Jackie Kennedy (Miscellaneous) – Overview, Biography

Name:Jackie Kennedy
Real Name:Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis
Occupation: Miscellaneous
Gender:Female
Birth Day: July 28,
1929
Death Date:May 19, 1994(1994-05-19) (aged 64)
Manhattan, New York, U.S.
Age: Aged 64
Birth Place: Southampton, New York, United States,
United States
Zodiac Sign:Leo

Jackie Kennedy

Jackie Kennedy was born on July 28, 1929 in Southampton, New York, United States, United States (64 years old). Jackie Kennedy is a Miscellaneous, zodiac sign: Leo. Nationality: United States. Approx. Net Worth: $1 Million – $2 Million (Approx.).

Brief Info

Jacqueline Lee “Jackie” Kennedy Onassis (née Bouvier /ˈbuːvieɪ/ BOO-VEE-AY; July 28, 1929 – May 19, 1994) was an American journalist who became First Lady of the United States as the wife of President John F. Kennedy. During her lifetime, Jacqueline Kennedy was regarded as an international fashion icon.[1] Her ensemble of a pink Chanel suit and matching pillbox hat that she wore in Dallas, Texas, when the president was assassinated on November 22, 1963, has become a symbol of her husband’s death.[2] Even after her death, she ranks as one of the most popular and recognizable First Ladies in American history, and in 1999, she was listed as one of Gallup’s Most-Admired Men and Women of the 20th century.[3]

Net Worth 2020

$1 Million – $2 Million (Approx.)
Find out more about Jackie Kennedy net worth here.

Family Members

#NameRelationshipNet WorthSalaryAgeOccupation
#1
Edith Bouvier Beale
Cousin$1 Million – $2 Million (Approx.) N/A 84 Model
#2Arabella Kennedy Daughter N/A N/A N/A
#3
Caroline Kennedy
Caroline Kennedy
Daughter$250 million (2015) N/A 63 Politician
#4John Vernou Bouvier III Father N/A N/A N/A
#5
John F. Kennedy
John F. Kennedy
Former spouse$3 Million (Approx.) N/A 46 President
#6
Aristotle Onassis
Aristotle Onassis
Former spouse$500 Million N/A 69 Entrepreneur
#7Rose Schlossberg Granddaughter N/A N/A N/A
#8Tatiana Schlossberg Granddaughter N/A N/A N/A
#9
John Schlossberg
Grandson$1 Million – $2 Million (Approx.) N/A 27 Celebrity Family Member
#10Maurice Tempelsman Partner N/A N/A N/A
#11
Lee Radziwill
Lee Radziwill
Sister$50 Million N/A 87 Actor
#12
Patrick Bouvier Kennedy
Patrick Bouvier Kennedy
Son$1 Million – $2 Million (Approx.) N/A 1 Miscellaneous
#13
John F. Kennedy Jr.
John F. Kennedy Jr.
Son$50 Million N/A 38 Entrepreneur
#14
Ted Kennedy
Ted Kennedy
$100 Million N/A 77 Politician
#15
Kara Kennedy
Kara Kennedy
$1 Million – $2 Million (Approx.) N/A 51 Celebrity Family Member
#16
Rory Kennedy
Rory Kennedy
$10 Million N/A 52 Director
#17
Rose Kennedy
Rose Kennedy
$500 Million N/A 104 Politician
#18
Mark Kennedy
Mark Kennedy
$7 Million (Approx.) N/A 63 Politician
#19
Kyra Kennedy
$1 Million – $2 Million (Approx.) N/A 25 Celebrity Family Member
#20
Ethel Kennedy
Ethel Kennedy
$50 Million N/A 92 Political Wife
#21
Conor Kennedy
Conor Kennedy
$10 Million N/A 26 Celebrity Family Member
#22
John Kennedy Jr.
John Kennedy Jr.
$1 Million – $2 Million (Approx.) N/A 38 Actor
#23
Patricia Kennedy
Patricia Kennedy
$1 Million – $2 Million (Approx.) N/A 82 Celebrity Family Member
#24
Patrick J Kennedy
Patrick J Kennedy
$7 Million (Approx.) N/A 53 Politician
#25
Robert F. Kennedy
Robert F. Kennedy
$1 Million – $2 Million (Approx.) N/A 42 Politician
#26
Robert Kennedy Jr.
Robert Kennedy Jr.
$7 Million (Approx.) N/A 66 Unclassified
#27
Jacqueline Kennedy
Jacqueline Kennedy
$7 Million (Approx.) N/A 64 Political Wife
#28
Joan Bennett Kennedy
Joan Bennett Kennedy
$1 Million – $2 Million (Approx.) N/A 84 Celebrity Family Member
#29
Robert F Kennedy Jr.
Robert F Kennedy Jr.
$50 Million N/A 66 Lawyer
#30
Joseph P. Kennedy Sr.
Joseph P. Kennedy Sr.
$1 Million – $2 Million (Approx.) N/A 81 Entrepreneur
#31
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
$50 million (2019) N/A 66 President
#32
Christopher G. Kennedy
$7 Million (Approx.) N/A 57 Celebrity Family Member
#33
Michael Lemoyne Kennedy
$7 Million (Approx.) N/A 62 Celebrity Family Member
#34
Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy
Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy
$3 Million (Approx.) N/A 33 Entrepreneur
#35
Kathleen Kennedy Townsend
Kathleen Kennedy Townsend
$7 Million (Approx.) N/A 69 Politician
#36
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis
$7 Million (Approx.) N/A 64 Political Wife

Does Jackie Kennedy Dead or Alive?

As per our current Database, Jackie Kennedy died on May 19, 1994(1994-05-19) (aged 64)
Manhattan, New York, U.S..

Physique

HeightWeightHair ColourEye ColourBlood TypeTattoo(s)
N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A

Biography

Biography Timeline

1929

Jacqueline Lee Bouvier was born on July 28, 1929, at Stony Brook Southampton Hospital in Southampton, New York, to Wall Street stockbroker John Vernou “Black Jack” Bouvier III and socialite Janet Norton Lee. Bouvier’s mother was of Irish descent, and her father had French, Scottish, and English ancestry. Named after her father, Bouvier was baptized at the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola in Manhattan; she was raised in the Catholic faith. Jacqueline’s younger sister, Caroline Lee, was born four years later in 1933.

1935

In 1935, Bouvier was enrolled in Manhattan’s Chapin School, which she attended for Grades 1–7. She was a bright student but often misbehaved; one of her teachers described her as “a darling child, the prettiest little girl, very clever, very artistic, and full of the devil”. Bouvier’s mother attributed her daughter’s behavior to the way that she finished her assignments ahead of classmates and then acted out in boredom. Her behavior improved after the headmistress warned her that none of her positive qualities would matter if she did not behave.

1936

The marriage of Bouvier’s parents was strained by her father’s alcoholism and extramarital affairs; the family had also struggled with financial difficulties following the Wall Street Crash of 1929. They separated in 1936 and divorced four years later, with the press publishing intimate details of the split. According to her cousin John H. Davis, Bouvier was deeply affected by the divorce and subsequently had a “tendency to withdraw frequently into a private world of her own.” When her mother married Standard Oil heir Hugh Dudley Auchincloss, Jr., Bouvier and her sister did not attend the ceremony, because it was arranged quickly and travel was restricted due to World War II. Bouvier gained three step-siblings from Auchincloss’ two previous marriages, Hugh “Yusha” Auchincloss III, Thomas Gore Auchincloss, and Nina Gore Auchincloss; she formed the closest bond with Yusha, who became one of her most trusted confidants. The marriage later produced two more children, Janet Jennings Auchincloss in 1945 and James Lee Auchincloss in 1947.

1941

Jacqueline had visited the White House on two occasions before she became First Lady: the first time as a grade-school tourist in 1941 and again as the guest of outgoing First Lady Mamie Eisenhower shortly before her husband’s inauguration. She was dismayed to find that the mansion’s rooms were furnished with undistinguished pieces that displayed little historical significance and made it her first major project as First Lady to restore its historical character. On her first day in residence, she began her efforts with the help of interior decorator Sister Parish. She decided to make the family quarters attractive and suitable for family life by adding a kitchen on the family floor and new rooms for her children. The $50,000 that had been appropriated for this effort was almost immediately exhausted. Continuing the project, she established a fine arts committee to oversee and fund the restoration process and solicited the advice of early American furniture expert Henry du Pont. To solve the funding problem, a White House guidebook was published, sales of which were used for the restoration. Working with Rachel Lambert Mellon, Kennedy also oversaw the redesign and replanting of the Rose Garden and the East Garden, which was renamed the Jacqueline Kennedy Garden after her husband’s assassination. In addition, Kennedy helped to stop the destruction of historic homes in Lafayette Square in Washington, D.C., because she felt these buildings were an important part of the nation’s capital and played an essential role in its history.

1951

In the fall of 1947, Bouvier entered Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York, at that time a women’s institution. She had wanted to attend Sarah Lawrence College, closer to New York City, but her parents insisted that she choose the more isolated Vassar. Bouvier was an accomplished student who participated in the school’s art and drama clubs and wrote for its newspaper. Due to her dislike of Vassar’s location in Poughkeepsie, she did not take an active part in its social life and instead traveled back to Manhattan for the weekends. She had made her debut to high society in the summer before entering college and became a frequent presence in New York social functions. Hearst columnist Igor Cassini dubbed her the “debutante of the year”. Bouvier spent her junior year (1949–1950) in France—at the University of Grenoble in Grenoble, and at the Sorbonne in Paris—in a study-abroad program through Smith College. Upon returning home, she transferred to George Washington University in Washington, D.C., graduating with a Bachelor of Arts degree in French literature in 1951. During the early years of her marriage to John F. Kennedy, she took continuing education classes in American history at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C.

1952

Bouvier moved back to Merrywood and was referred by a family friend to the Washington Times-Herald, where editor Frank Waldrop hired her as a part-time receptionist. A week later she requested more challenging work, and Waldrop sent her to city editor Sidney Epstein, who hired her as an “Inquiring Camera Girl” despite her inexperience, paying her $25 a week. He recalled, “I remember her as this very attractive, cute-as-hell girl, and all the guys in the newsroom giving her a good look.” The position required her to pose witty questions to individuals chosen at random on the street and take their pictures for publication in the newspaper alongside selected quotations from their responses. In addition to the random “man on the street” vignettes, she sometimes sought interviews with people of interest, such as six-year-old Tricia Nixon. Bouvier interviewed Tricia a few days after her father Richard Nixon was elected to the vice presidency in the 1952 election. During this time, Bouvier was briefly engaged to a young stockbroker named John Husted. After only a month of dating, the couple published the announcement in The New York Times in January 1952. After three months, Bouvier called off the engagement because she had found him “immature and boring” once she got to know him better.

Bouvier and U.S. Representative John F. Kennedy belonged to the same social circle and were formally introduced by a mutual friend, journalist Charles L. Bartlett, at a dinner party in May 1952. She was attracted to Kennedy’s physical appearance, wit and wealth. The pair also shared the similarities of Catholicism, writing, enjoying reading and having previously lived abroad. Kennedy was busy running for the U.S. Senate seat in Massachusetts; the relationship grew more serious and he proposed to her after the November election. Bouvier took some time to accept, because she had been assigned to cover the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in London for The Washington Times-Herald. After a month in Europe, she returned to the United States and accepted Kennedy’s marriage proposal. She then resigned from her position at the newspaper. Their engagement was officially announced on June 25, 1953.

1953

Bouvier and Kennedy married on September 12, 1953, at St. Mary’s Church in Newport, Rhode Island, in a mass celebrated by Boston’s Archbishop Richard Cushing. The wedding was considered the social event of the season with an estimated 700 guests at the ceremony and 1,200 at the reception that followed at Hammersmith Farm. The wedding dress was designed by Ann Lowe of New York City, and is now housed in the Kennedy Library in Boston, Massachusetts. The dresses of her attendants were also created by Lowe, who was not credited by Bouvier.

1954

The newlyweds honeymooned in Acapulco, Mexico, before settling in their new home, Hickory Hill in McLean, Virginia, a suburb of Washington, D.C. Jacqueline developed a warm relationship with her in-laws, Joseph and Rose Kennedy. In the early years of their marriage, the couple faced several personal setbacks. John suffered from Addison’s Disease and from chronic and at times debilitating back pain, which had been exacerbated by a war injury; in late 1954, he underwent a near-fatal spinal operation. Additionally, Jacqueline suffered a miscarriage in 1955 and in August 1956 gave birth to a stillborn daughter, Arabella. They subsequently sold their Hickory Hill estate to John’s brother Robert, who occupied it with his wife Ethel and their growing family, and bought a townhouse on N Street in Georgetown. Jacqueline and her husband also resided at an apartment at 122 Bowdoin Street in Boston, their permanent Massachusetts residence during his congressional career.

1957

Jacqueline gave birth to daughter Caroline on November 27, 1957. At the time, she and John were campaigning for his re-election to the Senate, and they posed with their infant daughter for the cover of the April 21, 1958 issue of Life magazine. They traveled together during the campaign, trying to narrow the geographical gap between them that had persisted for the first five years of the marriage. Soon enough, John Kennedy started to notice the value that his wife added to his congressional campaign. Kenneth O’Donnell remembered that “the size of the crowd was twice as big” when she accompanied her husband; he also recalled her as “always cheerful and obliging”. John’s mother Rose observed Jacqueline as not being “a natural-born campaigner” due to her shyness and being uncomfortable with too much attention. In November 1958, John Kennedy was reelected to a second term. He credited Jacqueline’s visibility in both ads and stumping as vital assets in securing his victory, and he called her “simply invaluable”.

1959

In July 1959, historian Arthur M. Schlesinger visited the Kennedy Compound in Hyannis Port and had his first conversation with Jacqueline; he found her to have “tremendous awareness, an all-seeing eye and a ruthless judgment”. That year, Jack Kennedy traveled to 14 states, with Jacqueline taking long breaks from the trips so she could spend time with their daughter Caroline. She also counseled her husband on improving his wardrobe in preparation for his intended presidential campaign the following year. In particular, she traveled to Louisiana to visit Edmund Reggie and to help her husband garner support in the state for his presidential bid.

1960

On January 3, 1960, John F. Kennedy was a United States Senator from Massachusetts when he announced his candidacy for the presidency and launched his campaign nationwide. In the early months of the election year, Jacqueline accompanied her husband to campaign events such as whistle-stops and dinners. Shortly after the campaign began, she became pregnant. Due to her previous high-risk pregnancies, she decided to stay at home in Georgetown. Jacqueline subsequently participated in the campaign by writing a weekly syndicated newspaper column, Campaign Wife, answering correspondence, and giving interviews to the media.

On July 13 at the 1960 Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles, the party nominated John F. Kennedy for President of the United States. Jacqueline did not attend the nomination due to her pregnancy, which had been publicly announced ten days earlier. She was in Hyannis Port when she watched the September 26, 1960 debate—which was the nation’s first televised presidential debate—between her husband and Republican candidate Richard Nixon, who was the incumbent vice president. Marian Cannon, the wife of Arthur Schlesinger, watched the debate with her. Days after the debates, Jacqueline contacted Schlesinger and informed him that John wanted his aid along with that of John Kenneth Galbraith in preparing for the third debate on October 13; she wished for them to give her husband new ideas and speeches. On September 29, 1960, the Kennedys appeared together for a joint interview on Person to Person, interviewed by Charles Collingwood.

On November 8, 1960, John F. Kennedy narrowly defeated Republican opponent Richard Nixon in the U.S. presidential election. A little over two weeks later on November 25, Jacqueline gave birth to the couple’s first son, John F. Kennedy, Jr. She spent two weeks recuperating in the hospital, during which the most minute details of both her and her son’s conditions were reported by the media in what has been considered the first instance of national interest in the Kennedy family.

1961

Her husband was sworn in as president on January 20, 1961. As a presidential couple, the Kennedys differed from the Eisenhowers by their political affiliation, youth, and their relationship with the media. Historian Gil Troy has noted that in particular, they “emphasized vague appearances rather than specific accomplishments or passionate commitments” and therefore fit in well in the early 1960s’ “cool, TV-oriented culture”. The discussion about Jacqueline’s fashion choices continued during her years in the White House, and she became a trendsetter, hiring American designer Oleg Cassini to design her wardrobe. She was the first presidential wife to hire a press secretary, Pamela Turnure, and carefully managed her contact with the media, usually shying away from making public statements, and strictly controlling the extent to which her children were photographed. The media portrayed Kennedy as the ideal woman, which led academic Maurine Beasley to observe that she “created an unrealistic media expectation for first ladies that would challenge her successors”. Nevertheless, the First Lady attracted worldwide positive public attention and gained allies for the White House and international support for the Kennedy administration and its Cold War policies.

Throughout her husband’s presidency and more than any of the preceding First Ladies, Kennedy made many official visits to other countries, on her own or with the President. Despite the initial worry that she might not have “political appeal”, she proved popular among international dignitaries. Before the Kennedys’ first official visit to France in 1961, a television special was shot in French with the First Lady on the White House lawn. After arriving in the country, she impressed the public with her ability to speak French, as well as her extensive knowledge of French history. At the conclusion of the visit, Time magazine seemed delighted with the First Lady and noted, “There was also that fellow who came with her.” Even President Kennedy joked, “I am the man who accompanied Jacqueline Kennedy to Paris – and I have enjoyed it!”

Jacqueline Kennedy became a global fashion icon during her husband’s presidency. After the 1960 election, she commissioned French-born American fashion designer and Kennedy family friend Oleg Cassini to create an original wardrobe for her appearances as First Lady. From 1961 to 1963, Cassini dressed her in many of her most iconic ensembles, including her Inauguration Day fawn coat and Inaugural gala gown, as well as many outfits for her visits to Europe, India, and Pakistan. In 1961, Kennedy spent $45,446 more on fashion than the $100,000 annual salary her husband earned as president.

Kennedy acquired a large collection of jewelry throughout her lifetime. Her triple-strand pearl necklace, designed by American jeweler Kenneth Jay Lane, became her signature piece of jewelry during her time as First Lady in the White House. Often referred to as the “berry brooch,” the two-fruit cluster brooch of strawberries made of rubies with stems and leaves of diamonds, designed by French jeweler Jean Schlumberger for Tiffany & Co., was personally selected and given to her by her husband several days prior to his inauguration in January 1961. She wore Schlumberger’s gold and enamel bracelets so frequently in the early and mid-1960s that the press called them “Jackie bracelets”; she also favored his white enamel and gold “banana” earrings. Kennedy wore jewelry designed by Van Cleef & Arpels throughout the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s; her sentimental favorite was the Van Cleef & Arpels wedding ring given to her by President Kennedy.

1962

On February 14, 1962, Jacqueline, accompanied by Charles Collingwood of CBS News, took American television viewers on a tour of the White House. In the tour, she stated that “I feel so strongly that the White House should have as fine a collection of American pictures as possible. It’s so important … the setting in which the presidency is presented to the world, to foreign visitors. The American people should be proud of it. We have such a great civilization. So many foreigners don’t realize it. I think this house should be the place we see them best.” The film was watched by 56 million television viewers in the United States, and was later distributed to 106 countries. Kennedy won a special Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Trustees Award for it at the Emmy Awards in 1962, which was accepted on her behalf by Lady Bird Johnson. Kennedy was the only First Lady to win an Emmy.

At the urging of U.S. Ambassador to India John Kenneth Galbraith, Kennedy undertook a tour of India and Pakistan with her sister Lee Radziwill in 1962. The tour was amply documented in photojournalism as well as in Galbraith’s journals and memoirs. The President of Pakistan, Ayub Khan, had given her a horse named Sardar as a gift. He had found out on his visit to the White House that he and the First Lady had a common interest in horses. Life magazine correspondent Anne Chamberlin wrote that Kennedy “conducted herself magnificently” although noting that her crowds were smaller than those that President Dwight Eisenhower and Queen Elizabeth II attracted when they had previously visited these countries. In addition to these well-publicized trips during the three years of the Kennedy administration, she traveled to countries including Afghanistan, Austria, Canada, Colombia, United Kingdom, Greece, Italy, Mexico, Morocco, Turkey, and Venezuela. Unlike her husband, Kennedy was fluent in Spanish, which she used to address Latin American audiences.

1963

In early 1963, Jacqueline was again pregnant, which led her to curtail her official duties. She spent most of the summer at a home she and the President had rented on Squaw Island, which was near the Kennedy compound on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. On August 7 (five weeks ahead of her scheduled due date), she went into labor and gave birth to a boy, Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, via emergency Caesarean section at nearby Otis Air Force Base. The infant’s lungs were not fully developed, and he was transferred from Cape Cod to Boston Children’s Hospital, where he died of hyaline membrane disease two days after birth. Jacqueline had remained at Otis Air Force Base to recuperate after the Caesarean delivery; her husband went to Boston to be with their infant son and was present when he died. On August 14, the President returned to Otis to take her home and gave an impromptu speech to thank nurses and airmen who had gathered in her suite. In appreciation, she presented hospital staff with framed and signed lithographs of the White House.

The First Lady was deeply affected by Patrick’s death and proceeded to enter a state of depression. However, the loss of their child had a positive impact on the marriage and brought the couple closer together in their shared grief. Arthur Schlesinger wrote that while President Kennedy always “regarded Jacqueline with genuine affection and pride,” their marriage “never seemed more solid than in the later months of 1963”. Jacqueline’s friend Aristotle Onassis was aware of her depression and invited her to his yacht to recuperate. President Kennedy initially had reservations, but he relented because he believed that it would be “good for her”. The trip was widely disapproved of within the Kennedy administration, by much of the general public, and in Congress. The First Lady returned to the United States on October 17, 1963. She would later say she regretted being away as long as she was but had been “melancholy after the death of my baby”.

On November 21, 1963, the First Lady and the President embarked on a political trip to Texas with several goals in mind; this was the first time that she had joined her husband on such a trip in the U.S. After a breakfast on November 22, they took a very short flight on Air Force One from Fort Worth’s Carswell Air Force Base to Dallas’ Love Field, accompanied by Texas Governor John Connally and his wife Nellie. The First Lady was wearing a bright pink Chanel suit and a pillbox hat, which had been personally selected by President Kennedy. A 9.5-mile (15.3 km) motorcade was to take them to the Trade Mart, where the president was scheduled to speak at a lunch. The First Lady was seated to her husband’s left in the third row of seats in the presidential limousine, with the Governor and his wife seated in front of them. Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson and his wife followed in another car in the motorcade.

1964

The President was rushed for the 3.8 mile trip to Parkland Hospital. At the First Lady’s request, she was allowed to be present in the operating room. President Kennedy never regained consciousness. He died not long after, aged 46. After Jacqueline’s husband was pronounced dead, she refused to remove her blood-stained clothing and reportedly regretted having washed the blood off her face and hands, explaining to Lady Bird Johnson that she wanted “them to see what they have done to Jack”. She continued to wear the blood-stained pink suit as she boarded Air Force One and stood next to Johnson when he took the oath of office as president. The unlaundered suit was donated to the National Archives and Records Administration in 1964 and, under the terms of an agreement with her daughter Caroline, will not be placed on public display until 2103. Johnson’s biographer Robert Caro wrote that Johnson wanted Jacqueline to be present at his swearing-in in order to demonstrate the legitimacy of his presidency to JFK loyalists and to the world at large.

Kennedy spent 1964 in mourning and made few public appearances. It has been speculated that she may have been suffering from undiagnosed posttraumatic stress disorder due to intrusive flashbacks. In the winter following the assassination, she and the children stayed at Averell Harriman’s home in Georgetown. On January 14, 1964, Kennedy made a televised appearance from the office of the Attorney General, thanking the public for the “hundreds of thousands of messages” she had received since the assassination and said she had been sustained by America’s affection for her late husband. She purchased a house for herself and her children in Georgetown but sold it later in 1964 and bought a 15th-floor penthouse apartment for $250,000 at 1040 Fifth Avenue in Manhattan in the hopes of having more privacy.

1965

Kennedy was named to the International Best Dressed List Hall of Fame in 1965. Many of her signature clothes are preserved at the John F. Kennedy Library and Museum; pieces from the collection were exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York in 2001. Titled “Jacqueline Kennedy: The White House Years,” the exhibition focused on her time as a First Lady.

1966

Despite having commissioned William Manchester’s authorized account of President Kennedy’s death, The Death of a President, Jacqueline was subject to significant media attention in 1966–1967 when she and Robert Kennedy tried to block the publication. They sued publishers Harper & Row in December 1966; the suit was settled the following year when Manchester removed passages that detailed President Kennedy’s private life. White viewed the ordeal as validation of the measures the Kennedy family, Jacqueline in particular, were prepared to take to preserve President Kennedy’s public image.

1967

During the Vietnam War in November 1967, Life magazine dubbed Kennedy “America’s unofficial roving ambassador” when she and David Ormsby-Gore, former British ambassador to the United States during the Kennedy administration, traveled to Cambodia, where they visited the religious complex of Angkor Wat with Chief of State Norodom Sihanouk. According to historian Milton Osbourne, her visit was “the start of the repair to Cambodian-US relations, which had been at a very low ebb”. She also attended the funeral services of Martin Luther King, Jr. in Atlanta, Georgia, in April 1968, despite her initial reluctance due to the crowds and reminders of President Kennedy’s death.

1968

The January 1968 Tet offensive in Vietnam resulted in a drop in President Johnson’s poll numbers, and Robert Kennedy’s advisors urged him to enter the upcoming presidential race. When Art Buchwald asked him if he intended to run, Robert replied, “That depends on what Jackie wants me to do”. She met with him around this time and encouraged him to run after she had previously advised him to not follow Jack, but to “be yourself”. Privately, she worried about his safety; she believed that Bobby was more disliked than her husband had been and that there was “so much hatred” in the United States. She confided in him about these feelings, but by her own account, he was “fatalistic” like her. Despite her concerns, Jacqueline campaigned for her brother-in-law and supported him, and at one point even showed outright optimism that through his victory, members of the Kennedy family would once again occupy the White House.

Just after midnight PDT on June 5, 1968, an enraged Palestinian gunman named Sirhan Sirhan mortally wounded Robert Kennedy minutes after he and a crowd of his supporters had been celebrating his victory in the California Democratic presidential primary. Jacqueline Kennedy rushed to Los Angeles to join his wife Ethel, her brother-in-law Ted Kennedy, and the other Kennedy family members at his hospital bedside. Bobby Kennedy never regained consciousness and died 26 hours after the shooting.

After Robert Kennedy’s death in 1968, Jacqueline reportedly suffered a relapse of the depression she had suffered in the days following her husband’s assassination nearly five years prior. She came to fear for her life and those of her two children, saying: “If they’re killing Kennedys, then my children are targets … I want to get out of this country”.

On October 20, 1968, Kennedy married her long-time friend Aristotle Onassis, a wealthy Greek shipping magnate who was able to provide the privacy and security she sought for herself and her children. The wedding took place on Skorpios, Onassis’ private Greek island in the Ionian Sea. After marrying Onassis, she took the legal name Jacqueline Onassis and consequently lost her right to Secret Service protection, which is an entitlement of a widow of a U.S. president. The marriage brought her considerable adverse publicity. The fact that Aristotle was divorced and his former wife Athina Livanos was still living led to speculation that Jacqueline might be excommunicated by the Roman Catholic church, though that concern was explicitly dismissed by Boston’s Archbishop, Cardinal Richard Cushing as “nonsense”. She was condemned by some as a “public sinner”, and became the target of paparazzi who followed her everywhere and nicknamed her “Jackie O”.

In 1968, billionaire heiress Doris Duke, whom Onassis was friends with, appointed her as the vice president of the Newport Restoration Foundation. Onassis publicly championed the foundation.

1973

Aristotle Onassis’ health deteriorated rapidly following the death of his son Alexander in a plane crash in 1973. He died of respiratory failure at age 69 in Paris on March 15, 1975. His financial legacy was severely limited under Greek law, which dictated how much a non-Greek surviving spouse could inherit. After two years of legal wrangling, Kennedy eventually accepted a settlement of $26 million from Christina Onassis—Aristotle’s daughter and sole heir—and waived all other claims to the Onassis estate.

1975

After the death of her second husband, Onassis returned permanently to the United States, splitting her time between Manhattan, Martha’s Vineyard, and the Kennedy compound in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts. In 1975, she became a consulting editor at Viking Press, a position that she held for two years.

1977

After almost a decade of avoiding participation in political events, Onassis attended the 1976 Democratic National Convention and stunned the assembled delegates when she appeared in the visitors’ gallery. She resigned from Viking Press in 1977 after John Leonard of The New York Times stated that Onassis held some responsibility for Viking’s publication of the Jeffrey Archer novel Shall We Tell the President?, set in a fictional future presidency of Ted Kennedy and describing an assassination plot against him. Two years later, she appeared alongside her mother-in-law Rose Kennedy at Faneuil Hall in Boston when Ted Kennedy announced that he was going to challenge incumbent president Jimmy Carter for the Democratic nomination for president. She participated in the subsequent presidential campaign, which was unsuccessful.

1981

Jaclyn Smith portrays Kennedy in the 1981 television film Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy, depicting Kennedy’s life until the end of the JFK presidency. The film’s producer Louis Rudolph stated an interest in creating a “positive portrait of a woman who I thought had been very much maligned,” comments that were interpreted by John J. O’Connor of The New York Times as erasing any chances of critique toward Kennedy. Though Smith received praise for her performance, with Marilynn Preston calling her “convincing in an impossible role”, Tom Shales wrote “Jaclyn Smith couldn’t act her way out of a Gucci bag”.

1983

Blair Brown portrays Kennedy in the 1983 miniseries Kennedy, set during the Kennedy presidency. Brown used wigs and makeup to better resemble Kennedy and said through playing the role she gained a different view of the assassination: “I realized that this was a woman witnessing the public execution of her husband.” Jason Bailey praised her performance, while Andrea Mullaney noted her resemblance to Kennedy and general shyness. Brown was nominated for a television BAFTA as Best Actress and a Golden Globe as Best Actress in a Miniseries or Television Film.

1991

Marianna Bishop, Sarah Michelle Gellar, and Roma Downey portray Kennedy in the 1991 miniseries A Woman Named Jackie, covering her entire life until the death of Aristotle Onassis. Of being contacted for the role, Downey reflected: “I thought I was a strange choice because I didn’t think I looked anything like her and I was Irish.” Half of Downey’s wardrobe was designed by Shelley Komarov and Downey stated that though she had long harbored “great respect and admiration” for Kennedy, she was unaware of the troubles in her childhood. Reviewer Rick Kogan praised Downey with doing “a surprisingly fine job in the demanding title role”, while Howard Rosenberg lamented Downey’s performance failing to “pierce this thick glaze of superficiality”. Ability credited the role with raising Downey’s profile. In 1992, the miniseries won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Miniseries.

1992

Rhoda Griffis portrays Kennedy in the 1992 film Love Field, set shortly before and in the aftermath of JFK’s assassination. It was Griffis’ feature film debut. Griffis said she had been told by her orthodontist of her resemblance to Kennedy and was cast as her upon walking into the auditions for the role.

1993

In November 1993, Jacqueline was thrown from her horse while participating in a fox hunt in Middleburg, Virginia, and was taken to the hospital to be examined. A swollen lymph node was discovered in her groin, which was initially diagnosed by the doctor to be caused by an infection. The fall from the horse contributed to her deteriorating health over the next six months. In December, Onassis developed new symptoms, including a stomach ache and swollen lymph nodes in her neck, and was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma, a blood cancer. She began chemotherapy in January 1994 and publicly announced the diagnosis, stating that the initial prognosis was good. She continued to work at Doubleday, but by March the cancer had spread to her spinal cord and brain, and by May to her liver and was deemed terminal. Onassis made her last trip home from New York Hospital–Cornell Medical Center on May 18, 1994. The following night at 10:15 p.m., she died in her sleep in her Manhattan apartment at age 64. In the morning, John F. Kennedy, Jr. announced his mother’s death to the press, stating that she had been “surrounded by her friends and her family and her books, and the people and the things that she loved”. He added that “She did it in her very own way, and on her own terms, and we all feel lucky for that.”

1994

On May 23, 1994, her funeral Mass was held a few blocks away from her apartment at the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola, the Catholic parish where she was baptized in 1929 and confirmed as a teenager. She was interred at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia, alongside President Kennedy, their son Patrick, and their stillborn daughter Arabella. President Bill Clinton delivered a eulogy at her graveside service. At the time of her death, Onassis was survived by her children Caroline and John Jr., three grandchildren, sister Lee Radziwill, son-in-law Edwin Schlossberg, and half-brother James Lee Auchincloss. She left an estate that its executors valued at $43.7 million.

2000

Sally Taylor-Isherwood, Emily VanCamp, and Joanne Whalley portray Onassis in the 2000 television miniseries Jackie Bouvier Kennedy Onassis, covering chronologically her entire life. Whalley prepared for the role by listening to recordings of Kennedy’s voice along with working with a dialect coach; by the end of production, she developed an attachment to Kennedy. Laura Fries assessed Whalley as lacking Kennedy’s charisma despite being “soulful and regal” in her own right while Ron Wertheimer viewed Whalley as being passive in the role and lamented “the filmmakers render Jackie as Forrest Gump in a pillbox hat, someone who keeps passing close to the center of things without really touching – or being touched by – very much.”

Stephanie Romanov portrays Kennedy in the 2000 film Thirteen Days, taking place during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Philip French of The Guardian noted her small role and being out of “the loop” was accurate of women’s roles in “the early Sixties”. Laura Clifford called Romanov “unconvincing” in the role.

2001

Jill Hennessy portrays Kennedy in the 2001 television film Jackie, Ethel, Joan: The Women of Camelot. Hennessy prepared for the performance by watching hours of archival footage of Kennedy and cited one of the reasons for her favoring of the miniseries was its distinctiveness in not focusing “strictly on the men or only on Jackie”. Reviewers Anita Gates and Terry Kelleher believed Hennessy brought “elegance” to the role while Steve Oxman panned the performance: “Hennessy simply doesn’t possess the right natural grace. But this pic has a habit of telling us more that it shows us, and the actress manages to communicate the most important elements of the story without ever making it especially convincing.”

2003

In addition to her work as an editor, Onassis participated in cultural and architectural preservation. In the 1970s, she led a historic preservation campaign to save Grand Central Terminal from demolition and renovate the structure in Manhattan. A plaque inside the terminal acknowledges her prominent role in its preservation. In the 1980s, she was a major figure in protests against a planned skyscraper at Columbus Circle that would have cast large shadows on Central Park; the project was cancelled. A later project proceeded despite protests: a large twin-towered skyscraper, the Time Warner Center, was completed in 2003. Her notable historic preservation efforts also include her influence in the campaign to save Olana, the home of Frederic Edwin Church in upstate New York.

Jacqueline Bisset portrays Onassis in the 2003 film America’s Prince: The John F. Kennedy Jr. Story. Bisset said the glasses she used during the film were holdovers from a prior role in The Greek Tycoon. Neil Genzlinger thought Bisset “should have known better” in taking on the role while Kristen Tauer wrote Bisset portraying Onassis as a mother was a “different central light than many proceeding films”.

2009

Jeanne Tripplehorn portrays Onassis in the 2009 film Grey Gardens for a single scene. Tripplehorn said questions she had about Edith Bouvier Beale that she thought would be answered by being a part of the film remained unsolved. Tripplehorn received diverse reactions to her performance while Brian Lowry noted her resemblance to Onassis and small role.

2011

Jacqueline Kennedy remains one of the most popular First Ladies. She was featured 27 times on the annual Gallup list of the top 10 most admired people of the second half of the 20th century; this number is superseded by only Billy Graham and Queen Elizabeth II and is higher than that of any U.S. president. In 2011, she was ranked in fifth place in a list of the five most influential First Ladies of the twentieth century for her “profound effect on American society”. In 2014, she ranked third place in a Siena College Institute survey, behind Eleanor Roosevelt and Abigail Adams. In 2015, she was included in a list of the top ten influential U.S. First Ladies due to the admiration for her based around “her fashion sense and later after her husband’s assassination, for her poise and dignity”. In 2020, Time magazine included her name on its list of 100 Women of the Year. She was named Woman of the Year 1962 for her efforts in uplifting the American history and art.

Katie Holmes portrays Kennedy in the 2011 miniseries The Kennedys, set during the Kennedy presidency and its 2017 sequel The Kennedys: After Camelot, focusing on her life after 1968. Mary McNamara and Hank Stuever regarded Holmes’ performance with neutrality in their reviews of The Kennedys while Hadley Freeman called her “bloodless” in the role. Holmes stated reprising the role was a “bigger challenge” for having to act through later periods of Kennedy’s life. When asked of the concurrent Jackie film, Holmes said, “I think its really exciting. It’s just is a testament to how amazing Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis was and how much she meant to our country.” Holmes also stated both should be watched due to covering different periods of Jacqueline’s life. In The Kennedys: After Camelot, Holmes’ performance was viewed favorably by Daniel Feinberg and Allison Keane while Kristi Turnquist panned her.

2012

In 2012, Time magazine included Kennedy on its All-TIME 100 Fashion Icons list. In 2016, Forbes included her on the list 10 Fashion Icons and the Trends They Made Famous.

2013

Minka Kelly portrays Kennedy in the 2013 film The Butler, giving the film’s protagonist Cecil one of her husband’s neckties after his assassination. Kelly said she was intimidated and scared taking on the role. Kelly admitted to having difficulty with perfecting Kennedy’s voice, going “to sleep listening to her”, and having discomfort with the wool clothing associated with the role.

Ginnifer Goodwin portrays her in the 2013 television film Killing Kennedy. Goodwin used intimate photos to better portray Kennedy and was concerned “to do her justice and to play her as accurately as possible without ever doing an impression of her”. Costar Rob Lowe said of seeing Goodwin in the pink Chanel suit, “It made it real. If I were under any illusions about what we were doing, seeing her in that iconic moment was, I would say, sobering.” Tom Carson wrote that Goodwin’s “trademark vulnerability humanizes Jackie considerably” while Bruce Miller called her a miscast and Robert Lloyd and Brian Lowry panned her performance.

2016

Kim Allen portrays Kennedy in the 2016 film LBJ. Ray Bennett noted in his review of the film that Allen was in a non-speaking role.

Natalie Portman portrays Kennedy in the 2016 film Jackie, set during the JFK presidency and the immediate aftermath of the assassination. Portman admitted being intimidated taking the role and doing research in preparation for filming. Nigel M. Smith wrote that by portraying Kennedy, Portman was “taking on arguably the biggest challenge of her career”. Manohla Dargis, David Edelstein, and Peter Bradshaw praised her performance. Portman was nominated for Best Actress by Academy Awards, AACTA Awards, AWFJ, AFCA, and BSFC, and won the category by the Online Film Critics Society.

Upcoming Birthday

Currently, Jackie Kennedy is 91 years, 11 months and 26 days old. Jackie Kennedy will celebrate 92nd birthday on a Wednesday 28th of July 2021.

Find out about Jackie Kennedy birthday activities in timeline view here.

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