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- <text id=94TT0692>
- <title>
- May 30, 1994: Essay:The Stylishness of Her Privacy
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 30, 1994 Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 70
- THE Stylishness of Her Privacy
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Lance Morrow
- </p>
- <p> Vaclav Havel was talking about the mouth-breathing heavies who
- ran Czechoslovakia during the communist years.
- </p>
- <p> One of the worst things about them, Havel said indignantly,
- was their awful taste. Havel gestured around a sitting room
- in his presidential residence in Prague. The room was handsomely
- simple and bathed in morning sunlight. "This was hideous when
- they were here," he said. "The furniture, the curtains..."
- Bad taste, he suggested, corrupts government.
- </p>
- <p> I thought of Havel's idea when Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis
- died, and wondered what it is that good taste does.
- </p>
- <p> In Havel's mind, brutality, stupidity and kitsch all belonged
- to the same local gang: dead-drunk communists and evil smells,
- ghastly heavy velvet drapes and torture. Havel's formula was
- a variation on Stendhal's rule: "Bad taste leads to crimes."
- </p>
- <p> It depends, of course: Bad taste in what? There were Nazis who
- came home from work at Auschwitz and listened to Mozart. An
- elegant emperor may also be a sadist or an idiot or a weakling.
- If good taste were the qualification for leadership, the greatest
- Presidents might be interior decorators.
- </p>
- <p> I am not sure about the bad-taste rule as it applies to styles
- of government, except in the way that it points to a sometimes
- desirable elegance of leaderly thought, or might remind Americans
- of a President long ago who designed his own house at Monticello.
- </p>
- <p> But surely Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis proved something about
- the rules of good and bad taste as they apply to that strange
- and sometimes rotten religion of the late 20th century--celebrity.
- It is a religion that, as she knew as well as anyone, demands
- human sacrifice. Somehow, she managed to escape. And the escape
- was the most stylish and elegant part of her life.
- </p>
- <p> Young Mrs. Kennedy, in her early 30s, in the pillbox hat, or
- the bloody pink suit, or the black veil, became one of the urdivinities
- of the paleotelevision age. By the time she died, she was still
- arguably the most famous woman on earth. Who else--Madonna?
- Princess Di? (The falloff in quality is steep.)
- </p>
- <p> It may seem an odd way of appreciating Jacqueline Kennedy, but
- think for a moment what she might have been had she possessed
- a different character. And, for that matter, what her children
- might have become, given their fame, their money, their trauma--their excuse. Instead, she was what she was, and they are,
- admirably, one gathers, what they are, thanks to their mother.
- Important things are unfakeable.
- </p>
- <p> She had excellent taste in art and music, of course; the "classy"
- (to use John Kennedy's word) side of Camelot--the stylish
- redecorations, Pablo Casals at the White House and so on--was her doing mostly. But it seemed to me that over the years
- her truly superb taste expressed itself in what might be called
- the stylishness of her privacy.
- </p>
- <p> Part of John Kennedy's charm derived from his reticence, from
- a sense one had of something withheld. That was his personality.
- In a more difficult way, in an earned way, Jacqueline Kennedy's
- achievement was what she was able to withhold. Celebrity Zen,
- perhaps: the mystique of reticence.
- </p>
- <p> She belonged to a time--a tragedy--when large literary lines
- did not seem off, or ridiculous, as they might now. Hamlet and
- Lear, "if worthy their prominent part in the play," wrote Yeats,
- "do not break up their lines to weep." She, magnificently, did
- not break up her lines to weep. There was another thought that
- was associated especially with her husband: Courage is "grace
- under pressure." But that line applied to her in some truer
- way than it applied to him. She earned it in a harder fashion.
- </p>
- <p> Jacqueline's father-in-law Joseph Kennedy went off to Hollywood
- decades ago and figured out the fundamental rule of the Age
- of Celebrity: "It doesn't matter what you are, it only matters
- what people think you are." The principle works for the short
- run, which is usually the only run that celebrity needs. Jacqueline
- Kennedy endured in the long run. Even in the earliest days after
- the Inauguration in 1961, she located the saner and contrary
- principle in a memo she wrote to her press secretary: "I feel
- strongly that publicity in this era has gotten completely out
- of hand--and you must really protect the privacy of me and
- my children."
- </p>
- <p> She was a civilized woman (John Kennedy was about half-civilized).
- Her civilized quality derived in large part from her insistence
- that her life belonged to her and her children. It is hard enough
- for a celebrity to be sane; fame is a distorting, corrupting
- and even psychotic environment. People in a healthy community
- gossip about people they know. It must disturb something in
- human nature to gossip so addictedly about people one doesn't
- know--all of those brightly painted, artificial familiars.
- </p>
- <p> Jacqueline Onassis was clearly a sane woman. She kept a seemly
- silence. And for all the fragility she may have suggested in
- the big, round sunglasses and the head scarf, she wore some
- inner armoring; she possessed an eerie talent (a strategy of
- self-protection well known to those who handle dangerous animals)
- to make herself disappear, to dematerialize. If you saw her
- on the street, she would seem to abstract herself out of public
- attention, a kind of elegant vanishing. She would be, as she
- finally is now...elsewhere.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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