Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis
Jacqueline "Jackie" Lee Bouvier Kennedy Onassis (born July 28, 1929 in Southampton on Long Island as Jacqueline Lee Bouvier, † May 19, 1994 in New York City ) was an American journalist and editor . She was the wife of the 35th US President John F. Kennedy and thus from January 20, 1961 to November 22, 1963, the First Lady of the United States.
The first lady, who became known as "Jackie Kennedy" in the 1960s, attracted attention with her fashionable style and her efforts to promote culture . During her second marriage to the 23 years older Greek shipowner Aristoteles Onassis , from 1968 until his death in 1975, the media gave her the nickname "Jackie O."
Life
Childhood and youth
Her parents, the Irish and French-born New York bankers John Vernou Bouvier III (1891-1957) and Janet Norton Lee (1907-1989), married on July 7, 1928 in the Catholic Church of St. Philomena in East Hampton . The first Bouvier to live in the USA had emigrated from Provence to Philadelphia in 1815 . Norton Lee's grandparents were immigrants from County Cork who settled in New York during the Great Famine in Ireland in the 1840s.
On March 3, 1933, Jacqueline's sister Caroline Lee Bouvier (nickname Lee , after her maternal grandfather James T. Lee) was born. The sisters were raised Roman Catholics . For the first few years the family lived in New York, where Jacqueline started school in 1935, and in East Hampton on Long Island .
The parents divorced in 1940. The mother married twice, her second husband was the twice divorced New York stockbroker Hugh Dudley Auchincloss junior (1897-1976). From this marriage, Jacqueline had two half-siblings, Janet Jennings Auchincloss (1945–1985) and James Lee Auchincloss (* 1947). Through the two first marriages of her stepfather Hugh Auchincloss, she also had three step-siblings, Hugh D. Auchincloss III. (1927–2015), Nina Gore Auchincloss (* 1935) and Thomas Gore Auchincloss (* 1937). In 1947 Jacqueline graduated from school in Farmington, Connecticut . In addition to English, she had learned French, Italian and Spanish.
Education
She began at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie , which she attended until 1949, studying history, literature, art and French. Jacqueline Bouvier received the title Debutante of the Year in 1947/1948 . She lived in France for a year as an exchange student in 1949/1950 and attended the Sorbonne in Paris and the University of Grenoble . She later described this time as the best year of her life. In everyday life she preferred the French pronunciation of her first name. She finished her studies in French literature at George Washington University . She then completed a postgraduate degree in American history at Georgetown University .
After graduating in 1951, she found a job as a photographer and journalist with the Washington Times-Herald newspaper ; she was making $ 42.50 a week. Her job was to ask randomly selected Washington DC residents original questions that would become increasingly political.
First, Bouvier got engaged in December 1951 to the young stockbroker John Husted; in March 1952 the engagement was dissolved.
Marriage to John F. Kennedy
Marriage and family life
John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Bouvier met at a dinner party in May 1951 and became engaged in June 1953. They married on September 12, 1953 in Newport , Rhode Island . They spent the first few years of their marriage in Washington DC
John F. and Jacqueline Kennedy had four children: Arabella (stillborn 1956), Caroline (born November 27, 1957), John F. Kennedy, Jr. (born November 25, 1960 - † July 16, 1999) and Patrick Bouvier Kennedy ( Premature birth, * August 7, 1963, † August 9, 1963).
Ten years of marriage to John F. were not always happy for her. This is evidenced by her numerous, long and very personal letters to the Irish priest Joseph Leonard, which she sent him to Ireland as part of a pastoral correspondence from 1950 until his death in 1964 and which only appeared in 2014.
Jacqueline's relationship with the Kennedy family was difficult because she had other ideals and, among other things, did not think much of the sport often played in the clan. The Kennedy sisters nicknamed her the debutante , Jacqueline complained about the manners and tone of the clan.
First Lady of the United States
Election campaign
In the 1960 election campaign in which John F. Kennedy ran for president, Jacqueline played an active role, limited by her pregnancy. She took part in television and newspaper interviews and recorded radio campaigns in foreign languages. She also advised her husband on how to organize his speeches, based on historical examples.
Finally, Kennedy was able to prevail against his rival Nixon, on January 20, 1961, he took his oath of office as the 35th President of the United States. Jacqueline Kennedy was the third youngest first lady in the USA. Although she was involved in the election campaign, she was initially politically disinterested during the presidency.
Establishment of the White House, cultural engagement
Jacqueline Kennedy's first big project was to change the furnishings in the White House. To this end, she set up a committee in February 1961 . She also reached out to people she knew owned from the White House in previous years and brought out the belongings of former US presidents from the basement. "All people who visit the White House should get a sense of history in it."
On February 14, 1962, she ran "American Television" through the White House. Charles Collingwood of Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) hosted the tour, which over 50 million Americans followed. The National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences awarded Jacqueline Kennedy an Emmy Award based on the success of the show.
Jacqueline Kennedy took care of a cultural painting with intellectual demands. Among other things, she gave French cuisine great influence in the presidential environment. On April 29, 1962, she organized a meeting of 49 Nobel Prize winners in the White House and on January 8, 1963, an exhibition of the Mona Lisa in Washington.
“Kennedy praised the White House dinner as the closest concentration of knowledge and talent since the days when Thomas Jefferson ate there alone. [...] People should know, she [Bouvier] said, that there is something under her pillbox hat too. "
Public appearances, style icon
Jacqueline Kennedy attracted public attention mainly through her wardrobe. Their pillbox hats were particularly popular . At the end of 1960 she had already been voted the best-dressed woman in the world . She chose Hollywood designer Oleg Cassini to make her dresses . He admitted her good taste and, above all, the ability to surround herself with competent people. Jacqueline Kennedy was the most photographed of all first ladies, she generated the greatest media interest. Their geometric, simple cut costumes and pillbox hats have been copied by women all over the world.
She had one of her most notable appearances when she and her husband traveled to Charles de Gaulle in France on May 31, 1963 , where she impressed with her knowledge of the French language and her knowledge of French culture. During a lunch with the press on the state visit, John F. Kennedy remarked:
- "I'm the man who accompanied Jacqueline Kennedy to Paris - and I enjoyed it."
Assassination of the President
After her youngest child Patrick died two days after birth in early August 1963, Jacqueline Kennedy appeared in public less often. She made her first appearance after Patrick's death in November of the same year: She accompanied her husband to the election campaign in Texas. When Kennedy was assassinated on November 22nd in Dallas, she was sitting in the open convertible on the back seat to his left.
She didn't want to change her blood-splattered costume in the hours that followed. She also wore it when Lyndon B. Johnson was sworn in as the new President of the United States in her presence that same day . She justified this by saying that people should see the blood. At the memorial service on November 25, she lit the Eternal Flame in Arlington National Cemetery .
Jacqueline Kennedy was deeply affected by the death of her husband.
"I feel more cruelly every day what I have lost - I always would have rather lost my life than lost Jack."
"Every day I feel my loss more painful - I would have rather lost my own life than Jack."
After the attack on JFK
After moving out of the White House two weeks after the funeral, Jacqueline Kennedy bought an apartment on New York's Fifth Avenue and withdrew from the public for a year.
In May 1965 she and Queen Elizabeth II inaugurated an official monument dedicated to John F. Kennedy in Runnymede , England. The memorial covers several acres of land where the Magna Carta was signed by King John in 1215 . The memorial was given to the United States by Great Britain. Two years later, Jacqueline Kennedy attended the christening of the aircraft carrier USS John F. Kennedy (CV-67) in Newport News , Virginia.
In the late 1960s, she helped save New York's historic Grand Central Terminal from demolition by leading a citizens' initiative .
In 1967 - in the middle of the Vietnam War - the Cambodian Prince Sihanouk received Jacqueline Kennedy in Angkor Wat as the US ambassador.
In 1968 Jacqueline Kennedy was elected Woman of the Year together with Věra Čáslavská . The Ladies Home Journal voted her among the 100 most powerful women of the 20th century.
Marriage to Aristotle Onassis
On October 20, 1968, Jacqueline Kennedy married the 23-year-old Greek shipowner and billionaire Aristotle Onassis (1906–1975) on the island of Skorpios . She then left the United States with her children. With her marriage, she lost her right to protection from the Secret Service .
The public reacted irritably when the wedding became known. The Bild newspaper ran the headline that America has lost a saint. One American commentator described the marriage as the worst insult to American men since Pearl Harbor . Friends also criticized Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. She later justified herself as follows: “I could no longer live as a Kennedy widow. It was a break from the oppressive obsession with which the Americans occupied me and my children. "
Jacqueline and Aristotle Onassis rarely saw each other. Onassis has been seen repeatedly in public with Maria Callas . Jacqueline Kennedy lived alternately on Skorpios and in Paris . She spent most of her time traveling and shopping, which led to repeated arguments between the couple. Onassis nicknamed her the Supertanker because of the high cost of her purchases , saying it cost him the same as buying a ship.
Onassis was preparing for divorce when he died on March 15, 1975. At that time, Jacqueline Kennedy was in New York with her children. Their share of the inheritance was severely restricted by a marriage contract. She eventually accepted the $ 27 million offered by Christina Onassis . In return, she waived all claims relating to the Onassis family's property.
1975-1980
In August 1975, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis involuntarily got into the US men's magazine Hustler . The paparazzo Settimio Garritano had photographed her naked on Skorpios. Larry Flynt bought the recordings and released them. From this point on, the media used the term "Jackie O" more and more.
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis lived in New York and Martha's Vineyard with the Belgian-born Maurice Tempelsman (born August 26, 1929), a married industrialist and diamond dealer. He and his family had fled the threat from the Nazi state in 1940. They met in the 1950s when he introduced then Senator John F. Kennedy to South African entrepreneurs in the diamond industry.
From 1976 she worked as an editor at Doubleday publishing house . She appreciated the contributions of African-American authors to American literature and encouraged Dorothy West , her neighbor in Martha's Vineyard and last survivor of the Harlem Renaissance , to complete her novel The Wedding , published in 1995. Dorothy West mentioned Jacqueline Kennedy's encouragement in her book.
Last years
In the 1980s, she was an important figure in protests against a planned skyscraper on Columbus Circle that would have cast large shadows on Central Park .
In January 1994, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma . The day before her death, she returned home one last time from the hospital. She died in her sleep at 1040 Fifth Avenue on May 19, 1994 at 10:15 p.m., aged 64 . Since she died that night, the date of death is often given as May 20, 1994.
Her funeral took place on May 23rd. She was buried in Arlington next to her murdered first husband according to the rite of the Catholic Church. Former First Lady Lady Bird Johnson and then First Lady Hillary Clinton attended her funeral . The eulogy was given by President Bill Clinton .
Her grave inscription "Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis" contains both her maiden name and the names of her two husbands.
After her death
Shortly after her death, some of her most prized possessions were sold. Among other things, Arnold Schwarzenegger , whose then wife Maria Shriver is a niece of Kennedy, acquired part of it for a total of more than one million US dollars.
After Jacqueline Kennedy's death, a lot of effort was put into maintaining her wardrobe so that it could be presented at exhibitions. Clothes were stored in acid-free cardboard boxes, and hanging clothes were supported with cotton sleeves so the fabric could breathe. Exhibited pieces were allowed to be exposed to light for a maximum of six months.
Awards
- in lifetime
- 1947: Debutante of the year
- 1951: Vogue Magazine Contest
- 1962: Emmy Special Award for public service (presented by the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences)
- 1968: woman of the year
- later appreciations
- 1995: Women's International Center Living Legacy Award
- One of the 100 most powerful women of the 20th century - a rating from the Ladies Home Journal
Commemoration
The Jacqueline Kennedy Garden on the south side of the White House has been named after her since the 1960s.
In Central Park , New York, near the place where she died, the large water reservoir and lake, the Central Park Reservoir, was renamed Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Reservoir.
In 1995, the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis High School for International Careers in New York was named after the former US First Lady.
The New York Metropolitan Museum of Art exhibited some of her clothing in 2001. Exhibition director Phillipe de Montebello said: "We want to celebrate the timeless influence of her extraordinary and unforgettable grace, grace and style."
Biographical reception
Documentary writings
In 2001, Jacqueline Kennedy's sister Lee Radziwill published a book called Happy Times . In an interview with CNN , she said that Jacqueline and Onassis had a lot in common.
In September 2011, her daughter Caroline Kennedy released tapes of interviews her mother had given Arthur M. Schlesinger in March 1964 (four months after her husband was murdered) . They also appeared in book form.
The 33 letters, with a length of 130 handwritten pages, that she sent to the Irish priest Joseph Leonard, were due to be auctioned in Durrow in June 2014 . However, they were removed from the auction because of their personal character and given to Caroline Kennedy.
Feature films and mini-series
These feature films (also) deal with Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis:
year | title | Director | as Jacqueline Kennedy |
---|---|---|---|
2017 | The Kennedys: After Camelot | Katie Holmes | |
2016 | Jackie: The first lady | Pablo Larraín | Natalie Portman |
2013 | Parkland | Peter Landesman | Kat Steffens |
2011 | The Kennedys | Jon Cassar | Katie Holmes |
2008 | Gray Gardens | Michael Sucsy | Jeanne Tripplehorn |
2003 | The American Dream: John F. Kennedy Jr. America's Prince: The John F. Kennedy Jr. Story |
Eric Laneuville | Jacqueline Bisset |
2002 | Timequest | Robert Dyke | Caprice Benedetti |
2001 | Jackie, Ethel, Joan: The Women of Camelot | Larry Shaw | Jill Hennessy |
2000 | Thirteen Days | Roger Donaldson | Stephanie Romanov |
2000 | Jackie Bouvier Kennedy Onassis | David Burton Morris | Joanne Whalley |
1992 | Love Field - love without limits | Jonathan Kaplan | Rhoda Griffis |
1991 | The Fate of Jackie O. A Woman Named Jackie |
Larry Peerce | Roma Downey / Sarah Michelle Gellar (in younger years) |
1988 | Onassis: The Richest Man in the World | Waris Hussein | Francesca Annis |
1987 | LBJ: The Early Years | Peter Werner | Robin Curtis |
1987 | Hoover vs. the Kennedys: The Second Civil War | Michael O'Herlihy | Jennifer Dale |
1983 | kennedy | Jim Goddard | Blair Brown |
1981 | The life of Jackie Kennedy Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy |
Steven Gethers | Jaclyn Smith |
1978 | The great Greek | J. Lee Thompson | Jacqueline Bisset (role name: Liz Cassidy) |
Documentaries
Appearance | title | Director |
---|---|---|
November 30, 1962 | Jacqueline Kennedy's Asian Journey | Leo Seltzer |
February 14, 1962 | Tour of the White House | Franklin J. Schaffner |
1960 | Primary | Robert Drew |
References in pop culture
- The 1963 New Order single is based on "a theory that JFK tried to get rid of his wife by shooting."
- Shel Silverstein's One’s On the Way refers to Jacqueline Onassis with the line “And Jackie was seen dancing in the last disco”.
- The 1972 Rod Stewart song You Wear It Well contains the lines
- "You made me feel a millionaire and you wear it well
- Madame Onassis got nothing on you "
- In the song Tire Me from Rage Against the Machine , Jacqueline Kennedy is mentioned in a reference to the death of JFK:
- “I want to be Jackie Onassis
- I wanna wear a pair of dark sunglasses
- I wanna be Jackie O
- Oh oh oh oh please don't die! "
- Jackie Kennedy and the murder of her husband is the theme of the tori amos song Jackie's Strength .
- In the Seinfeld episode The Chaperone , Elaine Benes applied for Bouvier's job at Doubleday. After Elaine didn't get the job at Doubleday, she got a job with a former (fictional) friend of Jacqueline's. The reason Elaine got a job with the friend: the boyfriend thought Elaine would resemble the late Jacqueline. In the episode, Elaine wears large sunglasses and a scarf over her hair, part of a clothing style that shaped Jacqueline in her later years. "I admired Mrs. Onassis very much," Elaine says to the friend.
- In the animated series The Simpsons , Marge Simpsons maiden name is Bouvier , her mother's first name is Jacqueline. Springfield's Mayor Quimby speaks in the original English with a tone that is very similar to John F. Kennedy's. His wife appears regularly in Jackie's famous rose-colored Chanel costume as well as with her hairstyle and her pillbox hat.
- Jackie O is also mentioned in the Spice Girls song Lady Is a Vamp . One line of the song reads:
- “Jackie O, we loved her so
- Sorry Mr. President, as far as we know. "
- Mos Def's single Ms. Fat Booty compares girls in the song to Jacqueline Kennedy ("She was like J. Kennedy").
- Carly Simon wrote the song Touched by the Sun , which appeared on her album Letters Never Sent in 1994 and is dedicated to Bouvier.
- The song Posthuman from the album Mechanical Animals by Marilyn Manson contains the lines:
- "She's pilgrim and pagan
- Softworn and social
- In all of her dreams
- She's a saint like Jackie-O "
- Marilyn Manson's music video with the song Coma White contains a passage that reenacts the murder of John F. Kennedy. Manson's girlfriend at the time, Rose McGowan, plays Jacqueline Kennedy.
- In the song Anything from Third Eye Blind Jackie O is mentioned several times. One line reads:
- "Jackie O with the top down open."
- In The House of Yes, Parker Posey plays a person who likes to call himself Jackie O because she is fascinated by Jackie.
- Gil Scott-Heron mentions Bouvier in The Revolution Will Not Be Televised . The lines in question are:
- "There will be no highlights on the eleven o'clock
- news and no pictures of hairy armed women
- liberationists and Jackie Onassis blowing her nose. "
- The song Bullet of Misfits , which deals with the assassination of Kennedy, contains a line that "Run Jackie run" is.
- In the film Naturally Blonde , the protagonist Elle Woods is left by her boyfriend Warner, an aspiring Harvard student and future senator. He explains why:
- “I need a Jacky. No Marilyn ! "
- Michael Daugherty composed an opera called "Jackie O".
- The band The B-52s alludes to “Jackie O” in their song “52 girls”.
- In the American cartoon series The Venture Brothers , Dr. Girlfriend, the partner of one of the villains of the series, always in a pink Chanel costume with the pillbox hat on.
Own publications
- A Memoir , 1967, Look Magazine, Nov. 27
- A Dream Realized , 1971, Ladies' Home Journal, September
- with Lee Bouvier Radziwill: One Special Summer , New York 1974, Delacorte Press
- Being Present , 1975, The New Yorker, Jan. 29
- The Firebird and Other Russian Fairy Tales , New York 1978, Viking Press
- Introduction , 1979, Atget's Gardens. William Howard Adams Garden City: Doubleday
- Introduction , 1988, Moonwalk. Michael Jackson New York: Doubleday
- (as editor): In the Russian style, 1976, London
Trivia
- In 1961, Nikita Khrushchev gave Jacqueline Kennedy a puppy (Pushenka) to the dog Strelka , who was the first living creature to return alive from space.
literature
- Wayne Koestenbaum: Jackie O - The fan and his star . Klett-Cotta, 1997, ISBN 3-608-91810-8
- Katherine Pancol : Jackie . Ullstein tb, 1997, ISBN 3-548-35722-9
- Donald Spoto: Jackie O . Europa, Hamburg 2000, ISBN 3-203-82045-5
- Sarah Bradford: Jackie Kennedy Onassis - A Passionate Life . Fischer, 2003, ISBN 3-596-15830-3
- Elisabeth Veit: Jacqueline Kennedy . dtv, 2003, ISBN 3-423-30837-0
- Jacqueline Kennedy: Conversations about a life with John F. Kennedy. With a foreword by Caroline Kennedy . Interviews with Arthur M. Schlesinger . Hoffmann and Campe Verlag, Hamburg 2011, ISBN 978-3-455-50238-1
- Sarah Bradford: America's Queen: The Life of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. Penguin Books, London 2013, ISBN 978-0-241-96743-0 .
- Barbara Leaming: Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis: The Untold Story. St. Martins Press, New York 2014, ISBN 978-1-250-01763-5 .
- Katherine Jellison: Jacqueline Kennedy. In Katherine AS Sibley (Ed.): A Companion to First Ladies. Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester 2016, ISBN 978-1-118-73222-9 , pp. 503-516.
Web links
- Literature by and about Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis in the catalog of the German National Library
- Biography on the White House website
- Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. In: FemBio. Women's biography research (with references and citations).
- Jacqueline Kennedy in the Internet Movie Database (English)
- Jacqueline Kennedy: The White House Years (English)
- Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy - John F. Kennedy Presidential Library (English)
- Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis in the Miller Center of Public Affairs of the University of Virginia (English)
- Obituary of May 20, 1994 in the New York Times (English)
- It's better to fall off the pedestal than freeze on it , an article from September 12, 2003 by stern
- Work on the Myth , an article from the newspaper Der Freitag on February 23, 2001
- Jacqueline Kennedy's fashion , an article dated September 12, 2003 by stern
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d e National First Ladies' Library
- ^ Sarah Bradford, Jackie Kennedy Onassis - a passionate life, 2nd edition, Frankfurt am Main 2007, page 19
- ↑ " Our First Ladies: Jacqueline Lee Bouvier Kennedy " on the White House website
- ^ JFK Library
- ↑ Michael Nelson: Guide to the Presidency and the Executive Branch, Volume I (5th edition). CQ Press, Thousand Oaks (CA) 2013, ISBN 978-1-60426-953-6 , p. 1825
- ↑ a b c d e f g Jacqueline Kennedy Timeline ( Memento from March 17, 2009 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ a b Lazar Backovic: Jackie Kennedy: letters about JFK surfaced . SPIEGEL ONLINE . May 15, 2014. Retrieved May 15, 2014.
- ↑ a b c d Better to fall off the pedestal than freeze to death on it
- ^ Arlington National Cemetery
- ^ JFK Library
- ↑ a b c Well preserved - The time
- ↑ Jacqueline Kennedy's fashion designer died - star
- ^ Obituary in the New York Times
- ↑ a b c biography for Jacqueline Kennedy in the IMDb
- ↑ New York Daily News on the letters to Joseph Leonard
- ↑ Kenton Clymer: The United States and Cambodia, 1870-1969: From Curiosity to Confrontation. Routledge, London 2004, ISBN 978-1-1343-5899-1 , p. 23.
- ↑ America's Queen - Stern.de
- ↑ Barbara Leaming: Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis: The Untold Story. St. Martins Press, New York 2014, ISBN 978-1-250-01763-5 , p. 298.
- ↑ http://abagond.wordpress.com/2008/08/27/1040-fifth-avenue-where-jackie-o-lived/
- ↑ Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag - Elisabeth Veit: Jacqueline Kennedy ( Memento of the original of September 27, 2007 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ John Kifner: Central Park Honor for Jacqueline Onassis . In: The New York Times . July 23, 1994, ISSN 0362-4331 ( nytimes.com [accessed October 4, 2017]).
- ↑ Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis High School ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (English)
- ↑ Jacqueline Kennedy's fashion - stern.de
- ^ CNN.com transcripts - Lee Radziwill Shares Her Remarkable Memories
- ↑ Jackie's life with the President
- ↑ Conversations about a life with John F. Kennedy. With a foreword by Caroline Kennedy. Interviews with Arthur M. Schlesinger. Hoffmann and Campe Verlag, Hamburg 2011, ISBN 978-3-455-50238-1
- ↑ Michael Parsons: 'Jackie letters' returned to Kennedy Family. Irishtimes.com on September 5, 2014, accessed April 11, 2018.
- ^ The Kennedys After Camelot - imdb.com
- ^ The Kennedys - imdb.com
- ^ Gray Gardens - imdb.com
- ↑ America's Prince: The John F. Kennedy Jr. Story - imdb.com
- ^ Timequest - imdb.com
- ↑ Jackie, Ethel, Joan: The Women of Camelot - imdb.com
- ^ Thirteen Days - imdb.com
- ↑ Jackie Bouvier Kennedy Onassis - imdb.com
- ^ Love Field - imdb.com
- ↑ A Woman Named Jackie - imdb.com
- ^ Onassis: The Richest Man in the World - imdb.com
- ^ LBJ: The Early Years - imdb.com
- ↑ Hoover vs. the Kennedys: The Second Civil War - imdb.com
- ^ Kennedy - imdb.com
- ↑ Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy - imdb.com
- ^ The Greek Tycoon - imdb.com
- ↑ New Order Online (English)
- ↑ International Lyrics Playground
- ↑ Lyrics Freak - You Wear It Well
- ↑ Lyrics Freak - Tire Me
- ↑ Lyrics Freak - Lady Is a Vamp
- ↑ musicsonglyrics.com
- ↑ www.gilscottheron.com ( Memento of the original from September 3, 2006 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ filmszene.de
- ↑ Pets
- ↑ detailed discussion with further materials e.g. B. under JFK widow in an interview-So spoke Jackie einestages.spiegel.de .
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Kennedy Onassis, Jacqueline |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Lee Bouvier, Jacqueline (maiden name); Kennedy, Jackie; O, Jackie (nickname) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | American journalist, first lady, shipowner's wife and editor |
DATE OF BIRTH | July 28, 1929 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Southampton (New York) , New York , United States |
DATE OF DEATH | May 19, 1994 |
Place of death | New York City , New York , United States |