The Unexpected Warmth of the Getty Clan Makes for a Perfect Summer Read

It’s not surprising that the Tri-state region book launch for “Growing Up Getty: The Story of America’s Most Unconventional Dynasty” took place last month at Tent, the sumptuous home furnishings shop that opened in Amenia, N.Y., in late 2020.

Author James Reginato has been friends with the store’s owner, interior designer Darren Henault, for at least 20 years, and they share a luxe sensibility informed by appreciation for what are generally considered the finer things in life.

It’s also a nice coincidence that Aimee Bell, editorial director at Simon & Schuster’s Gallery Books, which published “Growing Up Getty,” is a long-time resident of nearby Lakeville, Conn. Married to writer David Kamp, she was previously deputy editor at Vanity Fair, where Reginato is a writer-at-large.

Born in Chicago but a New Yorker since graduating from Columbia, Reginato has famously interviewed everyone from the Aga Khan to the Prince of Wales, with whom he spent a week gallivanting by private plane on a royal 70th-birthday tour. His previous book, “Great Houses, Modern Aristocrats” (Rizzoli Books), offered “an intimate and lively look at some of Great Britain’s most historic and majestic houses” as well as the fabled families who dwell in them.

His interest in the kind of lifestyle that only great fortunes can buy stems to the 1990s, when he was features director at W magazine. “John Fairchild [the publisher] was fascinated by high society, so it became part of my beat,” he said at Tent, where copies of his new book sold out. “I specialized in getting hard-to-get people to open up.”

Over decades, he interviewed a number of Getty family members, but writing the book was more of a challenge than anticipated, he says. It took three years, including a full year of meticulous research, to untangle various plots and subplots involving the wives (five), girlfriends (numerous), children (five sons), grandchildren (19) and great-grandchildren (47) of J. Paul Getty, who died in 1976.

Luckily, Reginato had access to the Getty Center’s archives, which include Getty’s daily diaries, many from Sutton Place, the grand English manor where he spent the last 16 years of his life with a famously upper-crust butler and two pet lions.

Getty’s fortune began in 1903 with his father’s lease of a small but oil-rich Oklahoma lot; it pinnacled a few years after his own prescient 1949 lease of the former Neutral Zone in Saudi Arabia. By 1957, Forbes cited him as the richest American, and in 1966 the Guinness Book of World Records named him the richest man on earth.  The key to his success, he explained, was easy: “Rise early, work hard — and strike oil.”

He was a serious collector of rare, historic furniture and art and today his public legacy is less about oil (the company he founded was dissolved in 2012) and more about the stunning Los Angeles museum that bears his name. It also includes a well-endowed third and fourth generation of Gettys who are artists, designers and musicians as well as business owners and quiet environmentalists.

Most surprising to Reginato, the image of J. Paul Getty as cruel and unfeeling (those of a certain age remember his much-publicized refusal to pay his 16-year-old grandson’s kidnappers, even after the boy’s ear was sent to the police), is patently false.

This was a man who married five times yet remained friendly with his exes. A man who remembered old lovers’ birthdays with red roses and gifts of money. A man whose journals kept a record of daily oil prices while fondly noting his grandchildren’s christenings and visits.

“J. Paul Getty is so often portrayed as this cold, monstrous character, but people who knew him really liked him,” Reginato says. His book is a “rapturous biography for casual readers,” says the Library Journal. And that makes it perfect summer reading.

Latest News

Fresh perspectives in Norfolk Library film series

Diego Ongaro

Photo submitted

Parisian filmmaker Diego Ongaro, who has been living in Norfolk for the past 20 years, has composed a collection of films for viewing based on his unique taste.

The series, titled “Visions of Europe,” began over the winter at the Norfolk Library with a focus on under-the-radar contemporary films with unique voices, highlighting the creative richness and vitality of the European film landscape.

Keep ReadingShow less
New ground to cover and plenty of groundcover

Young native pachysandra from Lindera Nursery shows a variety of color and delicate flowers.

Dee Salomon

It is still too early to sow seeds outside, except for peas, both the edible and floral kind. I have transplanted a few shrubs and a dogwood tree that was root pruned in the fall. I have also moved a few hellebores that seeded in the near woods back into their garden beds near the house; they seem not to mind the few frosty mornings we have recently had. In years past I would have been cleaning up the plant beds but I now know better and will wait at least six weeks more. I have instead found the most perfect time-consuming activity for early spring: teasing out Vinca minor, also known as periwinkle and myrtle, from the ground in places it was never meant to be.

Planting the stuff in the first place is my biggest ever garden regret. It was recommended to me as a groundcover that would hold together a hillside, bare after a removal of invasive plants save for a dozen or so trees. And here we are, twelve years later; there is vinca everywhere. It blankets the hillside and has crept over the top into the woods. It has made its way left and right. I am convinced that vinca is the plastic of the plant world. The stuff won’t die. (The name Vinca comes from the Latin ‘vincire’ which means ‘to bind or fetter.’) Last year I pulled a bunch and left it strewn on the roof of the root cellar for 6 months and the leaves were still green.

Keep ReadingShow less
Matza Lasagne by 'The Cook and the Rabbi'

Culinary craftsmanship intersects with spiritual insights in the wonderfully collaborative book, “The Cook and the Rabbi.” On April 14 at Oblong Books in Rhinebeck (6422 Montgomery Street), the cook, Susan Simon, and the rabbi, Zoe B. Zak, will lead a conversation about food, tradition, holidays, resilience and what to cook this Passover.

Passover, marked by the traditional seder meal, holds profound significance within Jewish culture and for many carries extra meaning this year at a time of great conflict. The word seder, meaning “order” in Hebrew, unfolds in a 15-step progression intertwining prayers, blessings, stories, and songs that narrate the ancient saga of the liberation of the Israelites from slavery. It’s a narrative that has endured for over two millennia, evolving with time yet retaining its essence, a theme echoed beautifully in “The Cook and the Rabbi.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Housy baseball drops 3-2 to Northwestern

Freshman pitcher Wyatt Bayer threw three strikeouts when HVRHS played Northwestern April 9.

Riley Klein

WINSTED — A back-and-forth baseball game between Housatonic Valley Regional High School and Northwestern Regional High School ended 3-2 in favor of Northwestern on Tuesday, April 9.

The Highlanders played a disciplined defensive game and kept errors to a minimum. Wyatt Bayer pitched a strong six innings for HVRHS, but the Mountaineers fell behind late and were unable to come back in the seventh.

Keep ReadingShow less