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  1. 13 de abr. de 2017 · Almost 19 years after her death, Pamela Harriman is being exhumed through not just one, but two, novels. In a strange confluence, the oft-wedded socialite and primo political hostess—often ...

  2. 6 de nov. de 1992 · PAMELA HARRIMAN, LIFE OF THE PARTY. IN 1980, THE DEMOCRATS WERE DOWN. BUT THIS WOMAN WASN'T ABOUT TO QUIT. By Donnie Radcliffe. November 5, 1992 at 7:00 p.m. EST. When Pamela Harriman woke up ...

  3. Until now, Pamela Harriman, the empress of the Democratic Party, has been the woman behind the man. And the men have included Aly Khan, Elie de Rothschild, Gianni Agnelli, Jock Whitney, Edward R. Murrow, Frank Sinatra, and her three husbands, Randolph Churchill, Leland Hayward and Averell Harriman. Two years ago, when Harriman died at ninety-four, leaving her more than $75 million and an ...

  4. Pamela HarrimanPamela Harriman (1920-1997) enjoyed the acquaintance of a number of world leaders and international men of wealth and influence. At various times married to the son of Winston Churchill, to a Hollywood and Broadway producer, and to a former governor of New York, Harriman was at first noted for her personal charm and ability to attract powerful men.

  5. Pamela Churchill Harriman’s accomplishments paint a portrait of a woman who shattered conventions, transcended boundaries, and forged an enduring legacy that remains a beacon of captivation and inspiration. The Oldest Profession Podcast reminds listeners that sex workers have always been part of the story.

  6. 29 de feb. de 2024 · Pamela Harriman died on February 5, 1997, at the age of 76, after suffering a stroke while swimming in the pool at the Hotel Ritz in Paris, a place of great significance in her life. She’d enjoyed a clandestine rendezvous with her second husband, Leland Hayward, there and celebrated the liberation of Paris with her lover, Edward R. Murrow, at the bar.

  7. 6 de feb. de 1997 · CAPTION: Pamela Harriman greets then-Democratic presidential candidate Bill Clinton on the steps of her home in Georgetown in August 1992. "Our country will miss her," Clinton said after her death.