That
was the Kennedy version of charm. Hanging tough was their idea of foreplay.
When I proposed a cover story about Jacqueline Kennedy, Evelyn Lincoln,
JFK's secretary, called back. "Mrs. Kennedy," she said, "isn't
sure she wants to do an interview for your magazine. She's still upset about
the last story."
We
tangoed. "Would you tell Mrs. Kennedy that a cover story about her during
the primaries could only be helpful. I know she'll understand."
She
did and we went ahead. What had upset her (read Bobby, she and JFK never
bothered with grudges) was an earlier piece. After losing the vice-presidential
nomination the year before, the Kennedys had gone into a full-court press for
1960. Our story had taken a hard look at JFK's record as a senator, including
the judgment by a colleague that, in his votes on civil rights and stand on
McCarthyism, the author of "Profiles in Courage" could have shown
less profile and more courage.
At
the cover shoot for the new story, I first met JFK. He came to the studio of
Howell Conant on schedule, but his wife was very late. He passed time asking
about Princess Grace. Conant was just back from Monaco photographing the former
Grace Kelly--he had made her famous years earlier with a Collier's cover.
As
Kennedy questioned Conant, it seemed more than idle chatter. Was he thinking
about a compliant movie-star wife rather than the woman who was now keeping him
waiting? Their marriage had been visibly shaky since JFK had gone off to
Aristotle Onassis' yacht after the 1956 convention, leaving behind his pregnant
wife, who had a miscarriage while he was away.
(That
the Kennedys and Kellys were very aware of one another would become clear for
me years later when Jacqueline Kennedy was musing about what her life would be like
as JFK’s widow. That famously soft voice hardened as she said emphatically, “I
don’t intend to become another Princess Grace!”)
Then,
for an hour, Kennedy sponged up everything I knew about New York politics and
kept asking for more. I had never met anyone with such insatiable curiosity and
grasp. He really wanted to know everything
and knew so much himself in astonishing detail. Drained and running very late,
I excused myself. Before I left, he looked past my shoulder and said,
"What do you do if your wife is always late?"
"Senator,"
I answered, "you can't win. Overlook it, you're not worried something
might have happened to her. Raise hell, you're a brute."
Soon afterward, Kennedy’s secretary called. He would be in Manhattan and wanted to see the pictures. Should someone bring them to his hotel? I asked. No, his father’s office was in the same building as mine. He would just stop in.
Next
day, JFK was leaning over my lightbox, looking at transparencies with a
magnifying glass. Every once in a while he would smile and exclaim,
“Excellent...This is first class, really first class.”
He
left the office expressing pleasure, shaking a few hands on the way out. The
cover was “first class,” another
small step on his way toward an amazing Presidency.
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