Billionaire Patricia Kluge Divorcee's
Kamis, 23 Juni 2011
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Billionaire Patricia Kluge Divorcee's Happy Ending Patricia Kluge took her post-nuptial windfall and opened a world-class winery—until hard times hit and Donald Trump had to bail her out. She tells Sandra McElwaine about his plans for the estate.
Patricia Kluge is happy at last. Longtime friend Donald Trump has come to her rescue. After weeks of gobbling up small parcels of her 2,000 acre foreclosed property in historic Charlottesville, Va., the flamboyant mega mogul—and new presidential aspirant—zeroed in and purchased the Kluge Estate Winery and may now add vintner extraordinaire to his high-profile résumé. It was a cool deal. He grabbed it for a little more than one fifth of the $28 million mortgage.
"My worst nightmare and personal Armageddon are finally over," said Kluge in her clipped English accent in a telephone interview on Saturday morning. "I'm thrilled beyond belief. Now finally I can relax, take a week off, and go on vacation." (Kluge is headed to Florida for what she calls much needed R&R; she and her husband, William Moses, "will be dancing everyday.")
"My worst nightmare and personal Armageddon are finally over," said Kluge in her clipped English accent in a telephone interview on Saturday morning. "I'm thrilled beyond belief. Now finally I can relax, take a week off, and go on vacation." (Kluge is headed to Florida for what she calls much needed R&R; she and her husband, William Moses, "will be dancing everyday.")
Rumors had swirled that the widow of her ex-husband, billionaire John Kluge, would buy the land, that a neighbor would take it over and destroy the vines, or another would plow up the Arnold Palmer golf course. But that is in the past. Now, "Donald plans to open it to the public and make it the most amazing experience in the world. Hopefully it will be the most visited place in America." A Disneyland, I ask? "Good lord," she responds with horror, "nothing that vulgar."
And though the master of the deal owns almost all of the acreage up to the front door of her grandiose Albemarle House—complete with private spa and beauty salon—he has yet to snag the luxurious show place, because he believes the current $16 million asking price is still too high. Kluge is undeterred and optimistic, saying Trump is negotiating with Bank of America, owner of the house, that all options are open, and that she is sure he will return her forlorn, empty mansion to its original glory. "I gave birth to the property," she says. "Donald believes in my vision, he loves my style and taste. He is astounded this has happened to us." (When Kluge called Trump to ask for financial help last fall, he approached various creditors but was rebuffed.)
Suddenly, she questions, "Who wants to live like that anymore, all that majesty and magnificence?"
She is especially thrilled that she and her husband have been asked to stay on to oversee the wines, which have been served at the White House and at Chelsea Clinton's wedding. "We were monumentally relevant to the world of wine," states Kluge. "Not just nationally, but internationally. London, Paris you name it. Donald has saved all that, now we are coming back, and we're coming back with a vengeance."
The saga of Patricia Kluge is one of glamour, sex, power, and money—and the luxurious lifestyle she so carefully crafted has crashed and burned. The era of conspicuous consumption for came to an end late last year when several banks foreclosed on the Charlottesville estate she had established in 1999. Then inJanuary Bank of America delivered the coup de grace, filing suit against Kluge, claiming she defaulted on three loans worth $23 million. The bank stepped in and seized Albemarle, adjacent to Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello.
And though the master of the deal owns almost all of the acreage up to the front door of her grandiose Albemarle House—complete with private spa and beauty salon—he has yet to snag the luxurious show place, because he believes the current $16 million asking price is still too high. Kluge is undeterred and optimistic, saying Trump is negotiating with Bank of America, owner of the house, that all options are open, and that she is sure he will return her forlorn, empty mansion to its original glory. "I gave birth to the property," she says. "Donald believes in my vision, he loves my style and taste. He is astounded this has happened to us." (When Kluge called Trump to ask for financial help last fall, he approached various creditors but was rebuffed.)
Suddenly, she questions, "Who wants to live like that anymore, all that majesty and magnificence?"
She is especially thrilled that she and her husband have been asked to stay on to oversee the wines, which have been served at the White House and at Chelsea Clinton's wedding. "We were monumentally relevant to the world of wine," states Kluge. "Not just nationally, but internationally. London, Paris you name it. Donald has saved all that, now we are coming back, and we're coming back with a vengeance."
The saga of Patricia Kluge is one of glamour, sex, power, and money—and the luxurious lifestyle she so carefully crafted has crashed and burned. The era of conspicuous consumption for came to an end late last year when several banks foreclosed on the Charlottesville estate she had established in 1999. Then inJanuary Bank of America delivered the coup de grace, filing suit against Kluge, claiming she defaulted on three loans worth $23 million. The bank stepped in and seized Albemarle, adjacent to Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello.
"Donald plans to open it to the public and make it the most amazing experience in the world. Hopefully it will be the most visited place in America."
Marie Ridder, a prominent Virginia environmentalist, dined on several occasions at the manse, where Kluge, a statuesque society vintner, 62, entertained movie stars, politicians, and international luminaries at pheasant and quail shoots, fox hunts, and lavish black-tie dinners. Albemarle is over the top and overdone, Ridder says: "It's really ridiculous and very pretentious. There were these grand busts of people everywhere, and even a private chapel. It was imitation British grandeur without the history to go with it."
Kluge and her third husband, former IBM executive William Moses, tried to save their pastoral property and stave off creditors in 2009 by putting it on the market for $100 million. (The price was ultimately reduced to $24 million.) Last June, the couple began auctioning off an assortment of treasures, including a massive 8-carat cabochon ruby ring, several initialed shooting guns, silver Faberge plates, and a well-worn frock by Arnold Scaasi, who designed Kluge's wedding gown.
Although these items fetched more than $15 million, Kluge and Moses were forced to retreat to far less ostentatious digs and now reside in a 6,000-square-foot spec home, the only house Kluge ever constructed on the land adjacent to the winery. (There are also reports she has purchased several apartments in Marrakech, Morocco, a resurgent haven for the chic and well-to-do.)
Kluge's neighborhood was in a tizzy. How could the woman who was once labeled the " Richest Brit in Virginia" be down and out in Charlottesville?
"Nobody knows anything, and nobody sees them anymore," said a longtime resident. "She's become a laughingstock, and that's sad."
Born in Iraq, the daughter an English translator father and a half-Iraqi half-Scottish mother, Patricia Maureen Rose attended a French convent school in Baghdad. She moved to London at 16 and then burst upon he swinging '60s scene as a belly dancer in a sleazy nightspot. There she met and married her first husband, Russell Gay, publisher of Knave, a steamy tabloid, and became a member of his soft-porn enterprise and a celebrity by posing nude and contributing to a cheeky sex-advice column.
A saucy, sultry 5-foot-10, with long, dark hair, she created quite a stir and did not lack for admirers. "I was hot looking in my twenties," Kluge told The Daily Telegraph. "I was gorgeous. It was a no-brainer."
Eventually Kluge tired of her spicy role and opted out. After ditching her career and her spouse, she headed for New York, where she met the married and mega-rich John Kluge, chairman of Metromedia and 35 years her senior. (John Kluge ultimately sold his company to Rupert Murdoch for a reported $4 billion and was dubbed the richest person in America by Forbes. Metromedia's radio and television stations would later form the core of what would become the immensely successful Fox TV network.)
When Kluge laid eyes on the exotic former centerfold, he was smitten and, before long, divorced. "John was so in love, he even converted to Catholicism to marry her," said Barbara Sinatra, a family friend.
John and Patricia tied the knot in St. Patrick's Cathedral in 1981. According to Marie Ridder, his wife's belly dancing became the main topic of John Kluge's conversation. "It was startling to sit next to him at dinner and have him tell you what an expert she was," says Ridder.
Marie Ridder, a prominent Virginia environmentalist, dined on several occasions at the manse, where Kluge, a statuesque society vintner, 62, entertained movie stars, politicians, and international luminaries at pheasant and quail shoots, fox hunts, and lavish black-tie dinners. Albemarle is over the top and overdone, Ridder says: "It's really ridiculous and very pretentious. There were these grand busts of people everywhere, and even a private chapel. It was imitation British grandeur without the history to go with it."
Kluge and her third husband, former IBM executive William Moses, tried to save their pastoral property and stave off creditors in 2009 by putting it on the market for $100 million. (The price was ultimately reduced to $24 million.) Last June, the couple began auctioning off an assortment of treasures, including a massive 8-carat cabochon ruby ring, several initialed shooting guns, silver Faberge plates, and a well-worn frock by Arnold Scaasi, who designed Kluge's wedding gown.
Although these items fetched more than $15 million, Kluge and Moses were forced to retreat to far less ostentatious digs and now reside in a 6,000-square-foot spec home, the only house Kluge ever constructed on the land adjacent to the winery. (There are also reports she has purchased several apartments in Marrakech, Morocco, a resurgent haven for the chic and well-to-do.)
Kluge's neighborhood was in a tizzy. How could the woman who was once labeled the " Richest Brit in Virginia" be down and out in Charlottesville?
"Nobody knows anything, and nobody sees them anymore," said a longtime resident. "She's become a laughingstock, and that's sad."
Born in Iraq, the daughter an English translator father and a half-Iraqi half-Scottish mother, Patricia Maureen Rose attended a French convent school in Baghdad. She moved to London at 16 and then burst upon he swinging '60s scene as a belly dancer in a sleazy nightspot. There she met and married her first husband, Russell Gay, publisher of Knave, a steamy tabloid, and became a member of his soft-porn enterprise and a celebrity by posing nude and contributing to a cheeky sex-advice column.
A saucy, sultry 5-foot-10, with long, dark hair, she created quite a stir and did not lack for admirers. "I was hot looking in my twenties," Kluge told The Daily Telegraph. "I was gorgeous. It was a no-brainer."
Eventually Kluge tired of her spicy role and opted out. After ditching her career and her spouse, she headed for New York, where she met the married and mega-rich John Kluge, chairman of Metromedia and 35 years her senior. (John Kluge ultimately sold his company to Rupert Murdoch for a reported $4 billion and was dubbed the richest person in America by Forbes. Metromedia's radio and television stations would later form the core of what would become the immensely successful Fox TV network.)
When Kluge laid eyes on the exotic former centerfold, he was smitten and, before long, divorced. "John was so in love, he even converted to Catholicism to marry her," said Barbara Sinatra, a family friend.
John and Patricia tied the knot in St. Patrick's Cathedral in 1981. According to Marie Ridder, his wife's belly dancing became the main topic of John Kluge's conversation. "It was startling to sit next to him at dinner and have him tell you what an expert she was," says Ridder.
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