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< BACK TO Fresh Intelligence Neglected Maybe, But Never Forgotten![]() GRAND DAME Brooke Astor Although Ms. Astor couldn't really understand the embarrassing drama of her final act, it seems such a shame that every obituary of the socialite mentions her poor retirement conditions, because the woman was actually crazy—in a good way—long before she was abandoned to live in a crackhouse. After the jump, a selection of some of our favorite bits from Lady Astor, a veritable New York superhero and worthy of setting the flags at half-mast—her story makes today's chattering class look like rank amateurs. She always looked fancy "At night—almost every night, even into her 90s—she could be found surrounded by crystal and caviar, done up in her designer dresses and magnificent jewels, seated to the right of the host. (She was always seated to the right of the host.)"—NYT "She was forced to wear high, tightly laced boots to keep her ankles slim, because she was being raised to be the wife of a very rich man."—Boston Globe She married for the money—three times. Then she gave it all away "She grew up as a perpetual poor relation—'the little sister of the rich.' Her mother and grandmother and a covey of aunts worked together to groom her so that she could marry money. And marry it she did—three millionaires in a row, the first one a few weeks after her 17th birthday."—Boston Globe "She married Vincent Astor, the eldest son of John Jacob Astor IV, who died in the sinking of the Titanic. 'Vincent was a very suspicious man,' she recalled. 'The fact that he had total confidence in me to run the foundation made me want to vindicate him, show him—wherever he is—that I could do a good job.'"—Chicago Tribune She stayed sprightly well into her golden years "Even into her 90s, she loved to go out, especially to places where there would be dancing. 'When that music starts,' she said, 'it enters my blood like a fever.'—NYT She was a living landmark. Officially Advertisement |
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