8825 SW Barnes Rd, Portland, OR 97225, United States
Margaux studied at the Catlin Gabel School in Portland, Oregon.
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
Margaux in her early years
College/University
Career
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1970
Margaux Hemingway poses for a photo.
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1975
9641 Sunset Blvd, Beverly Hills, CA 90210, United States
Margaux Hemingway, posing seated in the Lanai Room at the Beverly Hills Hotel, in California, wearing a white off-the-shoulder oversized top with full sleeves and a long matching skirt.
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1975
Beverly Hills, California, United States
Margaux Hemingway sitting on the diving board at the Beverly Hills Hotel pool, wearing a strapless white terry beach dress by Carol Horn for Bendel's Studio.
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1975
Margaux Hemingway poses for a photo.
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1975
New York City, New York, United States
Margaux Hemingway attends the premiere of "Rosebud" on March 23, 1975 in New York City.
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1975
Margaux Hemingway wears Aldo Cipullo's new love noose, a tiny goId rope, with a diamond weighing one-twentieth of a carat in the center.
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1976
Margaux Hemingway, standing with both hands in pockets, wearing a high-neck silk shirt with a bow and gathered sleeves, sashed at waist, by Karl Lagerfeld for Chloé, over narrow black pants.
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1976
United Kingdom
Margaux Hemingway on June 8, 1976 in the United Kingdom.
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1976
Margaux Hemingway in a publicity still for "Lipstick," directed by Lamont Johnson.
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1976
Close-up of Margaux Hemingway wearing a necklace and a black cashmere pullover with wrap waist and metallic-fiber bands by Valentino.
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1977
Margaux Hemingway
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1977
Paris, France
Margaux Hemingway
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1978
Havana, Cuba
Margaux Hemingway poses for photos in February 1978 in Havana, Cuba.
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1980
Margaux Hemingway
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1980
Paris, France
Margaux Hemingway at the gala dinner in honor of Luchino Visconti.
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1981
United States
Margaux Hemingway at home.
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1981
Margaux Hemingway
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1982
Margaux Hemingway poses for a photo.
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1982
Margaux Hemingway poses for a photo.
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1982
Mougins, France
Margaux Hemingway in Mougins, France, in October 1982.
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1982
Margaux Hemingway
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1988
Margaux Hemingway
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
1988
Margaux Hemingway
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
Margaux Hemingway poses for a photo.
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
Margaux Hemingway
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
Margaux Hemingway
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
Margaux Hemingway
Gallery of Margaux Hemingway
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Margaux Hemingway, being interviewed in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, circa 1978.
Achievements
1976
Margaux Hemingway of the cover of Vogue magazine, Paris, October 1976, by Helmut Newton.
9641 Sunset Blvd, Beverly Hills, CA 90210, United States
Margaux Hemingway, posing seated in the Lanai Room at the Beverly Hills Hotel, in California, wearing a white off-the-shoulder oversized top with full sleeves and a long matching skirt.
Margaux Hemingway sitting on the diving board at the Beverly Hills Hotel pool, wearing a strapless white terry beach dress by Carol Horn for Bendel's Studio.
Margaux Hemingway, standing with both hands in pockets, wearing a high-neck silk shirt with a bow and gathered sleeves, sashed at waist, by Karl Lagerfeld for Chloé, over narrow black pants.
135 N Grand Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90012, United States
Margaux Hemingway and her then-husband Erroll Wetanson attend the 48th Annual Academy Awards on March 29, 1976 at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, the Los Angeles Music Center in Los Angeles, California.
Margaux Hemingway and Stewart Sundland attend the Princess Grace Foundation and American Friends of Claude Pompidou Foundation Gala on September 23, 1990 aboard the Crown Princess in New York City.
Margaux Hemingway attends the Princess Grace Foundation-USA and the American Friends of the Claude Pompidou Foundation Gala on September 23, 1990 aboard the Crown Princess in New York City.
Margaux Hemingway attends Richard Bernstein's "Icons and Legends" Art Exhibition on November 20, 1991 at Cornerstone Galleries in Beverly Hills, California.
Supermodels Patti Hansen, Beverly Johnson, Rosie Vela, Kim Alexis and Margaux Hemingway support "You Can Do Something About AIDS" fundraiser circa 1988 in New York City.
(A Jewish man who owns a Brooklyn deli asks his domineerin...)
A Jewish man who owns a Brooklyn deli asks his domineering uncle for a loan so he can buy his dream restaurant in Manhattan, but the uncle demands that he give up his gentile girlfriend even though she's one of the few sources of stability in his somewhat chaotic life.
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A former terrorist has started a lawful career, being a truck driver. On a trip, he ignores the warnings given about the mafia, which leads to them setting fire to his truck, which has his wife on board. This has to be avenged.
(A loving couple struggles to fend for themselves in moder...)
A loving couple struggles to fend for themselves in modern-day Los Angeles. One a loner and down and out, the other a lonely but hardworking secretary. Eventually, as cracks form in their passionate relationship, they resort to robbing an aging actress for money.
(A disturbed lesbian librarian kidnaps a beautiful young w...)
A disturbed lesbian librarian kidnaps a beautiful young woman she's obsessed with, breaks her foot to keep her incapacitated, then starts to kill off people she believes are intruding in their "relationship."
(A physicist involved in classified military research meet...)
A physicist involved in classified military research meets a woman who he begins to suspect is a spy. Her sister is involved with the mob and one of the spies is working with the mob. He unwillingly helps the FBI figure this all out.
Margaux Hemingway was a famous American fashion model and actress. It was in the mid-1970s, that she gained prominence as a supermodel. Margaux was the face of several fashion magazines' covers across the world, including Cosmopolitan, Elle, Harper's Bazaar and Vogue. It was her supermodel career that led to her big, yet short break into the film industry.
Background
Margaux Hemingway was born Margot Louise Hemingway on February 16, 1954, in Portland, Oregon, United States. She was the daughter of Byra Louise Whittlesey and Jack Hemingway, a fly fisherman, conservationist, and writer. Ernest Hemingway, a renowned novelist, short-story writer, journalist, and sportsman, was Margaux's paternal grandfather.
Margaux had two sisters - Mariel and Joan.
Education
When Margaux was a child, her family lived in different places. Some time after her birth, they settled down in Cuba and then relocated first to San Francisco and later to Idaho. While in Idaho, the family lived on Margaux's famous grandfather's farm in Ketchum, adjacent to Sun Valley.
As for Margaux's education, she studied at the Catlin Gabel School in Portland, Oregon.
After finishing school, Margaux worked at a small public relations firm. She once asked her father to take her with him on a business trip to New York. There, namely at the Plaza Hotel, she got acquainted with Errol Wetanson, an entrepreneur, restaurant chain heir and her future husband. Within four months, 19-year-old Margaux relocated to New York, moved in with Wetanson and began working in modeling.
It was in the early 1970s, that Margaux signed a million-dollar contract with Fabergé, becoming the spokesmodel for Babe perfume. During that time, she also appeared on dozens of fashion magazine covers, including those of Cosmopolitan, Elle, Harper's Bazaar, and Vogue. On June 16, 1975, she appeared on the cover of TIME, which dubbed her one of the "new beauties."
Hemingway's work for the Fabergé fragrance Babe led to nationwide recognition, so it was no surprise that Hollywood came next. The first movie Margaux appeared in was Lipstick (1976), directed by Lamont Johnson. Margaux had the starring role, and at her suggestion, her younger sister Mariel Hemingway was cast in a supporting role. Though the film had its merits, it found no favor among Hollywood critics, who were quick to slam Margaux's performance. Mariel, however, won praise and went on to appear in a number of high profile film projects in the late '70s and early '80s.
In spite of her downfall, Margaux continued to work as a model and occasional actress, appearing in the low-budget horror Killer Fish (1979) opposite Lee Majors and Karen Black. Margaux began attracting more attention for her turbulent social life, frequenting Studio 54 in New York and attending numerous glamorous parties and events. It was in this period, that alcoholism began to come into play, a fact she later put down to her nervousness amongst the high profile celebrity crowd of New York.
Later, Margaux appeared in the comedy They Call Me Bruce? (1982) and had a supporting role in Over the Brooklyn Bridge (1984), a movie that she later mentioned as her favorite.
During her lifetime, Hemingway spent much time traveling. In 1984, Margaux was spending much time in Miami, Florida, and embarked upon the making of Hemingway: Winner Take Nothing (1998) in Cuba. The documentary chronicled the work of her famous grandfather Ernest Hemingway and involved her traveling around Europe and the United States.
It was also in 1984, that Margaux had a skiing accident. It took her almost a year to recover. During that period of time, she gained 75 pounds (34 kg), ending up at nearly 200 lbs, and became increasingly depressed. In 1987, she checked herself into the Betty Ford Center for rehabilitation.
In 1988, Margaux emerged from the clinic with positive energy. She attempted to make a comeback and appeared on the cover of Playboy magazine in May 1990. During that period of time, Hemingway appeared in La Messe en si Mineur (1990) with her in a leading role. In the years that followed, Margaux was cast in a series of small roles in Bad Love (1992), Deadly Rivals (1993), and had a lead in Joe D'Amato's A Woman's Secret (1992).
Other movies Margaux appeared in during the last years of her life were Double Obsession (1992), Inner Sanctum II (1994), Vicious Kiss (1995), Backroads to Vegas (1996), among others. Shortly before her death, she was set to host the outdoor adventure series Wild Guide on the Discovery Channel. She also endorsed a psychic telephone hotline, owned by her cousin, Adiel Hemingway.
(A former terrorist has started a lawful career, being a t...)
1984
Views
Margaux practiced yoga and followed the Solar Kundalini "Codex Relaxatia" paradigm, to which she was introduced by her close friend, Zachary Selig. For her, these were the tools for success and to overcome some of her debilitating mental disorders. Margaux resorted to these relaxation skills for the rest of her life.
Margaux was an avid environmentalist.
Quotations:
"I loved to dance and went to Studio 54 at least twice a week. But I always felt nervous around the people there. I was in awe of that whole Halston-Liza Minnelli crowd. To me, they were the real celebrities, and I was just a girl from Idaho."
"My name? Of course, it helps. If you've got it, use it. I'm proud of it, for sure."
"I am not a Hemingway aficionado."
"If you are at one with your body, then you are at one with yourself."
"I love France. The French respect your privacy."
"For me, becoming a celebrity was like being in the eye of a hurricane. Suddenly, I was an international cover girl. Everybody was lapping up my Hemingwayness. They wanted to rub elbows with me or brush up against me."
"I remember being really poor until I got my first $250,000 check from Fabergé. That was pretty nice; I put it in the bank, and from that moment on, there seemed to be a lot of champagne and limousines in my life."
Personality
Margaux was known as a party girl. She was a regular attendee of New York City's exclusive discothèque Studio 54. There, she hung out with such well-known personalities, as Halston, Bianca Jagger, Liza Minnelli, Grace Jones, and Andy Warhol.
Maryam d'Abo, Margaux Hemingway's friend, described her as a sweet, vulnerable and caring friend, a woman, who might have been injured by a too early brush with the limelight but was not destroyed by it, someone who struggled to overcome her disappointment and find meaning in the ordinary events of her life.
Physical Characteristics:
Margaux was 1,83 meters tall.
Beginning from her teenage years, she fought a number of disorders, including alcoholism, depression, bulimia, and epilepsy. She also suffered from dyslexia.
Beginning from the 1970s, Margaux did drugs.
According to Los Angeles County coroner's toxicology report, Margaux Hemingway killed herself by taking an overdose of a sedative. She was the fifth person in her family to commit suicide.
Quotes from others about the person
Joe Eula, an American fashion illustrator: "[Hemingway] had the face of a generation, as recognizable and memorable as Lisa Fonssagrives and Jean Shrimpton."
Interests
dancing, traveling, yoga and meditation
Connections
In 1975, Margaux married Errol Wetanson, whom she had met in New York City, when she was 19. The couple divorced three years later, in 1978. The following year, Hemingway married Bernard Faucher, a French filmmaker. It was in 1985, that they divorced.