipe, but for decades he refused to budge - not even for the first lady Jackie Kennedy, who wanted to serve the dessert at a White House function. On the occasion of Serendipity's fiftieth anniversary, however, he finally spilled the beans. Frozen Hot Chocolate, it turns out, gets its complex flavor from a dozen different cocoas that are blended with crushed ice to the consistency of a frozen daiquiri. While an authentic reproduction would call for assembling 1/2 ounce of all twelve cocoas, this version is a little more user-friendly. Whether sipped through a straw or eaten with a spoon, it's a sweet invitation to childhood.
Ingredients:
Ganache: 3 ounces unsweetened cocoa 3 ounces sweetened cocoa 1 1/2 tablespoons sugar 1 tablespoon unsalted butter 1/2 cup whole milk
Hot Chocolate: 1 cup whole milk 2 cups crushed ice basic whipped cream chocolate shavings for serving
Instructions:
Makes 1 Large Serving
To make the ganache, in the top of a double boiler over boiling water, combine the cocoas, sugar, and butter and melt until it forms a smooth paste. Slowly drizzle the milk into the chocolate mixture, stirring constantly until thoroughly blended and smooth as silk. Cool to room temperature.
To make the drink, combine 1/2 cup of the ganache with the milk and crushed ice in a blender and blend on high speed until the mixture if the consistency of a frozen daiquiri. Pour into a large goblet, top with a mound of whipped cream, and sprinkle with chocolate shavings. Serve with 2 straws for sipping and an iced tea spoon for devouring.
What Is Jackie Doing Here???
Saturday, August 8, 2009
Remembering Eunice Kennedy Shriver
Monday, August 3, 2009
Anzu Cards
Every once in awhile, someone comes a long and goes the extra mile! A couple weeks ago, I posted about the company Anzu and their "So Jackie O" cards. I wrote to Anzu, telling them how in love with their designs I was. In response, they sent me a selection of "So Jackie O" cards and even a journal!
These are the most BEAUTIFUL cards ever. I am so sad they are only available in the UK to purchase or I would buy the store out!
Thank you so much Anzu!
To visit Anzu's site, CLICK HERE!