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Sunday, February 16, 2014

Born Today- Margaux Hemingway

Quoted as saying " I lived my whole life as Ernest Hemingway."

Margaux Hemingway

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Margaux Hemingway
Margaux Hemingway.jpg
Margaux Hemingway
Born Margot Louise Hemingway
February 16, 1954[1]
Portland, Oregon, U.S.
Died July 1, 1996 (aged 42)
Santa Monica, California, U.S.
Cause of death
Suicide by drug overdose
Resting place
Ketchum Cemetery
Occupation Model, actress
Spouse(s) Erroll Wetanson (m. 1975–78)
Bernard Foucher (m. 1979–87)
Parents Puck Hemingway
Jack Hemingway
Relatives Mariel Hemingway (sister)
Ernest Hemingway (grandfather)
Cindy Crawford (tenth cousin)[2]
Margaux Louise Hemingway (February 16, 1954[1] – July 1, 1996) was an American fashion model and actress.

Early life

Born Margot Louise Hemingway in Portland, Oregon, she was the older sister of actress Mariel Hemingway and the granddaughter of writer Ernest Hemingway. When she learned that she was named after the wine, Château Margaux, which her parents, Puck and Jack Hemingway (eldest son of Ernest), were drinking the night she was conceived, she changed the original spelling from "Margot" to "Margaux" to match.[3]

In addition to Mariel, she had another sister, Joan. She grew up in Idaho on her grandfather's farm in Ketchum. She struggled with a variety of disorders in addition to alcoholism, including depression, bulimia and epilepsy. She allowed a video recording to be made of a therapy session related to her bulimia and it was broadcast on television. Hemingway also suffered from dyslexia.[4][5]

Early career as a model

At six feet tall, Hemingway experienced success as a model, including a million-dollar contract for Fabergé as the spokesmodel for Babe perfume in the 1970s.[6] This was the first million-dollar contract ever awarded to a fashion model.[7] She also appeared on the covers of Vogue, Elle, Cosmopolitan, and Harper's Bazaar, and on the June 16, 1975 cover of Time, which dubbed her one of the "new beauties".[8] The September 1, 1975 cover issue of American Vogue called Hemingway "New York's New Supermodel."[9]

In an E! True Hollywood Story that profiled Hemingway's life, her mentor and close friend Zachary Selig discussed how he helped launch her early career with his initial marketing and public relations work as she became a global celebrity, and he introduced her to yoga and the Solar Kundalini "Codex Relaxatia" paradigm as tools for success and to overcome some of her debilitating mental disorders. Selig and Hemingway spent time with the Hemingway family at their property in Ketchum adjacent to Sun Valley, where they both studied Solar Kundalini, yoga and meditation together. Hemingway continued using these relaxation skills for the rest of her life.[10]

During the height of her modeling career in the mid-to-late 1970s, Hemingway was a regular attendee of New York City's exclusive discothèque Studio 54, often in the company of such celebrities as Liza Minnelli, Halston, Bianca Jagger, Andy Warhol and Grace Jones. It was at such social mixers that she began to experiment with alcohol and drugs.[11]

She made her film debut in the 1976 Lamont Johnson-directed drama Lipstick, alongside her fourteen-year-old sister Mariel.

Personal life and later career

Her first marriage, to Errol Wetanson, ended in divorce. They met when, at 19, she accompanied her father to the Plaza Hotel in New York City on a business trip. Four months later she moved from Idaho to New York City to live with Wetanson as a guest at Selig's apartment at 12 East 72nd Street, a residence that was owned by heiress Gloria Vanderbilt. It was there that Selig made Hemingways's business and social introductions to his friends, such as Marian McEvoy, fashion editor at Women's Wear Daily; photographer Francesco Scavullo; fashion designer Halston; Vogue magazine fashion editor Francis Stein; and Jon Revson, Selig's cousin. Revson, a scion of the Revson family that created Revlon cosmetics, declined Selig's offer for Hemingway to endorse Revlon, whereas later Fabergé signed her on with the largest salary of its day. Revson did come to visit both Selig and Hemingway (with the Hemingway family in Ketchum, Idaho) to congratulate her after Hemingway's Time magazine cover appeared in June 1975. Marian McEvoy quickly interviewed Margaux at a party given by Selig, which resulted in Hemingway's Women's Wear Daily front- and back-page story that launched Hemingway into the fashion limelight.[10]

On the rebound, Hemingway married Venezuelan Bernard Fauchier, and they lived in Paris for a year. She also divorced him in 1985 after six years. Like her grandfather, she experienced occasional bouts of clinical depression all through her life. After a skiing accident in 1984, she gained 75 pounds and became more and more depressed. In 1987, she checked into the Betty Ford Center. Making a comeback, Hemingway appeared on the cover of Playboy magazine in May 1990, and she asked Playboy to hire Selig as the creative director for her cover story. It was shot in Belize.[12]

Hemingway experienced familial dramas throughout her life. Her relationship with her mother, Puck, was fraught with tension, but they did reconcile prior to Puck's death from cancer in 1988. She also experienced intense competition with her younger sister Mariel, who received greater accolades for her acting. In the 1990s, Hemingway went forward with allegations that her godfather had molested her as a child; her father, Jack, and stepmother, Angela, resented the allegations and stopped speaking to her. Angela told People magazine, "Jack and I did not talk to her for two years. She constantly lies. The whole family won't have anything to do with her. She's nothing but an angry woman."[13]
She supported herself later in life by appearing in a few direct-to-video films, autographing her nude photos from Playboy magazine, and endorsing a psychic telephone hotline owned by her cousin Adiel Hemingway. Shortly before her death, she was set to host the outdoor adventure series Wild Guide on the Discovery Channel.

The 2013 documentary film, Running from Crazy relating the Hemingway family story of suicide and drug addiction, contains documentary film excerpts filmed by Margaux Hemingway.[14]

Death

On July 1, 1996, one day before the anniversary of her grandfather's own suicide, Hemingway was found dead in her studio apartment in Santa Monica, at age 42. She had taken an overdose of phenobarbital, according to the Los Angeles County coroner's findings one month later.[15]
Though her death was ruled a suicide, family members disputed this finding.[7] Steve Crisman, Mariel Hemingway's then-husband in 1996, told People that year, "This was the best I'd seen her in years. She had gotten herself back together."[16] On a December 22, 2005, edition of Larry King Live, however, Mariel said she now accepts the death of Margaux as suicide.[17]
Her remains were cremated and buried in the Hemingway family plot in the Ketchum Cemetery in Idaho.

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1976 Lipstick Chris McCormick
1979 Killer Fish Gabrielle Alternative title: Naked Sun
1982 They Call Me Bruce? Karmen
1984 Over the Brooklyn Bridge Elizabeth Anderson
1984 Goma-2 Jacqueline Alternative title: The Killing Machine
1986 Portami la luna
Television movie
1991 La donna di una sera Ellen Foster
1991 Inner Sanctum Anna Rawlins
1992 Love Is Like That Jackie
1992 Deadly Rivals Agent Linda Howerton Credited as Margot Hemingway
1994 Double Obsession Heather Dwyer
1994 Inner Sanctum II Anna Rawlins
1994 Frame-Up II: The Cover-Up Jean Searage Alternative title: Deadly Conspiracy
1995 Vicious Kiss Lisa
1995 A comme acteur

1996 Dangerous Cargo Julie
1996 Backroads to Vegas
Television movie


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