The Wow of Sao - Vanity Fair
The Wow of Sao - Vanity Fair
The Wow of Sao - Vanity Fair
“Of all those ladies, she got it,” adds the New York
photographer Christopher Makos, who was also helped by
Schlumberger early in his career. “She was incredibly
cool.”
A Complicated Marriage
The same year the company was listed on the New York
Stock Exchange, to celebrate the birth of their son, Pierre
surprised São with “the most incredible set of emeralds—
the earrings, the necklace, the bracelet, the ring—that
anyone had ever seen,” to quote Dunstetter, who was
living in Dallas then. Dunstetter recalls meeting São at a
gallery opening there in 1962: “She was so incredibly
beautiful, and when she arrived everyone whispered,
‘That’s São Schlumberger!’ The crowd parted as if the
queen were arriving in the Hall of Mirrors. She was the talk
of Texas.”
From the beginning, the vivacious, showy São seemed
incapable of fitting into this obsessively discreet clan or
getting along with her stepchildren, who were still grieving
over the loss of their mother, Claire Schwob d’Hericourt, a
reserved Frenchwoman from an old Jewish currency-
trading family. Two of the children, Christiane and
Jacques, were still living with their father in his Georgian-
style mansion in River Oaks, which São promptly set
about redecorating with the noted French architect Pierre
Barbe. Pierre’s cousin Dominique de Menil, the daughter
of Conrad, and her husband, Jean de Menil, who were
Houston’s leading patrons and collectors of modern art,
were cordial to São, but they never became intimate.
Pierre himself was very set in his ways. São told a friend
that the first time she made him a drink he said, “We have
butlers to do that.” His laconic manner became a running
joke in Houston. One local lady who was seated beside
him at a dinner party bet a friend that she could get him to
say “more than two words.” When she repeated that to
Pierre over the appetizer, he told her, “You lost.”
One year after the ball, in 1969, Pierre had a stroke while
taking a shower at Vinagre. São was in New York
arranging for their son’s schooling, but she flew back
immediately. “They found him in the bathroom, half dead,”
says Yvi Larsen. “The Portuguese doctors said, ‘You
better organize his funeral. There is nothing we can do.’
He was in a coma. But São had a doctor brought in from
France.” Florence Van der Kemp adds, “We went to
Portugal to be with her. She stayed 24 hours a day in the
hospital with Pierre.” Victoire says that she was always
told that her mother had saved her father’s life by having
him flown to Paris for a brain operation. “The doctor said,
‘It’s 50-50. We don’t know if we’ll succeed or not.’ She
said, ‘Well, it’s better to take the risk and try and save him
than to just do nothing.’” To everyone’s amazement, Pierre
emerged only moderately impaired physically, but he
seemed even more withdrawn psychologically and totally
dependent on São. “He adored her,” says Dunstetter. “He
was really in love, love, love.” As their friends still say, and I
often witnessed, Pierre’s eyes would literally light up when
São entered a room and follow her every movement.
If São was disappointed, she tried hard not to show it. She
was still a lady of leisure with a rich husband who couldn’t
go out. People said their annual income was in the
neighborhood of $30 million. São seemed to travel more
than ever and express her opinions—particularly about
other society ladies—more sharply than ever. Where many
found Nan Kempner witty, São found her silly and didn’t
hesitate to say so among friends. She took Anne Bass’s
side when her husband, Sid, left her for the more popular
Mercedes Kellogg, even though Mercedes had been a
close friend. In 1981, I went on a trip to the Amazon with
São and other members of MoMA’s International Council.
On our last night in the Colombian frontier town of Leticia,
the ladies compared jewelry they had bought in Rio de
Janeiro and São Paulo. One had an amethyst necklace,
another an aquamarine pin, a third a citrine ring. São
remained silent until her bête noire on the trip, a mousy
woman from San Francisco, said, “São, didn’t you buy
anything?” São, who had had her entire jungle wardrobe
made by Givenchy, snapped, “Yes, I bought a sapphire
necklace, earrings, bracelet, and ring.” Then she added,
“For my maid.”
Rue Férou was put on the market, and São casually turned
down an offer of more than $20 million from an American
friend of André Dunstetter’s. Nevertheless, she went
ahead and paid $9 million for an apartment overlooking
the Eiffel Tower, which had been the residence of the
Moroccan decorator Alberto Pinto until it had been
destroyed by a fire a year earlier. After spending at least
$1 million to turn it into a minimalist “loft,” she changed
her mind and decided to hire Gabhan O’Keeffe, who had
decorated a suite of rooms for her friend Princess Gloria
von Thurn und Taxis in her palace in Bavaria. Soon carpets
were being woven in Bangkok, fabrics were being
designed in Venice, and craftsmen from London were
stippling the walls with feathers.
One day in early 1996, São called her daughter and invited
her to lunch. Victoire recalls that her mother said she was
“desperate” because her bank was calling in a loan for
several million dollars. She wanted Victoire to deposit
money in an account for her so that the bank would
extend the line of credit until she could sell some jewelry.
“And I said, ‘We gave you all the money.… That was only
six years ago. Daddy was one of the richest people in the
world. How can it be possible that you’re in this
situation?’” That night Victoire consulted with her
longtime companion, who told her that, since her mother
was clearly financially irresponsible, and probably being
taken advantage of, the only thing to do was to go to court
and ask for an order of protection. “My mother thought I
was going against her, but I was only trying to help her.”
São took occasional calls from Naguib, but she told him
she preferred not to have him see her in such bad
condition. One day in 2004, Naguib says, she changed
her mind all of a sudden and told him to come to dinner.
“Sao told me that night, ‘We had it all—the love, the
money, the glamour.’ She was fabulous. You know, her
favorite expression was ‘The sky’s the limit.’ But I told her
once what Thomas Mann said: For the leaves to touch the
sky, the roots must reach to hell. Poor São. She had the
most terrible time for years and years.”
I told her that I had seen Naguib the year before at the
Venice Biennale with a new lady friend, a rich Mexican art
collector. I asked São if she ever had any desire to see
Naguib again.
“No.”