Life following the assassination (1963–1975)
Mourning period and
later public appearances
Don't let it be forgotten,
that once there was a spot, for one brief, shining moment that was known as
Camelot.
There'll be great
presidents again ... but there will never be another Camelot.—Jackie describing the years of her
husband's presidency for Life
On November 29, 1963—a week after her husband's
assassination—Kennedy was interviewed in Hyannis
Port by Theodore H. White of Life
magazine. In that session, she compared the Kennedy years in the White House to King Arthur's mythical Camelot, commenting that the President often
played the title song of Lerner and
Loewe's musical recording before retreating to bed. She also quoted Queen Guinevere from the musical,
trying to express how the loss felt. The era of the Kennedy administration has
subsequently been referred to as the "Camelot
Era", although historians have later argued that the comparison is not
appropriate, with Robert Dallek
stating that Kennedy's "effort to
lionize [her husband] must have provided a therapeutic shield against immobilizing
grief."
Kennedy and her children remained in the White House for two
weeks following the assassination. Wanting to "do something nice for Jackie", President Johnson offered an ambassadorship to France to her, aware of her heritage and fondness for the
country's culture, but she turned the offer down, as well as follow-up offers
of ambassadorships to Mexico and the
United Kingdom. At her request,
Johnson renamed the Florida space center
the John F. Kennedy Space Center a
week after the assassination. Kennedy later publicly praised Johnson for his
kindness to her.
Kennedy spent 1964 in mourning and made few public
appearances. 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.
In the following years, Kennedy attended selected memorial
dedications to her late husband. She also oversaw the establishment of the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and
Museum, which is the repository for official papers of the Kennedy Administration. Designed by architect I.M. Pei, it is situated next
to the University of Massachusetts
campus in Boston.
Despite having commissioned William Manchester's authorized account of President Kennedy's
death, The Death of a President,
Kennedy was subject to significant media attention in 1966–1967 when she and Robert Kennedy tried to block its 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, was prepared to take to preserve John's public image.
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 Osborne, her visit was "the start of the repair to Cambodian-US
relations, which had been at 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.
Relationship with
Robert F. Kennedy
After her husband's assassination, Jacqueline Kennedy relied heavily on her brother-in-law Robert F. Kennedy; she observed him to be the "least like his father" of the
Kennedy brothers. He had been a source of support after she had suffered a
miscarriage early in her marriage; it was he, not her husband, who stayed with
her in the hospital. In the aftermath of the assassination, Robert became a
surrogate father for her children until eventual demands by his own large
family and his responsibilities as attorney general required him to reduce
attention. He credited her with convincing him to stay in politics, and she
supported his 1964 run for United States senator from New York.
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 not to 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
Kennedy 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, and the
other Kennedy family members at his hospital bedside. Robert Kennedy never regained consciousness and died the following
day. He was 42 years old.
Marriage to Aristotle
Onassis
After Robert
Kennedy's death in 1968, Kennedy 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, Jacqueline
Kennedy married her long-time friend Aristotle
Onassis, a 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's 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 that followed her
everywhere and nicknamed her "Jackie
O".
In 1968, billionaire
heiress Doris Duke, with whom Jacqueline
Onassis was friends, appointed her as the vice president of the Newport Restoration Foundation. Onassis
publicly championed the foundation.
During their marriage, Jacqueline
and Aristotle Onassis inhabited six different residences: her 15-room Fifth Avenue apartment in
Manhattan, her horse farm in Peapack-Gladstone,
New Jersey, his Avenue Foch
apartment in Paris, his private island Skorpios, his house in Athens, and his yacht Christina O. Onassis ensured that
her children continued a connection with the Kennedy family by having Ted
Kennedy visit them often. She developed a close relationship with Ted, and from
then on he was involved in her public appearances.
Aristotle Onassis's
health deteriorated rapidly following the death of his son Alexander in a plane
crash in 1973. He died of respiratory failure aged 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, Jacqueline Onassis
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.
Later years
(1975–1990s)
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.
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 she 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.
Following her resignation from Viking Press, Onassis was hired by Doubleday, where she worked as
an associate editor under an old friend, John
Turner Sargent, Sr. Among the books she edited for the company are Larry Gonick's The Cartoon History of the Universe, the English translation of the
three volumes of Naghib Mahfuz's Cairo Trilogy (with Martha Levin), and autobiographies of ballerina Gelsey Kirkland, singer-songwriter
Carly Simon, and fashion icon Diana
Vreeland. She also encouraged Dorothy
West, her neighbor on Martha's
Vineyard and one of the last surviving members of the Harlem Renaissance, to complete the novel The Wedding (1995), a multi-generational story about race, class,
wealth, and power in the U.S.
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 canceled. A later project proceeded despite protests: a large
twin-towered skyscraper, the Time Warner
Center, was completed in 2003. Her historic preservation efforts also
include her influence in the campaign to save Olana, the home of Frederic Edwin Church in upstate New
York. She was awarded the Fine Arts
Federation medal for her devotion to the cause of historic preservation in New York City.
Onassis remained the subject of considerable press
attention, especially from the paparazzi photographer Ron Galella, who followed her around and photographed her as she
went about her normal activities; he took candid photos of her without her
permission. She ultimately obtained a restraining order against him, and the
situation brought attention to the problem of paparazzi photography. From 1980
until her death, Onassis maintained a close relationship with Maurice Tempelsman, a Belgian-born
industrialist and diamond merchant who was her companion and personal financial
adviser.
In the early 1990s, Onassis supported Bill Clinton and
contributed money to his presidential campaign. Following the election, she met
with First Lady Hillary Clinton and
advised her on raising a child in the White
House. In her memoir Living History, Clinton wrote that Onassis was "a source of inspiration and advice for
me". Democratic consultant Ann
Lewis observed that Onassis had reached out to the Clintons "in a way she has not always acted
toward leading Democrats in the past".
Illness, death and
funeral
In November 1993, Onassis 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, brain and liver and by May it 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, with
her children by her side.
In the morning, her son, 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."
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—and asked for no cameras to film the event, for
privacy. 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.
She left an estate that its executors valued at $43.7
million.
Legacy
Popularity
Jacqueline Kennedy's marriage to Aristotle Onassis caused
her popularity to decline sharply among an American public who viewed it as a
betrayal of the assassinated president. Her lavish lifestyle as Onassis's "trophy wife", in contrast to "the shy, selfless, and sacrificing
mother the American public had come to respect" as First Lady, led the
press to portray her as "a
spendthrift and a reckless woman".
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis took conscious control of her
public image and, by the time of her death, succeeded in rehabilitating it. By
moving back to New York City after Onassis's death, working as an editor for Viking Press and Doubleday, focusing on her children and grandchildren, and
participating in charitable causes, she reversed her "reckless spendthrift" image. She also reestablished her
relationship with the Kennedy family and supported the John F. Kennedy Library and Museum.
Onassis 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 surpassed by only Billy Graham
and Queen Elizabeth II and is higher
than that of any U.S. president.
Tina Turner and Jackie Joyner-Kersee have cited Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis as
influences.
Style icon
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
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 preferred French couture, particularly the work of Chanel, Balenciaga, and Givenchy, but was aware that in her
role as First Lady, she would be
expected to wear American designers' work. After noticing that her taste for
Paris fashion was being criticized in the press, she wrote to the fashion
editor Diana Vreeland to ask for suitable American designers, particularly
those who could reproduce the Paris look. After considering the letter, which
expressed her dislike of prints and her preference for "terribly simple, covered-up clothes," Vreeland
recommended Norman Norell, who was
considered America's first designer and known for his high-end simplicity and
fine quality work. She also suggested
Ben Zuckerman, another highly regarded tailor who regularly offered
re-interpretations of Paris couture, and the sportswear designer Stella Sloat, who occasionally offered
Givenchy copies. Kennedy's first choice for her Inauguration Day coat was
originally a purple wool Zuckerman model that was based on a Pierre Cardin design, but she instead
settled on a fawn Cassini coat and wore the Zuckerman for a tour of the White House with Mamie Eisenhower.
In her role as First
Lady, Kennedy preferred to wear clean-cut suits with a skirt hem down to
middle of the knee, three-quarter sleeves on notch-collar jackets, sleeveless
A-line dresses, above-the-elbow gloves, low-heel pumps, and pillbox hats.
Dubbed the "Jackie" look,
these clothing items rapidly became fashion trends in the Western world. More
than any other First Lady, her style
was copied by commercial manufacturers and a large segment of young women. Her
influential bouffant hairstyle, described as a "grown-up exaggeration of little girls' hair," was
created by Mr. Kenneth, who worked for her from 1954 until 1986. Her tastes in
eyewear were also influential, the most famous of which were the bespoke pairs
designed for her by French designer, François
Pinton. The coinage 'Jackie O
glasses' is still used today to refer to this style of oversized,
oval-lensed sunglasses.
After leaving the White
House, Kennedy underwent a style change. Her new looks consisted of
wide-leg pantsuits, silk Hermès headscarves, and large, round, dark sunglasses.
She began wearing jeans in public as part of a casualization of her look.
Jacqueline Kennedy
Onassis 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.
Kennedy, a Catholic, was known for wearing a mantilla at
Mass and in the presence of the Pope.
Mary Tyler Moore's
Dick Van Dyke Show character Laura
Petrie, who symbolized the "feel-good
nature" of the Kennedy White
House, often dressed like Kennedy.
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.
In 2012, Time
magazine included Jacqueline Kennedy
Onassis 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.
Historical
assessments
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.
Jacqueline Kennedy
Onassis is seen as being customary in her role as First Lady, though Frank N.
Magill argued that her life was validation that "fame and celebrity" changed the way that first ladies are
evaluated historically. Hamish Bowles,
curator of the "Jacqueline Kennedy:
The White House Years" exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, attributed her popularity to a sense of
unknown that was felt in her withdrawal from the public which he dubbed "immensely appealing". After
her death, Kelly Barber referred to Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis as "the most intriguing woman in the
world", furthering that her stature was also due to her affiliation
with valuable causes. Historian Carl
Sferrazza Anthony summarized that the former First Lady "became an
aspirational figure of that era, one whose privilege might not be easily
reached by a majority of Americans but which others could strive to
emulate". Since the late 2000s, Onassis's traditional persona has been
invoked by commentators when referring to fashionable political spouses. A wide
variety of commentators have positively credited the work of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis in restoring
the White House, including Hugh Sidey, Letitia Baldrige, Laura Bush,
Kathleen P. Galop, and Carl Anthony.
Since 1982 Siena
College Research Institute has periodically conducted surveys asking
historians to assess American first ladies according to a cumulative score on
the independent criteria of their background, value to the country,
intelligence, courage, accomplishments, integrity, leadership, being their own
women, public image, and value to the president. Consistently, Onassis has
ranked among the three-eight highly regarded first ladies in these surveys. In
terms of cumulative assessment, Onassis has been ranked:
8th-best of 42 in
1982
7th-best of 37 in
1993
4th-best of 38 in 2003
3rd-best of 38 in 2008
3rd-best of 39 in
2014
In the 2008 Siena
Research Institute survey, Onassis was ranked in the top-five of all
criteria, ranking the 2nd-highest in background, 4th-highest in intelligence,
2nd-highest in value to the country, 4th-highest in being her "own woman", 4th-highest in
integrity, 5th-highest in her accomplishments, 2nd-highest in courage,
4th-highest in leadership, 1st in public image, and 3rd-highest in her value to
the president. In the 2003 survey, Onassis made the top-five in half of the
categories, being ranked 1st-highest in background, 5th-highest in
intelligence, 4th-highest in courage, 4th-highest in value to the country, and
1st-highest in public image. In the 2014 Siena Research Institute survey, in
the rankings of 20th and 21st century American first ladies in additional
survey questions, Onassis was ranked 2nd-highest for management of family life,
4th-highest for advancement of women's issues, 3rd-greatest as a political
asset, 4th-strongest public communicator, and 2nd-highest for creation of a
lasting legacy. In the 2014 survey, Onassis and her first husband were also
ranked the 6th-highest out of 39 first couples in terms of being a "power couple".
In the 1982 Sienna
College Research Institute survey, Onassis had been ranked the lowest in
the criteria of integrity. In subsequent iterations of the survey, historians'
regard for her integrity markedly improved. The initial disapproving view of
her integrity may have been due to sentiments towards her marriage to Aristotle Onassis. Historians' overall
opinions towards Onassis as a whole appear to have become more favorable in the
subsequent years as she, in her second widowhood, demonstrated her independence
with her career in publishing.
Honors and memorials
A high school named Jacqueline
Kennedy Onassis High School for International Careers was dedicated by New York City in 1995, the first high
school named in her honor. It is located at 120 West 46th Street between Sixth
and Seventh Avenues, and was formerly the High School of Performing Arts.
Public School 66
in the Richmond Hill neighborhood of
Queens, New York City was renamed in
honor of the former First Lady.
The main reservoir in Central
Park, located in Manhattan near her apartment, was renamed in her honor as
the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis
Reservoir.
The main entry foyer on East
42nd Street, across from Pershing
Square, into Grand Central Terminal
in New York City was renamed The Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Foyer,
in honor of her work in the 1970s of saving the terminal.
The Municipal Art
Society of New York presents the Jacqueline
Kennedy Onassis Medal to an individual whose work and deeds have made an
outstanding contribution to the city of New York. The medal was named in honor
of the former MAS board member in 1994, for her tireless efforts to preserve
and protect New York City's great
architecture. She made her last public appearance at the Municipal Art Society two months before her May 1994 death.
Jacqueline Bouvier
Kennedy Onassis Hall at the George
Washington University (her alma mater) in Washington, DC.
The White House's
East Garden was renamed the Jacqueline
Kennedy Garden in her honor.
In 2007, her name and her first husband's were included on
the list of people aboard the Japanese
Kaguya mission to the Moon launched on September 14, as part of The Planetary Society's "Wish Upon The Moon" campaign.
In addition, they are included on the list aboard NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter mission.
A school and an award at the American Ballet Theater have been named after her in honor of her
childhood study of ballet.
The companion book for a series of interviews between
mythologist Joseph Campbell and Bill Moyers, The Power of Myth, was created under her direction prior to her
death. The book's editor, Betty Sue
Flowers, writes in the Editor's Note
to The Power of Myth: "I am
grateful ... to Jacqueline Lee Bouvier Kennedy Onassis, the Doubleday editor,
whose interest in the books of Joseph Campbell was the prime mover in the
publication of this book." A year after her death in 1994, Moyers
dedicated the companion book for his PBS series, The Language of Life as follows: "To Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.
As you sail on to Ithaka." Ithaka was a reference to the C.P. Cavafy poem
that Maurice Tempelsman read at her funeral’
A white gazebo is dedicated to Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis on North
Madison Street in Middleburg,
Virginia. The First Lady and President Kennedy frequented the small town of
Middleburg and intended to retire in the nearby town of Atoka. She also hunted with the Middleburg Hunt numerous times.
Portrayals
Jaclyn Smith portrays Jacqueline Kennedy in the 1981
television film Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy, depicting her 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 her. 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".
Blair Brown
portrays Jacqueline 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.
Marianna Bishop,
Sarah Michelle Gellar, and Roma
Downey portray Jacqueline Kennedy
Onassis 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 Jacqueline
Kennedy Onassis, 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.
Rhoda Griffis
portrays Jacqueline Kennedy in the
1992 film Love Field, set shortly
before and in the aftermath of JFK's assassination. It was Griffis's 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.
Sally
Taylor-Isherwood, Emily VanCamp, and Joanne
Whalley portray Jacqueline Kennedy
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 Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis's voice
along with working with a dialect coach; by the end of production, she developed
an attachment to her. Laura Fries assessed
Whalley as lacking Jacqueline Kennedy
Onassis'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 Jacqueline 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.
Jill Hennessy
portrays Jacqueline Kennedy in the
2001 television film Jackie, Ethel, and
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."
Jacqueline Bisset
portrays Jacqueline Kennedy 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 Kennedy as a mother was a "different central light than many
proceeding films".
Jeanne Tripplehorn
portrays Jacqueline Kennedy 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 unresolved. Tripplehorn received diverse reactions to
her performance while Brian Lowry
noted her resemblance to Kennedy and small role.
Katie Holmes
portrays Jacqueline 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's 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 it’s 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 Jackie's life. In The
Kennedys: After Camelot, Holmes's performance was viewed favorably by Daniel Feinberg and Allison Keane while Kristi Turnquist panned her.
Minka Kelly
portrays Jacqueline 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 Jacqueline 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.
Kim Allen
portrays Jacqueline 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 Jacqueline 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.
Jodi Balfour
portrays Jacqueline Kennedy in the
2017 eighth episode of the second season of Netflix's drama series, The
Crown, titled "Dear Mrs.
Kennedy", set during the June 1961 visit of the Kennedy couple to Buckingham Palace and the immediate
reaction to the assassination of John F.
Kennedy.
Comments
Post a Comment