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  1. 17 de jun. de 2024 · Józef Simmler painted The Death of Barbara Radziwiłł in 1860. It depicts the death of the infamous Queen Barbara of Poland. Barbara Radziwiłł was a Lithuanian noble whose great beauty caught the eye of King Sigismund II Augustus in 1543.

  2. 12 de jun. de 2024 · Carole Radziwill. Craig Barritt/Getty Photographs. El drama entre Andy Cohen y Carole Radziwill no ha terminado.. el primero Amas de casa reales de la ciudad de Nueva York La estrella confirmó a través de X el martes 11 de junio que de hecho dio una cita anónima sobre Cohen a Nueva York revista, pero tenía buenas razones para mantener su identidad en secreto.

  3. 1 de jul. de 2024 · It's such a thrill to have Carole with us, and she doesn't disappoint. She talks being part of an aristocratic dynasty, how she navigated the greatest tragedy of her life, and the tear-down of ...

    • 47 min
    • Tape Podcasts
  4. Hace 5 días · Before taking her front seat next to Holland at the Ashi show, Flockhart modeled a black strapless corset with a sheer black cape and silk trousers while jumping on her hotel bed. Celebrity hair ...

    • Overview
    • Truman Capote
    • Babe Paley
    • Slim Keith
    • C.Z. Guest
    • Lee Radziwill
    • Ann Woodward
    • Joanne Carson

    In 1975 New York’s high society was the talk of the town—for all the wrong reasons. That year Esquire magazine published “La Côte Basque, 1965,” a scandalous chapter from Truman Capote’s unfinished roman à clef Answered Prayers. In the tell-all excerpt, he skewered his inner circle of socialite friends, portraying them as catty backstabbers and revealing their secrets. Babe Paley, Slim Keith, and other “swans,” as Capote called them, were furious, and the writer became a social pariah. The excerpt from Answered Prayers—which he thought would be his masterpiece, even more influential than his classic In Cold Blood—instead irreparably damaged Capote’s career and personal life.

    A cause célèbre, the excerpt and its fallout continues to be a source of interest and is the inspiration for the TV miniseries Feud: Capote vs. the Swans (2024). We go behind the scenes to tell the true story of Truman Capote and the socialites he befriended and betrayed.

    •Original name: Truman Streckfus Persons

    •Born: September 30, 1924, New Orleans, Louisiana

    •Died: August 25, 1984, Los Angeles, California (aged 59)

    From a young age, Truman Capote established himself as one of America’s leading writers. His first published novel, Other Voices, Other Rooms, appeared in 1948 and drew widespread praise. The book is a sensitive, partly autobiographical portrayal of a boy’s search for his father and his own sexual identity. More acclaimed work followed, including the novella Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1958). Capote achieved his greatest success in 1965, when In Cold Blood was published in The New Yorker magazine; it appeared in book form the following year. A true-crime classic, it introduced a new genre that Capote called the “nonfiction novel.”

    Writing helped make Capote famous, and he reveled in his celebrity. Known for his sharp wit and love of gossip, he became a fixture in high society and a confidante to a number of socialites. During this time he also began drinking and using drugs heavily. Between his busy social life and occasional stints in rehab, Capote spent little time writing. After the excerpt from Answered Prayers was published, he began a downward spiral. Ostracized by his glamorous friends, his alcohol and drug problems worsened, and Capote died in 1984 at age 59.

    • In Feud: Capote vs. the Swans, Truman Capote is played by English actor Tom Hollander.

    •Original name: Barbara Cushing

    •Born: July 5, 1915, Boston, Massachusetts

    •Died: July 6, 1978, New York City, New York (aged 63)

    •Spouses: Stanley G. Mortimer, Jr. (1940–46); William S. Paley (1947–78)

    •Children: Stanley G. Mortimer III, Amanda Mortimer Burden, William Cushing Paley, Kate Cushing Paley

    With her impeccable taste and manners, Barbara (“Babe”) Paley was considered the grande dame of Truman’s swans. She worked as a fashion editor at Vogue magazine before marrying her second husband, CBS executive William S. Paley, in 1947. They subsequently became the golden couple of New York society. The ultimate trendsetter, Babe Paley was a fixture on best-dressed lists, known for her elegance, whether wearing high-end fashion or more affordable attire.

    •Original name: Mary Raye Gross; first name later changed to Nancy

    •Born: July 15, 1916, Salinas, California

    •Died: April 6, 1990, New York City, New York (aged 73)

    •Spouses: Howard Hawks (1941–49); Leland Hayward (1949–59); Kenneth Keith, Baron Keith of Castleacre (1962–72)

    •Child: Kitty Hawks

    While still a teenager, Nancy Keith became popular on the Hollywood social scene. Tall and slender, she earned the nickname “Slim” and became known for her fashion sense as well as her charm and wit. She attended parties at William Randolph Hearst’s San Simeon mansion and became friends with numerous celebrities. For a time she worked as a model. While married to director Howard Hawks, she discovered Lauren Bacall. Slim Keith was the inspiration for Bacall’s sultry character in Hawks’s To Have and Have Not (1944), and Keith supplied the film’s famous suggestive line: “You know how to whistle, don’t you?”

    •Original name: Lucy Douglas Cochrane

    •Born: February 19, 1920, Boston, Massachusetts

    •Died: November 8, 2003, Old Westbury, New York (aged 83)

    •Spouse: Winston Frederick Churchill Guest (1947–82 [his death])

    •Children: Alexander Guest, Cornelia Guest

    She was given the nickname “C.Z.” at a young age because her brother had difficulty saying “sister.” She made her society debut in 1937 and later worked as a showgirl and then studied acting in Hollywood. However, her name was more commonly found in gossip columns than on call sheets. At one point she went to Mexico, where Diego Rivera did a nude painting of her. Other artists, including Salvador Dalí and Andy Warhol, would also paint her.

    •Original name: Caroline Lee Bouvier

    •Born: March 3, 1933, Manhattan, New York

    •Died: February 15, 2019, Manhattan, New York (aged 85)

    •Spouses: Michael Temple Canfield (1953–58); Prince Stanislas Radziwill (1959–74); Herbert Ross (1988–2001)

    •Children: Prince Anthony Radziwill, Princess Anna Christina Radziwill

    She was the younger sister of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, one of the world’s most famous women. Although often in her shadow, Lee Radziwill became a fashion icon in her own right—in fact, many claim that she had more style than her sister—and she was a fixture in New York society. She also pursued a number of careers, including interior decorating, acting, and writing. However, none proved successful.

    •Original name: Ann Crowell

    •Born: December 12, 1915, Pittsburg, Kansas

    •Died: October 10, 1975, Manhattan, New York (aged 57)

    •Spouse: William Woodward, Jr. (1943–55 [his death])

    •Children: William Woodward III, James Woodward

    Ann Woodward grew up in Kansas City and was largely raised by her mother, who ran a taxi business. Highly ambitious, she moved to New York City in 1937, where she became a nightclub dancer, then a model, and later a radio actress. She was once voted “the most beautiful girl in radio.” At some point she is believed to have had an affair with William Woodward, Sr., a wealthy banker. He reportedly encouraged her to take up with his son, William Jr., whom he was worried was gay. Although his parents opposed the marriage, the couple wed.

    •Original name: Joanne Copeland

    •Born: October 20, 1931, Los Angeles, California

    •Died: May 8, 2015, Los Angeles, California (aged 83)

    •Spouses: Johnny Carson (1963–72); Richard Rever

    Joanne Copeland worked as a model and as a flight attendant before marrying Johnny Carson, host of The Tonight Show, in 1963. The couple lived in New York City, where Carson’s show was filmed. Although Joanne Carson disliked the city’s social scene, she was close friends with Capote, whom she had met years earlier. After Joanne and Johnny Carson divorced in 1972, she hosted a health and fitness show, Joanne Carson’s VIPs (1972–73). About this time she moved back to Los Angeles. Capote had a writing room in her home, and he died there in 1985.

    • In Feud: Capote vs. the Swans, Joanne Carson is played by American actress Molly Ringwald.

  5. 12 de jun. de 2024 · La exestrella de ‘ Real Housewives of New York City’ confirmó a través de X el martes 11 de junio, que efectivamente hizo un comentario anónimo sobre Cohen en una entrevista a la revista...

  6. Hace 3 días · Chairman of the Board and Director.