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Archive for My Life – Page 6

What Svetlana Stalin and I had in Common

by Beverley
December 5th, 2011

A friend asked me, “Did you ever know Svetlana Stalin Peters who just died?” And my answer was “No, but I read her first book and I did have a one-evening indirect contact with her. “That indirect contact with her was I had her ex-husband, the late William Wesley Peters, as my dinner partner at Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin West on one occasion. His widow Olgivanna Lloyd Wright, a former Serb Montenegrin dancer, had learned my beau Dwight Hart was in Phoenix, Arizona where Taliesin West is located. Mrs. Wright had been quite attracted to Dwight during her stays at the Clift Hotel in San Francisco which he ran for Bob Odell who owned the Clift and the Santa Barbara Biltmore. So upon hearing he was visiting near her Taliesin West she immediately called and invited him to dine. Dwight informed her he could come if he was able to bring the friend he was traveling with and she said he could bring the friend.

Mrs. Wright, having expected a male friend was amazingly rude to me the entire evening. After being introduced she immediately turned me over to architect Wes Peters who had been married for 20 months to the daughter of Josef Stalin. A wedding Mrs. Wright had arranged. The handover to Peters was fine with me. Wes Peters proved to be a charming, very intelligent and amusing gentleman. He showed me some of the more hidden fascinating areas of Taliesin West before we went in to dine. Not surprisingly he turned out to be my dinner partner with my date Dwight far away at the end of the very long table next to the hostess. Dinner was good though uninspired. What surprised me was we were waited on by young men who were students at Taliesin West. All wore expensive perfectly fitted evening clothes. Dwight had been informed that dinner was black tie and fortunately I had packed a very pretty long gown for another event in Phoenix. I was told that the young future architects serving us paid at least $50,000 a year to study at Taliesin West in those days, study and wait table for Mrs. Wright! That was a great deal of money in the 1970’s! The other dinner guests were all male, basically the top men at Taliesin West. After Frank Lloyd Wright’s death it obviously was a male operation run by a matriarch.

Wes made a fascinating dinner partner. I plied him with questions about Falling Waters in Mill Run, PA, one of Wright’s most famous commissions, as well as the Guggenheim Museum in New York City which Wes also worked on. And I told him the saga of my mother deciding when I was about eight that I had a speaking voice that needed improving. I mumbled! She found a retired British Shakespearean actor named Guy Bates Post and once a week I was deposited at a fascinating Frank Lloyd Wright home in the Los Feliz area where he rented a room for teaching. The fascinating luxury home had been reduced to a sort of Frank Lloyd Wright boarding house! It wasn’t the huge Ennis House on the hill recently purchased by Ron Burkle, nor Wright’s famous Hollyhock House, but a small residence on Franklin Avenue basically unknown today in the shadow of the other two. To me it was rather Persian more than Mayan in concept and once inside there was a long narrow courtyard surrounded by the long narrow house. And there was a long narrow pool with water lilies just inside the courtyard. I remember it well because once I wasn’t paying attention and I fell into it. I don’t remember a lot about Mr. Post except he was very dramatic and smelled of alcohol most of the time. But I guess he did his job because my mother was very satisfied with my speaking voice when the lessons concluded, no more mumbling, and I ended up winning lots of debating contests in high school. I sometimes thought however that these were based more upon my speaking voice than my logic!!

Well while I’m on this subject… A few years ago I was in Los Angeles with some time to spare and went exploring the Los Felix area where I grew up. And I swung by the Wright house where I learned not to mumble. The exterior looked the same. Some men were hauling out furniture that had been used inside for a just concluded photo shoot. I asked one of them if there was anyone in charge inside and he said the property manager. I went in and the very nice gentleman showed me around. Not much was changed except no sign of the pool. He told me that investigators had been curious about the house because the main suspect for the Black Dahlia murders, a doctor, had rented rooms there at one time. He told me it was suspected there might be other bodies buried somewhere. At that point I said had anyone checked where the original pool was. “What pool?” Well I’ve never heard if they checked but the Philip Marlow in me says that’s where the bodies are!!!

Now back to Taliesin West: Following dinner we all piled into golf carts to go from the dining room to the theatre for a movie. Dwight was whisked off first with our hostess and I went in another one with Wes. And Dwight and I were further separated by all possible distance in the theatre. However I couldn’t have been sent into Siberia for a total evening with a more delightful partner than the late William Wesley Peters, sadly known mainly for having been married for 20 months to dreaded dictator Josef Stalin’s daughter who has just died at the age of 85.

Incidentally what film did we see that night? Expecting something intellectual I was most surprised when the Beatles came on in “A Hard Day’s Night”. Dwight slept through the film to Mrs. Wright’s very obvious annoyance.

In one of the obits I’ve read Lana Peters, as Stalin’s daughter chose to be called in America, had one comment for the press when she divorced Wes Peters and left Taliesin West: “I came away less than glowingly impressed by the matriach and management of Taliesin.” So while I never met Stalin’s daughter, we really did have something in common!

And while I’m into to things Russian, the great Danish ballet dancer David Hallberg, who recently left New York Ballet to become a principle dancer in Moscow to dance with the famed Bolshoi company and particularly to partner Natalia Osipova, hasn’t gotten off to such a great start as you might or might not have read. Before they could dance together Osipova accepted a too tempting to turn down invitation to join the Mikhailovsky Theater in St. Petersburg. And even worse, although his opening night reviews at the Bolshoi dancing Sleeping Beauty were greatest raves possible, it turns out he sprained his ankle near the very beginning of the performance. But the show of perfection went on! Interviewed a few days later he confessed he told no one of his accident until the performance was over. “Russians love that kind of drama in the theater. It would have been really dramatic, but nothing would have been accomplished. When stress sets in and pressure, I focus. Had it (sprained ankle) happened two days before it would have been a catastrophe because now I can’t dance. I can barely walk right now.”

Well from now on every time I wake up in the morning with aches and pains instead of complaining I’ll think of David Hallberg and the show going on achieving greatness in the world of dance.

Darci Kistler and Beverley Jackson

Darci Kistler and Beverley Jackson at USCB Faculty Club. The interesting wood paneling behind us was part of a ceiling purchased for UCSB Faculty Club from William Randolph Hearst’s San Simeon.

Speaking of great ballet dancers, beautiful sweet magnificent dancer Darci Kistler, now retired at age 47 from the New York City Ballet, was in Santa Barbara several weeks ago. And I had the great fortune to be one of a very small group invited to watch a Master Class she conducted with ballet students at University of California Santa Barbara. It was quite wonderful to watch her turn shy, frightened or untalented or both, students into glowing performers. Her kind encouraging words were there for all. “Beautiful!” she exclaimed when a step was finally performed correctly after some very bad mistakes. Again and again she instilled if not confidence at least momentary pride. Not all Master Classes are conducted so graciously.

Following the event Darci, Annette Caleel, Dilling Yang (wife of UCSB Chancellor Henry Yang) and several others and I enjoyed luncheon together in the Faculty Club. Darci confessed that when she was young she wanted to be a singer but she had no voice so she turned to dance. Good choice! And now her 15 year old daughter wants to sing. And she has a fine voice. Well two great dancers in a family are really enough. Darci is married to Peter Martins, Ballet Master in Chief of New York City Ballet where he danced from 1967 until he retired 1983. Maybe it is time for a singer in the Martins family…

By The Way
This blog was started to sell my new book and I keep going off on other topics. Please do check out The Beautiful Lady Was A Palace Eunuch at Amazon.com
Acknowledgement:
Kathleen Fetner, Technical Advisor and Friend
Categories Editorial, My Life
Comments (2)

Are your Penguins Warmly Dressed in Case of an Oil Spill?

by Beverley
November 26th, 2011

I have to thank a favorite blog Fashionista.com for the following story, just too cute not to pass along. After all, how many of us could know that a cozy wool sweater could save the lives of adorable little penguins caught in an oil spill? New Zealanders found out during a recent disastrous oil spill off their coast the value of little wool sweaters. They prevented the penguins from preening their feather and ingesting the oil that could kill them. Penguins coated in oil, when quickly tucked into warm sweaters, were able to survive until rescue workers could get them cleaned up.

According to Fashionista.com an independent green news site GIST put out a call for knitters to quickly come to the penguin’s rescue and New Zealanders heeded the call. In fact they heeded so well ultimately the word had to go out no more sweaters needed.

A yarn company Skeinz published a pattern for knitters. You need a pair of 3.25mm needles, 1 pair of 3.75mm needles and a set of 3.25mm. dpn’s or circular. You must use 100% wool yarn. Cast on 36 stitches using 3.25 needle. K1, P1 to end of row and repeat this row seven times. Change to 3.25mm needles… Well, why don’t you just email me if you really want to make this sweater for your penguin.

And while I’m talking about cute things, look at a birthday present I received from brilliant costume jewelry designer in Paris Natalie Bernhard. Absolutely adorable. I had asked Natalie if she’d seen these brand new Karl Lagerfeld eyeshadows made in his shape in Paris. They have just come out but are only for sale in Europe and Singapore. America won’t have them for many months.

Being so far away Natalie didn’t know my standard procedure for birthday presents for me. They are supposed to be new toys to be given as gifts at Christmas to children of families living at Transition House, children who have very little since their parents have lost their jobs and homes.

So in her innocence Natalie sent me this delightful gift, the most wonderful surprise. She actually sent her mother off searching for them so it was a family project.

There is one problem however, they are really too adorable to use. But I certainly am enjoying looking at them on my dressing table!

By The Way
This blog was started to sell my new book and I keep going off on other topics. Please do check out The Beautiful Lady Was A Palace Eunuch at Amazon.com
Acknowledgement:
Kathleen Fetner, Technical Advisor and Friend
Categories My Life
Comments (0)

Good Can Be Followed Closely By Bad As I’ve Experienced This Past Week

by Beverley
November 21st, 2011

Since I try to keep this blog positive and up and hopefully interesting I’ll start with the good first. I had a wonderful 83rd birthday with all sorts of celebrations with real family as well as three of my adopted families. I of course wish it had been my 50th birthday but I’m not complaining. I may be slowed down a bit by health problems but I’m still having a wonderful life and still able to contribute to those in need and other such things that have always been of major importance to me!!! Speaking of which, everyone brought a huge number of gifts which was very heartwarming since the only gifts I allowed had to be new toys to be delivered to Transition House for Christmas gifts for children there. Transition House is a very worthwhile organization in Santa Barbara that helps families who have lost their jobs and homes until they can get back on their feet.

The bad was the loss of three people I tremendously admired and in two cases truly loved very much. First was wonderful Evelyn Lauder who has been a dear friend for so many years. I’m sure you have been reading endless articles on this fabulous woman the world has just lost. Her great work for breast cancer research, the pink ribbon project she started that grew to world wide proportions, the parks she and Leonard donated for underprivileged areas — these and so much more that was done very privately. So I’ll just say a bit about personal reasons for my love and respect of her. Evelyn was always there as a friend. Not just fun lunches at Le Cirque when I was in New York. She was there when I had a frightening medical diagnosis and within a half hour after a call to her in New York she had set me up with the finest doctor in the USA in the field I needed. A man otherwise impossible to get an appoint with in less than a year or more. When my daughter was trying to get my granddaughter into a New York kindergarten, more difficult than being accepted at Harvard or Princeton or Yale!!! I went to Evelyn though I hated to ask such favors. I knew the demands on her were endless. But knowing how major it was to my daughter I did and Evelyn not only wrote a letter of recommendation but hand carried it and personally presented it to the headmistress. She was also responsible for kickstarting my daughter’s career as a scriptwriter. After going with me to a reading of a play my daughter had written and hearing my tale of woe about the difficulties she was having finding an agent Evelyn sent a copy of the script to her close friend, a leading theatrical agent in New York, and a successful career was off and running. Evelyn Lauder was not only a wonderful friend to thousands, she was a miracle maker and a magnificent human being.

Then I lost a dear friend of more than 40 years, artist Jack Baker. I first met Jack when we moved to Santa Barbara in 1963 and I became active in the Art Affiliates of UCSB where he was a major participant. Jack and I worked together for the group and his then wife Lynn and Jack became dear friends.

Jack was the most wonderfully UP person. He thought life was beautiful and if it wasn’t he helped make it so both physically and with his glorious colorful paintings. His travels were an inspiration to others to be more adventurous in their travels. And he brought back so much color from his travels which showed up in his paintings and his tales of travel. After a trip to India with the late Hattie von Breton and Guy and Sylvia Roop he and Lynn recreated a two story tall beautifully lighted replica of the Taj Mahal over the dressing rooms for their swimming pool at their downtown Santa Barbara home. This was for their Indian themed “we’re back in Santa Barbara” party where he taught us Indian dances in the early morning hours. Jack gave great parties! The years he spent in Ethiopia tutoring Emperor Haile Selassie children and grandchildren influenced some his greatest paintings. He loved his gardens and flowers and he created magic with both. Color was everywhere in his far from conventional home. I remember one dreary Christmas eve driving down to Rincon in horrendous rain. But entering the house we found springtime. Instead of Christmas decorations the house and dinner table were filled with crates of brightly colored primrose. And somewhere he had found great branches of fruit tree blossoms in December.

I could tell so many Jack Baker stories. The time I went to visit Jack and Fred Gowland in Jack’s house on a tiny remote peninsula in Maine where he lived for some years during a sabbatical from Santa Barbara. One day Fred had gone out lobstering at five in the morning and came back with 15 live lobsters. So Jack prepared a real Maine lobster dinner. He did a great table for the three of us covered with white paper as was done for lobster feasts in Maine so you could really make a big mess and enjoy them to the fullest. But being Jack he created a wonderous shipwreck scene of rocks and sand and a small boat replica on one end of the table. I was standing in the kitchen being no help at one point when Jack, busy slicing tomatoes, said, “Bev would you please get me some lettuce out of the bottom crisper in the refrigerator.” I jumped to be of service, opened the refrigerator door, started to open the crisper to reach in when claws of 15 live lobsters anxious to escape came after me. They roared with laughter. I didn’t!!! I’ve always thought it was Fred’s idea, but if he had asked me to do it I might have been suspicious. But Jack I trusted!

Sadly serious cancer struck a few years back leaving Jack’s speech impaired and he became very reclusive, seeing almost no one except Fred and occasional visits from his daughters who both live far away. However he lived the life he loved as best he could, walking his beloved Rincon Beach finding treasures in the sand — shells, rocks, tide-worn glass, all of which would end in some decorative fashion in his home; caring for his incredible fern forest and gardens. Gardens and flowers were magic in Jack’s hands.

But he did come out to my 80th Great Gatsby birthday party at the 1929 estate Val Verde to everyone’s amazement and was the hit of the party. I was so happy to relinquish the spotlight to dear Jack who truly shone that night. Except for impaired speech and less hair he was again the Jack of Art Affiliate and party giving and traveling days. See the photograph attached. Sadly it was the last time most of us saw Jack in person as he went back into hiding. But I know he’ll be there right with us at his “bon voyage party” at the Santa Barbara Zoo. He’ll want it to be a colorful happy laughing time. And I hope he and Fred haven’t pre-planned another lobster surprise for any of us with some of the zoo animals to divert us from being sad he isn’t there in person!

Jack Baker and Fred Gowland

Jack Baker in cap and Fred Gowland at my 80th birthday party. My adopted granddaughter Alix de Gramont watching with amusement in the background.

The third loss was someone I’ve been proud to call a friend again for over 40 years, the late Jon Lovelace. He and wife Lillian are people I have known and respected but sadly haven’t seen enough of during the years. They have been quiet family people who contributed tremendous amounts of money anonymously to almost every important cause. I knew in some cases how big their donation was because it was to charities where I was a board member. But they never wanted it known publically. They’ve never wanted their names on plaques or on buildings. There were times at charity benefits where they did show up and I watched them quietly in the background, frequently being ignored by new money people in town making their donations very public. Donations generally SO much less than the Lovelace secret donations. I chuckled thinking if those people only knew. But I have to admit, although I knew John administered the Capital Group mutual fund company his father founded in Los Angeles in 1931 and it handled billions of dollars when there wasn’t even a Forbes billionaire list, only millionaire list, I admit I was pretty surprised reading the large New York Times obituary on Jon to read his company now oversees one trillion dollars in their 40 funds. I wonder what that group who considered their own money was there to be flaunted, and on occasion ignored Jon Lovelace, are making of this figure. I’ll bet Jon is up there chuckling quietly to himself now that his secret is out!

And to end with a laugh, the following was sent to me by Susie Mitchell whose son J.J. is one of my “sort of adopted” children and grand children. J.J. has a really hot/cool, I guess both words work, vintage “Muscle car” in which he just drove Aunt Bubbly (which he’s called me since he was two and still does in his twenties) up to Santa Ynez to visit a friend of mine who has just arrived from Hyderabad. It was indeed an experience!!! Just getting me in and out from a seat practically dragging on the highway is an event. All I can say is when we reached our destination my friend said “What did you arrive in? We heard you coming from half way down the hill!”

DETROIT, Nov. 21, 2011 “The muscle car could only happen in the U.S. because we’re the only ones crazy enough to stuff a V8 into the smallest possible car and scare the hell out of mothers everywhere.”

By The Way
This blog was started to sell my new book and I keep going off on other topics. Please do check out The Beautiful Lady Was A Palace Eunuch at Amazon.com
Acknowledgement:
Kathleen Fetner, Technical Advisor and Friend
Categories My Life
Comments (2)

Life Was More Glamorous Then

by Beverley
November 8th, 2011

All the most colorful people showed up in Santa Barbara in the 1970’s and 1980’s. Here is an article in W Magazine January 4-11, 1980. The very well known Clare Boothe Luce came to town and the great philanthropist and fun hostess Gladys Knapp gave a party for her. Since the article may be difficult to read I’ll tell you what it says:

Santa Barbara — Clare Boothe Luce was her old opinionated self as she discussed a variety of topics that ranged from politics to power and the decline of elegance. It was during a party here hosted by Gladys Knapp.

Many of Santa Barbara’s BP [beautiful people – a popular term then] were in attendance, including Hall and Leonore Adams [Oprah Winfrey has since bought their charming home next door to her big estate to house her trainer!], Mary and Gordon Douglas, Stewart and Katherine Abercrombie, Barbara and Robert Straus and Beverley Jackson.

‘It looks delicious,’ said Virginia Martini, but she avoided the venison flown in for the dinner and picked at the whipped potatoes and sorrel between anecdotes about her former husband Cary Grant and her life as the Countess of Jersey.

There was applause as David Knapp introduced Luce as ‘a woman for all seasons’, and she responded with, ‘I love old things — old wine, old books and most of all old friends.’ She then toasted the guests with ‘Here’s to the elite, before it disappears off the face of the earth.’

Luce (in town as honorary chairman of the St. Francis Hospital charity benefit set for next spring) lamented today’s loss of elegance. ‘Everything is ground down to one comfortable mediocrity,’ she observed.

Would Luce consider another political stint? ‘I resigned. I wasn’t beaten,’ she quickly pointed out. ‘The thought of being in politics again turns my blood cold. Politics is a terribly non-creative thing, a scrimmage and a place for second rate talents.'”

The young readers probably don’t know much about Clare Booth Luce. She was a very colorful woman. Many will remember her as the author of the great play and movie “The Women”. Others will remember her as the wife of powerful Henry Luce, owner and publisher of Life, Fortune and Time Magazines. Some remember her as a very involved convert to Catholicism in 1946 following the death of her daughter, a Stanford University student in an auto accident. There was a joke that went around — Mrs. Luce was having an audience with the Pope. She kept going on and on about the value of being a Catholic. Finally the Pope interjected, “But Mrs. Luce. I’m already a Catholic!” During WWII she served as a foreign correspondent for her husband’s magazines on the frontlines in Netherlands, France, Italy and Belgium. She served as a Congresswoman from Fairfield County, CT. And with her husband was a great promoter of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek and his wife Mei-ling Soong, neither of whom have ended great favorites of mine after my 35 years of research on China, Chinese history and Chinese custom. Clare Booth Luce died in 1987, still very active at age 84.

If you can’t read the captions under the pictures that is Mrs. Luce and Leigh Block of Montecito and Chicago. Leigh and wife Mary had a great collection of Impressionist paintings that were left to Chicago Art Institute, a museum of which he was head of the board at one time. Mary’s father Albert Lasker had one of greatest collections of Impressionist paintings in the United States. Luce is hugging the hostess in the next photo. That’s beautiful Loretta Young with interior designer Guy Roop. His book on Palladian Villas has become a sought after out-of-print treasure. Mary and Gordon Douglas who owned the lovely Montecito estate Il Brolino where they created great topiary gardens which are still maintained by present owners Bui and Herb Simon. Penny Williams whose grandfather Sam Mosher owned Signal Oil. I’m wearing an antique Chinese coat talking to Barbara Straus whose husband Bobby Straus (Macy’s family) was one of Santa Barbara’s most loved men, a war hero, a great gentleman, the grandson of Ida and Isador Straus who went down with the Titanic with great dignity. Then there is marvelous Virginia Martini and last Gladys Knapp with Dr. Don Patterson. Mary Douglas now lives in Charleston, SC. Last I heard Penny Williams and her family were in Australia I think it was. Sadly only the three of us are still alive. Even lovely old St. Francis Hospital has been torn down to make space for affordable housing for nursing staff at the Cottage Hospital.

By The Way
This blog was started to sell my new book and I keep going off on other topics. Please do check out The Beautiful Lady Was A Palace Eunuch at Amazon.com
Acknowledgement:
Kathleen Fetner, Technical Advisor and Friend
Categories My Life
Comments (2)

Bouncing in a Bubble

by Beverley
October 31st, 2011
Kathy and Alain Clenet and I in front of a row of his 14 vintage Clenet cars.

Kathy and Alain Clenet and I in front of a row of his 14 vintage Clenet cars.

The Concours d’Elegance came to Santa Barbara and I couldn’t resist attending. It was a lovely autumn day. As always a wonderful assortment of cars were being shown — old cars, rare cars, “Woodies” one of which, a two seat convertible, I  coveted. But what really caught my interest was “Bubble Fun”. Maybe you’ve seen it but I never have. It was something to keep the children amused once they’d had their fill of antique Rolls, Packards, Ferraris, etc.

The concession consisted of an area with a big pile of plastic forms that will blow up into giant see through balls and a very large plastic pool of water.  The children, one at a time, climb into one of these transparent plastic forms and a man blows them up with I presume oxygen because no one was gasping for breath. Once blown up to proper size they get zipped tight and rolled into the big plastic water-filled pool. A woman standing near me comented “Just like my hamsters” as we watched the children running in the balls as they rolled over and over in the water. Actually a friend has just told me her grandson has a plastic bubble he blows up to put his hamster in at night to keep the family cat from getting it while they sleep. And the hamster seems totally comfortable in his bubble she reported. It looked like such fun! The friend I was with watched my enthusiasm cautiously and finally said, “Don’t get any ideas!” He was right. It was for children.

 
 

Another highlight of this Concours was seeing my dear very long time friends Kathy and Alain Clenet and their children and grandchildren. And their extended family that included 14 of Alain’s legendary Clenet cars on display. An entire Clenet Car Club was represented. In 1975 Alain started building these fabulous cars in a garage in Santa Barbara. Ultimately he outgrew the garage and went on to airplane hangers. The cars were sheer luxury in every detail and were bought by customers like Silverster Stallone, King Husssein of Jordan and I remember one man from Saudi Arabia who ordered about 20 of the to give as gifts. Very expensive gifts! Alain later was designing cars in China and now he is… well he’s such an interesting man I’m going to let you Google him and get the whole story!

Another friend Michael Gross has a brand new book out Unreal Estate that really captures the reader and holds them, especially anyone who knows the Los Angeles area. Having made a big success with his most recent book 740 Park Avenue telling the stories behind the billionaires who lived and live in this New York building at 740 Park Avenue, he is now telling all about the history of a group of old mansions in Beverly Hills, Bel Air, and Holmby Hills and all the gossip on the developers, oil millionaires and silent film stars who originally built them. He goes right through the various owners to the billionaires who now call these places home.  Home does seem like much too cozy a word for me to use here. Don’t get ideas of a happy little house filled with happy people please.

There was a small amount of information I was able to give Michael for this riveting new book and he very graciously acknowledged this in the book as my friend Lisa See acknowledged me in her best seller Snow Flower and the Secret Fan. I mention this because all I have to do is Google “Chinese Footbinding” and I can about 50 pages of sites for papers, articles and books now out on the subject I wrote the first complete book on in 1998 that have taken the majority of their material from my book. And no sign of any acknowledgement there! So I am most grateful to Michael and Lisa. But then they are big time authors with manners.

We read about the books that sell over a million copies like these two authors but one wonders realistically how many copies do most books sell? I’ve always been pleased with how many tens of thousands my Splendid Slippers has sold since 1998, and still going strong in latest Random House printing. My other books have done as expected since two of them were expensive very focused books meant only for collectors, museum libraries, auction house libraries etc. One of these Kingfisher Blue with only 2,000 printed sold out and last year there were two used copies for sale for $1,350 each on Amazon. And they sold!! I called my publisher and asked if I was dead and didn’t know it.  I didn’t know books of living authors could demand such a price. Now the $50 book can be bought used for about $300.  Incidentally I made $4.70 a copy for this book! Well there was a decent advance too.

But again what do most books sell? I started checking it out and found 500 copies is a good average.  And now I discover that of the six shortlisted books for the coveted 2011 British Booker Award the best seller of the six was A. D. Miller’s Snowdrops. And this book sold only 11,800 copies!

So if many of you think you are going to write a best seller and make millions of dollars, maybe you’d better spend that time doing something more promising!

By The Way
This blog was started to sell my new book and I keep going off on other topics. Please do check out The Beautiful Lady Was A Palace Eunuch at Amazon.com
Acknowledgement:
Kathleen Fetner, Technical Advisor and Friend
Categories My Life
Comments (1)

Sharing a Bumpy Bathroom With President Jack Kennedy’s Sisters & Nieces

by Beverley
October 18th, 2011

There was an aura of an Agatha Christie mystery brewing when one boarded the newly restored glamorous Venice Simplon-Orient Express in 1983. The abandoned 1920’s Pullman cars that James Sherwood had located around the world had been restored to their original elegance. Every detail from the Lalique glass panels and intricate wood marquetry to the uniforms worn by the porters and dining room attendants was exactly like the original.

Five of us were on this train journey in September 1983, having first spent three nights in London at Claridge’s. Our trip was a fancy press junket arranged by prestigious PR representative Mary Homi who handled the Savoy Group Hotels (Claridge’s, Berkeley, Connaught, Savoy, Lancaster in Paris) as well as the as all James Sherwood’s 5 star hotels and his Simplon-Orient Express train. The group was made up of society columnists from New York, Palm Beach, Palm Springs and Santa Barbara. Mary made five. And it was glamour all the way! While we were in London I noted in the morning paper that the exciting Night of 100 Stars charity theatre event would take place the night we returned from Venice. Among the stars performing was Charles Dance. I was and still am a tremendous fan of this English actor. Reading about the event I decided I simply had to see him perform in person. Fellow traveler, my long time friend Gloria Greer the Palm Springs representative, was all for it too so we purchased VIP tickets including the after performance reception before taking off on our rail adventure. Something to look forward at the end of our journey.

Paris station Orient Express Gloria Greer

Gloria Greer second from right facing camera at the Paris stop.

Excitement was high as we boarded the train in London. The “All Aboard” call sounded loud and clear and we clamored aboard and found our compartments with childlike enthusiasm. Our luggage, having last been seen in our rooms at Claridge’s, awaited us in our compartments. That’s the way travel was then but I’ve already told you about that in my blog on sailing the Atlantic on the S.S. United States in 1953. And believe me those memories are kept alive any time I venture out of Santa Barbara dragging bags on wheels and backpacks and purses hanging from my shoulders with no one to lend a hand.

The train compartments were small but most comfortable. Linens on the beds were fine perfectly ironed Irish linen. All was perfection especially the service of all the train employees. Bathrooms were a bit of a drawback however. In those days you didn’t have bathroom facilities attached to your compartments. You marched in nightgown, bathrobe and bedroom slippers down to the end of the car to the one bathroom per railroad car, tooth brush and towels in hand. Now this was perfectly fine going to Venice as there men occupying the other compartments in my car and they got in there, brushed there teeth and did whatever else needed doing and got out. It was on the return trip, Venice to London that my bathroom problems arose. On that return somewhere in the middle of the night at a small stop in the Italian Alps four American skiers boarded, Patricia Kennedy Lawford and her daughter, and Jeanne Kennedy Smith and her daughter, sisters and nieces of the president of the United States Jack Kennedy.

Orient Express. Pat Kennedy Lawford and daughter 9/83

Pat Kennedy Lawford center in short fox coat talking to her daughter Victoria left pushing cart.

I met the Kennedy clan early the next morning standing in line waiting to get into the bathroom. Pat Lawford had gotten there first. I’d known her casually in the days when she dated my good friend Alfredo de la Vega, but I didn’t know her bathroom habits. “She takes forever once she gets in there,” Victoria Lawford moaned. Her aunt Jeanne nodded in agreement. What didn’t come out was Jeanne Smith’s daughter didn’t exactly rush through teeth brushing, make up applying etc. either. All I can say is Jeanne Smith and I were practically lifetime friends by the time we left the bumpy hallway and got our turns in that one bathroom.

As I read newspapers today of the wonderful things Jeanne Smith has achieved, Ambassador to Ireland from the United States, her tireless work for the disabled etc. and receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honor given in our country, I remember our brief friendship balancing on the fast moving train with firm grip on our toothbrushes and tooth paste waiting anxiously to get into the bathroom early one morning as our splendid vintage train clicky clacked its way to Paris, then London.

Dinner on the train was true dining in style. Wonderful silk damask cloths and gigantic napkins and shining vintage silver ware dressed the tables. The menu choices were fantastic and the products the kitchen produced were superb. Dining was a very special event on this jaunt. Everyone in the diner was in evening clothes except the Kennedy family who had only ski attire. But it was sweet to notice Jeanne Smith’s daughter, after glancing around the elegantly dressed guests in the dining room, slipped a few small flowers out of the vase of fresh flowers on their dinner table and tucked them into her hair to look more dressed up.

Upon our return to London following the glorious train ride and a 3 day stay at Jim Sherwood’s Hotel Cipriani in Venice, Gloria and I had our tickets for the great charity theatre waiting. It was a most thrilling event. All the biggest names in English theatre, movies, TV, rock stars performed. Interestingly each one did the opposite of what they were known for. A famous opera star sang Rock ‘n Roll. A leading TV comedy star performed a scene from Shakespeare’s King Lear. Charles Dance, known as a serious actor, came out in a tight black tee shirt and jeans and sang Noel Coward’s “Only mad dogs and Englishmen go out in the noon day sun.” Following the performance there was the reception on stage. The Royal Patron for the event, the Duchess of Kent, was the center of attention. But I kept looking for Charles Dance. He finally appeared looking very special in black tie after the black tee shirt. I suddenly became shy so Gloria approached him and asked if she could take a photo of him and me. He was very gracious about it. A few days after her return to Palm Springs I got a call from Gloria, “I have the greatest photo of you and Charles Dance. Will get you a print soon.” That was 1983. I’m still waiting. She still can’t find the negative. But I still have hopes! And memories.

By The Way
This blog was started to sell my new book and I keep going off on other topics. Please do check out The Beautiful Lady Was A Palace Eunuch at Amazon.com
Acknowledgement:
Kathleen Fetner, Technical Advisor and Friend
Categories My Life
Comments (5)

Anna Met the King of Siam But I Met the Queen

by Beverley
October 9th, 2011
Queen Sirikit visits with Colonel William McKean, Commander of the 27th, and U.S. Ambassador to Thailand, Kenneth T. Young, Jr., June 1962.

Queen Sirikit visits with Colonel William McKean, Commander of the 27th, and U.S. Ambassador to Thailand, Kenneth T. Young, Jr., June 1962. Public Domain, via Wikimedia Commons.

The invitation came as a great surprise. Mr. Herbert W. Armstrong was inviting the 50 most influential women in California to a luncheon in Pasadena to meet Her Majesty Queen Sirikit of Thailand in March 1985. I was most honored to say the least to be included in such an impressive group. Wasn’t sure how I rated but I accepted with pleasure.

Herbert Armstrong, founder and chairman of the Ambassador Foundation in Pasadena, California was Her Majesty’s host in the United States for an unofficial visit. An expensive visit for him. She was traveling with an entourage of 45 and between them they had 400 pieces of luggage. Just do the math on all those tips for porters and bellmen!!! Her stay in the USA started in Palm Beach and included stops in New York and Washington DC where she was received unofficially by the Reagan’s then Pasadena, California.

Herbert W. Armstrong welcoming Queen Sirikit to his luncheon in her honor

Herbert W. Armstrong welcoming Queen Sirikit to his luncheon in her honor

For the luncheon at the Ambassador Foundation the queen’s own security forces were augmented by United States Secret Service agents and Los Angeles and Pasadena police forces as well as the security forces of the Ambassador Foundation and Ambassador College. Queen Sirikit was here in connection with the SUPPORT Foundation she started in 1975 to promote the training of peasant farmers and the hill tribes in ways to earn income by producing traditional crafts and arts.

I was met and taken through a side door upon arrival to avoid all the security by Ellis La Ravia, vice president of the Ambassador Foundation whom I knew through my volunteer work on Prince Charles’ project to build a small opera house in the Royal College of Music. And together we wandered privately through a magnificent exhibition “Treasures of the Kings of Siam” sponsored by the Ambassador Foundation. There were both examples of work being done through the queen’s project and examples of the royal family’s own collection of Thai antique treasures.

Luncheon was served at five large round tables of eleven. Her Majesty sat with Herbert Armstrong, the only man dining, and her main lady-in-waiting at an elevated table surrounded by security. One of Her Majesty’s delightful ladies-in-waiting, all Thai princesses, was seated at each of the tables of ten California women. I was honored to be seated with Mrs. Tom Bradley, wife of the Mayor of Los Angeles wearing one of her fabulous custom made Bullock’s Wilshire hats and Secretary of State March Fong Eu among others.

This is the dress I wore to the luncheon with Queen Sirikit of Thailand

This is the dress I wore to the luncheon with Queen Sirikit of Thailand

Detail of the fabric used in my dress

Detail of the fabric used in my dress

Back tracking I have to explain that upon receiving the coveted invitation my first big decision was of course what should I wear. It was known the queen had appointed Pierre Balmain in Paris as her exclusive couturier. I had a supply of outfits from trips to Bangkok made of Thai silk from the native weavers of Jim Thompson silks. But that didn’t seem appropriate. Then I thought of a wonderful Italian silk print with leopards I’d brought home from Lake Como that Parola had transformed into a daytime dress for me. That was it! This choice actually led to a memorable moment. Just before dessert was served the number one lady-in-waiting left the head table and approaching our table came to me. Making a slight bow, with her hands pressed together in a prayer-like position in the traditional wai greeting, the princess said in her musical voice straight out of The King and I, “Excuse me please. But Her Majesty has asked me to convey a message to you. She would like you to know she finds your dress most delightful.” I can still hear her saying it. An enchanting moment.

By The Way
This blog was started to sell my new book and I keep going off on other topics. Please do check out The Beautiful Lady Was A Palace Eunuch at Amazon.com
Acknowledgement:
Kathleen Fetner, Technical Advisor and Friend
Categories My Life
Comments (1)

What Do You Give Your Ex-Husband For His Birthday?

by Beverley
October 6th, 2011

What do you give your ex-husband for his birthday after you’ve been estranged for nearly 47 years? “Tis a puzzlement” to quote a movie King of Siam. I found the answer in my own wine cellar.

This blog is about pleasant things, interesting places, people past and present, as well as items of interest from the media and everyday life. I’ve been writing it casually as I did the original By The Way newspaper column I wrote for 22 years. Then recently my wonderful tech helper and friend Kathleen Fetner in San Francisco sent me charts showing my blog is being read in almost every country in the world. I’m still in a shocked state of amazement. Why my blog even got hacked by professionals in Pakistan last week. Just like the Pentagon! I’d questioned her about emails I’d received from followers in Rumania, Japan and Denmark. “How did they find me when they don’t know me?” I asked Kathleen. “Well you caught on in Rumania when some avid Barbara Cartland reader Googled her and your blog on her came up and she must have spread the word to the Barbara Cartland readers in Rumania. Then your blog on Florence Chadwick swimming the Catalina Channel was picked up worldwide as people were Googling about Diane Nyad‘s Cuba-Miami swim attempt. And people liked what they read and started following.” Amazing! So now I’ve had to analyze more carefully what I write. One thing is definite, since I firmly believe decent people keep their private lives private there will never be dirty laundry aired here.

However, I am now going to tell you a bit of personal history because it’s an All’s Well That Ends Well story that might encourage other divorced couples in coping pleasantly with their situations in their later years.

Bob Jackson, Beverley Jackson, Carol Jackson, Leslie Jones, Linda Jackson

Left to right having dinner at Lucky’s. Bob Jackson on his 84th birthday, Beverley, Carol Jackson, Leslie Jones and Linda Jackson

My marriage ended after eight years. Bob Jackson my ex went on to be happily married to Carol Jackson for 47 years so far. We basically had no friendly contact all those years. I decided after the divorce I was an only child who liked to live life her way. I wasn’t really meant to be married. I raised my young daughter alone making her my primary interest in life in her young years. We roamed the world together having a fabulous time. Through my hotelier friendships we stayed in elegant suites in the world’s greatest hotels. Through my devoted friends worldwide we stayed in wonderful country houses and palaces as well. There were of course nights spent on wooden benches in cold remote little airports around the world due to plane delays. In the worst predicaments, in places like Rumania during the Cold War or no bathrooms on 10 hour drive from Jaipur to Udaipur, my daughter could always make me laugh.

I long ago heeded Auntie Mame‘s advice to Agnes, “Live! Life is a banquet and most poor suckers are starving to death!” Yes as my 83rd birthday approaches I can say I’ve truly feasted at life’s table!!

And so now in 2011 the three of us, Carol, Bob and I, are having a fun comfortable time together in our last years. We’ve gone far beyond the bad things and eliminated trouble makers from our lives. They are there for me and I’m there for them. Their being there for me includes the luxury of fresh eggs from their chickens, just picked vegetables from their garden, fabulous white goat milk butter they keep me supplied with.

I can’t contribute such culinary luxuries to our friendship but I can supply unusual entertainment. Prince William and the Duchess of Cambridge came to Santa Barbara for a charity polo benefit. Being quite involved with the Santa Barbara Polo Club I had advance notice and obtained impossible to get tickets for the Jacksons. Unfortunately my nontransferable ticket went to waste as I developed a last minute health problem and missed the big event. But they gave me a full report.

I’d so wanted to see Prince William and his bride as his mother Princess Diana and I were friends in my London days, working together for our close mutual friends the late Duke of Norfolk’s Help the Aged and the now Dowager Duchess of Norfolk’s Hospices. But that will come up in a future blog when I tell you about the first time I met the young bride Princess Diana. It was the night Prince Charles kindly invited me to dine with them at Kensington Palace as a thank you for my help in raising the funds for his project of building a small opera house in the Royal College of Music.

Now more about that bottle of wine I took to Bob’s birthday dinner party, along with a book of Irving Penn photographs, it was quite a good wine from the great vineyards of my very special friend of many years the late Baron Philippe de Rothschild‘s Chateau Mouton. Vintage 1981 for you former fellow Oenophiles in the San Francisco Commandarie de Bordeaux. How was it? It drank well, good nose, fruits still strong but it is meant to be drunk now and not held much longer. By the way I miss you all. Not sure I ever explained why I disappeared. But when Clem Whitaker died and United Air started charging $750 for the less than 400 mile flight and hotel rates soared I did the math and decided as much as I loved our meetings and dinners and the honor of being one of the only female members of the San Francisco Chapter of Commandarie de Bordeaux, it was time to resign. The math showed me how many Meals on Wheels I could supply and how many AIDS orphans in Rwanda I could feed by resigning.

So the advice I offer in this blog today is, in your 70’s or 80’s you might try to establish a comfortable “chicken soup when you’re sick” relationship with your ex spouses. It can prove very pleasant. It has for me.

Baron Philippe de Rothschild

Baron Philippe de Rothschild and his cellar master and friend of a lifetime Raoul Blondin, who is carrying wines he is about to decant for our dinner, talking in front of Grande Mouton.

Baron Philippe de Rothschild and me at a party in Montecito 1978

Baron Philippe de Rothschild and me at a party in Montecito 1978

By The Way
This blog was started to sell my new book and I keep going off on other topics. Please do check out The Beautiful Lady Was A Palace Eunuch at Amazon.com
Acknowledgement:
Kathleen Fetner, Technical Advisor and Friend
Categories My Life
Comments (2)

If You’re Rich Enough You Can Live In Movie Star Clothes From Auctions

by Beverley
October 3rd, 2011

Suddenly there is an epidemic of auctions of major deceased film stars!  Have all the families been hanging in there waiting for it to begin?  Last week I told you about handsome Douglas Fairbanks Jr.’s big auction.  Even confessed to bidding, though not getting, a lovely velvet collared evening cape.

Well from formal evening capes to John Wayne’s Lucchese cowboy boots, looking a bit beaten up that he wore in True Grit or Rooster Cogburn — or maybe both.  The auction house isn’t quite sure.  The estimate on them is $8,000 to $10,000 and it’s sure to soar.  You know how men are about their cowboy boots — when they’re in to them.  And to have “The Big Man’s!”  Of course there is one little catch.  Lucchese boots are hand made and they have numbers in them.  Well these boots have 495 in one and 496 in other which means they’re not exactly a matched pair.  The auction house explains it by stating that in Rooster Cogburn John Wayne had walked in streams and rafted some rivers and they probably got wet and additional boots were needed.  So if you don’t mind having a pair of boots that don’t exactly match the opening bid is $8,000.

There are actually more than one pair of Lucchese boots up for sale.  I’ve been looking at sample Lucchese boots all summer in a booth selling them at the Santa Barbara Polo Club almost every Sunday.  The boot booth was there because Lucchese is owned by John Muse who had a polo team playing at the Santa Barbara Polo Club called, surprise “Lucchese”.  And Lucchese won the hotly contested Bombardier Pacific Coast Open Tournament September 4th.  Of course John Muse doesn’t make anything on the auction of John Wayne’s boots and even if he did it wouldn’t really help him pay the ten goal star of his polo team, world’s greatest Adolfo Cambiaso.  You see Cambiaso was rumored to be getting paid a million dollars plus four fine polo ponies for his summer of polo in Santa Barbara.  I’m wondering now who made Adolfo’s boots.  Maybe some day they’ll come up for sale at a famous sportsmen’s auction and we’ll find out.

Now if you’re not interested in buying what John Wayne wore on his feet you can start at the top and work your way down.  But like Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. don’t look for underwear for sale.  Fortunately there’s none of Wayne’s either!  But there are lots of hats!

You can pick up a little beret from The Green Berets if you’re game to start bidding at $6,000.  No it’s not lined in sable!

A cowboy hat worn in either Horse Soldiers or Rio Lobo is considered more of a treasure than the little beret because bidding on that hat starts at $30,000.  A cowboy hat from Big Jake and/or Train Robbers starts at $30,000 as well.  A real bargain is a black bowler hat they think is from The Quiet Man that starts at $1,300.  And now I have to confess there is a white hat with a back flap that appears to me to be a Foreign Legion hat (they have another name for it) I find quite appealing.  It starts at $500 and one never knows how things will go.  I don’t think 82 going on 83 is really too old to run off and join the Foreign Legion if things get too rough do you?  It has always sounded so romantic.  And that hat is so cute…

Like the Douglas Fairbanks Jr. auction there are so many things for sale I don’t think should be like two unused checkbooks from 1960.  Opening bid is $600.  Who would be fool enough to sign one of those John Wayne and walk into a bank and try to cash it? Even if he were wearing cowboy boots and Stetson hat.

And again there were lots of books for sale.  But they were more Hollywood biography and coffee table books.  I won’t even begin to compare it to Douglas Fairbanks Jr’s really fine quality library.

If you are tempted by any of this you’d better get on line fast and go to Heritage House Auctions because John Wayne goes on sale October 6th and 7th.  No time to lose.

You have plenty of time to buy Elizabeth Taylor gowns, jewels, who knows what else.  Christie’s is really pushing this one!  I had a formal engraved invitation to buy a ticket for a viewing of  Taylor items being sold in Los Angeles.  First time for that.  I’m invited to every viewing and they offer me drinks and hors d’oeuvres.  Selling tickets to clients is really a first.

When I say they are promoting big, they’ve got this act on the road unlike any auction in my memory.  Even more than the Duke and Duchess of Windsor or Rudolf Nuryev.  Elizabeth Taylor treasures to be auctioned were in Moscow Gum Red Square 3 for viewing last month, September 15th and 16th.  Next stop September 24-26th London. It’s in Dubai for the big spenders to check Liz out October 23rd.  Geneva bankers can peek November 11th and 12th.  Then back to Paris November 25th to 27th.  The sale takes place in Los Angeles December 13th to 16th. [Edited to add: Every ticket is sold out for four December days of viewings of Elizabeth Taylor sale LA!  Catalogues can be preordered. Entire set is $300. Individually catalogues on jewels, costumes, personal clothing etc run $150 each. The Collection of Elizabeth Taylor – Christie’s]

I saw some of the great Taylor jewels in San Francisco when Cartier presented fantastic jewels from their archives at the Legion of Honor Museum in December 2009.  A set of diamond and gorgeous Burmese rubies necklace, bracelet and earrings given to her by her husband Mike Todd in 1957 had museum goers breathless.

My memories of Elizabeth Taylor go way back.  I was at a bridal shower for my friend singer Jane Powell.  Other than Janie I didn’t really know any of the other girls and was sitting on a sofa between Ann Blyth and Janet Leigh when the most gorgeous creature I’d ever seen burst into the room and threw herself on the ground in front of her friends Ann and Janet.  Without taking a breath, bursting with enthusiasm she told them she’d just met the man she was going to marry, Nicky Hilton.  And I’m there in the middle just starring at those magnificent lavender eyes and marveling at the beauty of this young woman.

I still had never really met Elizabeth Taylor when some years later I went to a party at the Edwin Pauley’s home following the premiere of Lust for Life.   This time my escort was a friend of Mike Todd so I got introduced to both.  She was wearing a beautiful very full gown of champagne color double satin with black velvet trim and lots of diamonds.  But sadly what I noticed most was the old perspiration stains under the arms of the gown that obviously was put into the closet after the previous wearing when it should have gone to Beverly Hills best cleaner.  So if you are tempted to bid on any champagne satin gowns, check the underarms first.

By The Way
This blog was started to sell my new book and I keep going off on other topics. Please do check out The Beautiful Lady Was A Palace Eunuch at Amazon.com
Acknowledgement:
Kathleen Fetner, Technical Advisor and Friend
Categories My Life
Comments (0)

A Lot of Dresses Have Gone Over My Head

by Beverley
September 25th, 2011

Hundreds of blogs are appearing on our screens with spring 2012 fashion as our calendars only take us into first week of autumn. The Collections are being paraded on runways in New York, London, Milan, and Paris. The topic of whom Dior will select to replace the disgraced, disgraceful but unarguably talented John Galliano is making the fashion columns and blogs again.

While all this doesn’t really affect my wardrobe in any major way it does bring back “Remembrances of Dresses Past”. When I was growing up in Los Angeles everything I wore came from a magnificent Art Deco department store Bullocks Wilshire. The clothing that covered me when I was brought home from the Hollywood Presbyterian Hospital was from Bullocks Wilshire. My haircuts took place with me sitting on one of the genuine carousel animals in Bullocks Wilshire’s children’s barber shop. The white Mary Jane shoes for dress that indicated spring had sprung came from BW as had the black patent leather Mary Janes being replaced. My dresses came from the same place as did my coats, camel hair or navy blue wool. When I was older my Westlake School for Girls uniforms and my voluminous wedding gown did too.

A great treat through the years was lunch with my mother in the BW Tea Room where pretty thin models paraded the latest from the elegant 2nd floor French Room. I always ordered their Welsh Rarebit with chocolate ice cream for dessert. The store was a place of unchanging tradition. It was the same men year in and year out, wearing discreet uniforms and clean white gloves, who moved the shiny brass elevator controls to carry us from floor to floor, announcing each floor as we smoothly arrived. I think those men spent their entire lives going up & down announcing “Fifth floor Tea Room & Ladies Lounge, Second floor French Room and Irene Collection”. And they knew us all by name. I knew I was getting older when they switched from “Good day Beverley” to “Good day Miss Beverley”.

Huell Howser visits Leslie Steinberg of the Southwestern University School of Law, which has lovingly restored the Bullocks Tea Room to its original splendor.

I remember getting the first outfit of my own choice, not my mother’s. I was about 14 and my friend the late Carole Elliott’s mother was a buyer at BW. Well armed with birthday money off to BW Carole and I went. On mezzanine floor Ladies Sportswear I chose a very tailored soft moss green wool gabardine dress with brown leather belt. I had a waist back then. Actually a very small waist in those days! And brown & white Spectator pumps with very conservative heel. That might have been the day I became Miss Beverley.

I cried The Day Bullocks Wilshire closed. Everyone did! We’d lost a way of life and many long time friends.

In the years that followed my personal fashion went through many phases until I met the remarkable Ursula Parola. She was a master at creating with scissors & needle! Since she was a well-trained perfectionist my Parola gowns where as beautifully constructed as Paris haute couture. Inner seams were perfect double French seams. Jackets were anchored with hidden chains. Button holes were handmade. In other words, perfection of construction. And since I’d always loved fine fabrics we made a great team.

My social life in the early Parola days was tremendously active and I was also writing my social column, the first By The Way for the Santa Barbara News-Press. Full evening dress could be required as often as five nights a week. I ended with a very large closet devoted entirely to full length gowns & flowing capes.

Parola fabric

Here are samples of some of the fabulous silk fabrics I brought from Paris and Lake Como in the late 1970’s and 1980’s for gowns Parola made me. I was into big bright florals at that time.

I’d discovered a fabulous small fabric shop off the Place Vendome in Paris and another at the entrance to the Villa d’Esté on Lake Como. Both shops got the best end lots of silks made specifically for the greatest Italian & Paris designers. The designer’s name was frequently woven into a salvage edge of the fabric and Parola loved hiding the name just once somewhere inside each garment. I wore one dress for years before finding Givenchy‘s hiding place! Some of the fabrics were outrageously expensive but totally safe beneath her scissors. I’ve kept some of those gowns even though they no longer fit and occasions for wearing them minimal. Some have gone to museums with fashion collections in NY.

Ball for Norfolks with Ed Wilson

A Parola gown of reembroidered lace from Lyon, France worn for the Hospice benefit I chaired honoring the late Duke and present Dowager Duchess of Norfolk at Birnam Wood. I’m standing with the late Ed Wilson.

One bright day I arrived at Parola’s for a fitting and a new face, dear wonderful Quy, appeared in the workroom. She and her family had just arrived on a boat from Vietnam, in a new strange country with few possessions, having left behind a most affluent existence when they fled Vietnam.

Parola eventually retired but Quy and I are at it still. Dear friends first and creators second. She and her engineer husband have built a wonderful life as hardworking American citizens. Their university graduate children are all exceedingly successful. It is a truly fine story of what is possible in our country. Quy and I seem to spend as much time at her kitchen table talking and eating Vietnamese salad of shredded chicken breast, cabbage, fresh cilantro with lots of lemon juice and some secret Vietnamese sauce, as we do in the fitting room. Through the years the things we create together have changed. An incorrectly set broken ankle some years ago left me unable to display leg in short skirts so it’s all trousers & long gowns. But the specialty the last few years is assembling pieces of superb vintage Chinese embroidery saved from garments too badly damaged through the centuries to be part of my collection of antique Chinese costume and textiles. The one jacket pictured Quy said was absolutely the last she would make after it required weeks of delicate work. It wasn’t the last but it is her masterpiece of assemblage.

Chinese jacket Quy made

Jacket Quy made from salvagable parts of a badly damaged early 19th century Chinese skirt

The other time she said never again was when I purchased on eBay a size one Galanos dress with the most fabulous top half totally beaded by Lesage in Paris. I found a full page color photo of the dress’s bead design in the book The Master Touch of Lesage written about the four generations of Lesage, the world’s greatest workshop of embroiderers and beaders. I spent many nights carefully taking the perfectly made dress apart. Galanos creations are perfection inside and out. Then with beaded full front, back and two sleeves and weeks of patient work Quy was able to make a brown velvet jacket with one side of front and rolled collar of the Lesage beading. That’s a clue as to what I can get out of a Size ONE!!! She marveled at the Lesage workmanship. With all the cutting and piecing necessary, not a single fine bead, sequin, crystal or pearl fell off. Although marveling at the Lesage masterful technique, when the jacket was finally finished she said “Never again!” I think this time she means it. At least until my next discovery.

By The Way
This blog was started to sell my new book and I keep going off on other topics. Please do check out The Beautiful Lady Was A Palace Eunuch at Amazon.com
Acknowledgement:
Kathleen Fetner, Technical Advisor and Friend
Categories My Life
Comments (2)
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