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A Friend Stopped By | 07/10/2008 6:30 pm

Dorian Leigh, the 'Real' Holly Golightly, Dies at 91

By Charlotte Hays
© Getty Images

Editor’s Note: Charlotte Hays, a writer living in Washington, D.C., is coauthor of Being Dead Is No Excuse: The Official Southern Ladies Guide To Hosting the Perfect Funeral.

When I read of the death of Dorian Leigh, one of the first women in the world to be hailed as a "supermodel," I thought first of all the ladies of a certain vintage who wouldn’t have been caught dead without a tube of "Fire and Ice" – the Revlon lipstick Miss Leigh so ably represented – at the ready.

And then I felt a poignant stirring for an era when glamour was real and racy but seldom trashy. I also recalled my pursuit of several years of an interview with Miss Leigh, who was then living in Paris but who died this week in Falls Church, VA, at the age of 91, old enough to be virtually unknown to the Brittany-Paris generation.

Click here to see photographs celebrating the life and career of Dorian Leigh.

But there was a time when Dorian and her sister, the model Suzy Parker, who died in 2003, were household names. Dorian once graced all the fashionable magazines in photos by Avedon and Irving Penn. In the course of researching my book The Fortune Hunters: Dazzling Women and the Men They Married (Dorian was anything but a fortune hunter!), I learned about part of Dorian’s life that has been only lightly touched upon in her
obituaries: it was one of the most famous love triangles of the 1950s—actually, given the nature of the male member, the randy and dazzling Marquis de Portago, it might have been more of a love hexagon, or at the very least a rectangle. At any rate, revered New York socialite Carroll Petrie, widow of the philanthropist Milton Petrie, was The Wife and Dorian was The Other Woman. A child, as we shall see, was involved.

Dorian Leigh, one of the first women in the world to be hailed as a "supermodel."

Dorian emerged in my book as the anti-fortune hunter. She was, after all, considered by many (herself foremost among them) to have been the
model for her friend Truman Capote’s Holly Golightly, the protagonist in "Breakfast at Tiffany’s." She was too much of an individual to submit herself to anybody, even to Fon Portago, the professional race-car-driving marquis. But she seems to have been the love of his life.

She was born Dorian Elizabeth Leigh Parker in San Antonio. Dorian was a model in New York by the mid-1940s and living in Paris and having an affair with Portago at least by the late 1940s.

Dorian and Fon carried on their affair before and during his marriage to Carroll Petrie, a South Carolina peach who had met Portago in Maxim’s in Paris while on a ‘round the world trip with Albergo Dodero, an Argentine shipping magnate. Portago proposed immediately and after some mild feints at protesting, they were married in 1949. But the marriage did not affect Dorian’s relationship with Fon.

Alas for Carroll, Olga, Portago’s mother and the dowager marquise, who still held the noble purse strings, doted on Dorian, whom she reportedly established in a Paris apartment not far from the ritzy 40 avenue Foch address of Portago and his wife. Carroll was jealous; Dorian decidedly was not. If Fon potted another woman he wanted to pursue when they went to the Elephant Blanc, the Paris hangout, he simply gave Dorian an agreed-upon signal and she left him to his amorous adventures. Not for nothing had Capote dubbed her "Happy Go Lucky." Dorian’s son by Fon — Kim — was born September 27, 1955—a scant year and a few months after Portago’s only legitimate son — Antonio — was born.

On the eve of his death in a tragic racing accident, Portago wrote Dorian, always in his life, that he feared his premonitions of an early death might come true. He died on May 12, 1957 in the Mille Miglia, then a famous race. Dorian’s life seems to have had many ups and downs since Fon’s death — she married four or five times, worked as a chef, sometimes lucratively sometimes, not. Kim, who oozed charm, committed suicide in his early 20s, jumping from a window on Park Avenue.

When I finally got Dorian on the phone, she understandably didn’t want to discuss any of this. But for me she will be always a figure of glamour, the reigning model back when even their love affairs, though sometimes tragic, weren’t vulgar.

I visited Kim’s grave on a hill in the cemetery of Arcangues, near Biarritz. He is buried close to his father and Olga. It is a sad and beautiful spot. I keep hoping they’ll bury Dorian there.

Read more about: Dorian Leigh, Fashion, Obituary

30 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

DeBúrca obj
There was a ‘real’ Holly Golightly? Cool. Also cool that she lived so long.
By DeBúrca obj on 07/10/2008 5:47 pm
DeBúrca obj
Great photos!
By DeBúrca obj on 07/10/2008 5:49 pm
Peggy Sue
Some stunning images and an interesting life.
By Peggy Sue on 07/10/2008 6:09 pm
Brooklyn Gal
A fascinating story. I loved her sister in “The Best of Everything”.
By Brooklyn Gal on 07/10/2008 6:20 pm
Rita T
She was absolutely stunning!
By Rita T on 07/10/2008 7:19 pm
Charles Dance
What a story,loved both of them…thank you
By Charles Dance on 07/10/2008 7:52 pm
Deni G
o.k. Is it just me? Or is this not written, very poorly?

My brain actually got rearranged trying to read it. I don’t know if the content is good or not, cause I still have no idea what was said. Was this like dashed off by someone cutting and pasting, with a 30 minute deadline?

Inquiring minds want to know.

By Deni G on 07/10/2008 7:53 pm
Frank Peterson
ACtually Deni it’s fairly straghtforward—how are you?
By Frank Peterson on 07/10/2008 10:09 pm
Bonnie Oliver
Deni G - Yes, I agree with you. I had to read the article twice to fully understand but that is probably because the only name in the story that is familiar is that of Suzy Parker. Anyway, did you look at the photographs? That swooping backless dress just oozes pure sex and glamour. It is a dynamite look and Dorian’s photograph is splendid. I remember Rosalind Russel wearing a similar dress in Auntie Mame and only revealed the complete look of the dress at the end of a scene….. it was startling and funny inasmuch as it was a black dress and she was in mourning. Stunning though. If Capote had a model for Holly Golightly (and he never said, did he?) why not Dorian? She thought she was the model and she was a friend … it is possible, is it not?
By Bonnie Oliver on 07/11/2008 6:50 am
No Way-No How -No McCain
Fascinating and wonderfully written piece and photos. I hope you get your wish that she is buried with her son. Thanks very much…I share your love and appreciation for those glamorous times and people.
By No Way-No How -No McCain on 07/10/2008 10:30 pm
theCHEROKEErose
i dont remember dorian leigh, but i do remember suzy parker..i had no idea she and her sister were fellow texans…great things have come from this state…will miss both of their shining stars…always hard to lose the GREAT ones…
By theCHEROKEErose on 07/10/2008 10:40 pm
Flora Dora
Thank you! I have a small palette of Revlon red lipsticks and Fire and Ice is one of them. Vanity Fair did a wonderful story on Suzy Parker—very different from her sister but the glamour sure was there!
By Flora Dora on 07/10/2008 11:03 pm
Maggi D
Great story - thanks for sharing.
By Maggi D on 07/10/2008 11:37 pm
Kay Sara
Another incredible woman - Milicent Fenwick - was editor of Vogue, highly intelligent and had the wit of Dorothy Parker. Once, when a conservative male congressman attacked a piece of equal rights legislation by saying, “I’ve always thought of women as kissable, cuddly, and smelling good,” Fenwick responded, “That’s what I’ve always thought about men, and I hope for your sake that you haven’t been disappointed as many times as I’ve been.” Fenwick is considered to be the model for the character of Lacey Davenport in Garry Trudeau’s comic strip Doonesbury. Television commentator Walter Cronkite called her “the conscience of Congress (from Wickopedia: ) In the 1950s, Fenwick became involved in politics via the Civil Rights Movement. Often described as being blessed with exceptional intelligence, striking good looks, and a keen wit. Elected to Congress from New Jersey in 1974 at age sixty-four, Fenwick became a media darling. .” During her four terms in the House of Representatives, she emerged as arguably one of the most colorful politicians in American history. She was known for her opposition to corruption by both parties and special interest groups. She was one of the most liberal Republicans in the House. Fenwick was also instrumental in establishing the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE), which oversaw the implementation of the Helsinki Accords, which covered relations between states and human rights across Europe. In 1982, she ran for a U.S. Senate seat, but narrowly lost the general election to businessman Frank Lautenberg. Lautenberg had used Fenwick’s age at the time- she was 72- as part of an attack upon her fitness to serve as a U.S. Senator. Many regarded Lautenberg’s tactics as dirty politics. After leaving the House of Representatives following the 1982 election, Fenwick was appointed by President Ronald Reagan as the United States representative, with rank of ambassador, to the United Nations Agencies for Food and Agriculture in Rome, Italy[3]. She held this position from June 1983, to March 1987, when she retired from public life at the age of 77. .
By Kay Sara on 07/11/2008 6:26 am
beth willis
Kay, Thank you for providing us with all of this information about yet another exceptional woman. Peace and grace
By beth willis on 07/11/2008 8:34 pm