Mary Richardson Kennedy | |
|---|---|
![]() Richardson Kennedy in 2008 | |
| Born | Mary Kathleen Richardson (1959-10-04)October 4, 1959 Bayonne, New Jersey, U.S. |
| Died | May 16, 2012(2012-05-16) (aged 52) Bedford, New York, U.S. |
| Cause of death | Suicide by hanging |
| Education | Brown University Rhode Island School of Design |
| Occupations |
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| Spouse | |
| Children | 4 |
| Family | Kennedy (by marriage) |
Mary Kathleen Richardson Kennedy (néeRichardson; October 4, 1959 – May 16, 2012) was an American interior designer, political fundraiser, and philanthropist. A proponent ofgreen building and co-founder of theFood Allergy Initiative, the largest fund for food allergy research in the United States, Richardson was regarded as an effective and resourceful fundraiser. She worked onDemocratic campaigns, includingTed Kennedy's 1980 presidential bid andJoe Kennedy's congressional campaign in 1986. Educated atBrown University and later theRhode Island School of Design, she also briefly worked atAndy Warhol'sFactory in New York. Richardson was married toRobert F. Kennedy Jr., and theirlegal separation in 2010 was highly publicized. Her death bysuicide in 2012 also received significant national attention.
Mary Kathleen Richardson was born on October 4, 1959, and was raised inHoboken, New Jersey. Her father, John F. Richardson, who died when she was 12 years old, was an attorney and a professor atStevens Institute of Technology.[1] Richardson's mother, Nancy Higgins, was a public school English teacher.[1][2] Richardson had four sisters and two brothers.[2]
She attendedThe Putney School, where she became friends and roommates withKerry Kennedy, the daughter ofRobert F. Kennedy andEthel Skakel Kennedy.[3] She later roomed with Kerry Kennedy in college and served as her maid of honor at her wedding in 1990 toAndrew Cuomo.[4][1]
As aFine Arts major atBrown University, Richardson spent her junior year in New York City, where she worked in publishing atInterview, the magazine founded by Pop artistAndy Warhol.[5][3] She later pursued studies inarchitectural design at theRhode Island School of Design (RISD).[3]
WhenJoe Kennedy foundedCitizens Energy in 1979, Richardson designed, wrote, and produced the organization's first annual report and created its logo, which remains in use today.[3]
In 1980, at age 20, Richardson worked onTed Kennedy's presidential campaign. She helped raise millions of dollars in donated artworks from Warhol and other artists in his circle, includingRobert Rauschenberg,Roy Lichtenstein, andJulian Schnabel.[6]
Richardson was photographed for the March 1980 issue ofInterview magazine.[5] In 1981, she earned $500 per hour as a model for fashion designerBill Blass.[7]
In 1986, Richardson joined Joe Kennedy's congressional campaign, where she became known for her inventive fundraising and outreach efforts.[3] On Election Day, she helped transform the traditional distribution of coffee and doughnuts by soliciting food donations from local restaurants, resulting in an unusually elaborate spread that distinguished the campaign from its rivals.[3]
Richardson was regarded as an effective and resourceful fundraiser. In the mid-1980s, she volunteered with theRFK Center for Justice and Human Rights to assist the Mothers of the Disappeared inEl Salvador after U.S. military aid was cut to impoverished regions.[3] As part of the effort, she successfully secured large-scale donations of food, clothing, and medical supplies from major retailers, helping assemble multiple truckloads of humanitarian aid.[3]
In 1993, Richardson worked for the firmParrish Hadley Design as an architectural designer.[1] She was involved in the renovation of theNaval Observatory in Washington, DC, theofficial residence of the Vice President of the United States.[8] Her work involvedgreen building practices and was certified through theLeadership in Energy and Environmental Design program.[9] Following flood damage to her home in 2003, Richardson oversaw a massive salvage job and green rebuild project known as the Kennedy Green House Project.[9]
In 1998, she co-founded theFood Allergy Initiative, the largest private fund forfood allergy research in the United States.[8]
After studying architecture at RISD, Richardson lived inSoHo, Manhattan, in the 1980s, and was active in thebohemian culture.[10]
In 1980, she was briefly involved with actorJohn Stockwell.[11] Later in the 1980s, Richardson dated Carlos Mavroleon, a member of theMavroleon family.[12][13]
On April 15, 1994, Richardson marriedRobert F. Kennedy Jr., the brother of her close friend Kerry Kennedy, aboard a research vessel on theHudson River.[14] They had four children: Conor, Kyra, Aidan, and William.[15][16]
During their marriage, Kennedy was widely regarded as a serial philanderer and was known among his friends for sending explicit nude photos of women that they presumed he had taken, according toVanity Fair.[6][17] The highly publicized allegations of sexual assault against Kennedy by the family's then-babysitter, Eliza Cooney, allegedly took place during this period.[18][19][20][21]
On May 10, 2010, Richardson called 911 to report that her husband had been verbally abusive to her and her children, according toThe Journal News.[22] Police responding to the call reported that Richardson appeared "visibly intoxicated" and had difficulty organizing her thoughts and explaining the reason for the call.[22] A few days later, on May 12, Kennedy filed for divorce from Richardson.[23] The following day, police were again called to the couple's home in response to a "domestic incident."[22] Two days later, on May 15, Richardson was arrested and charged with driving under the influence. A court ordered that full temporary custody of her children be granted to her estranged husband.[24] She pleaded guilty to a reduced charge for driving while intoxicated, resulting in a $500 fine, a 90-day license suspension, and court-mandated alcohol education.[25] A subsequent drug-related impaired driving charge from August 2010 was dismissed in 2011 after a judge ruled there was insufficient evidence that she knowingly drove while impaired by prescription medication.[26]
According to reports published byThe Daily Beast, Richardson struggled with severe mental health issues for many years.[27] She reportedly attempted suicide twice during the 1980s (in 1985, by suffocation with a plastic bag, and in 1986 by overdose barbiturates[27]) and exhibited suicidal behavior in the 1990s,[28] In a 1997 email, her brother Thomas Richardson wrote to Kennedy: "I know you think Mary’s going to kill herself, but I guarantee she won't. I may regret those words one day, but that’s how I feel."[28] The publication also reported that Richardson experienced significant emotional difficulties prior to her marriage in 1994.[27]
On May 16, 2012, Richardson was found dead at her home inBedford, New York. Her death was ruled asuicide by hanging.[29] An autopsy revealed that she hadantidepressants in her blood.[30] Before her death, Richardson had discovered Kennedy's personal journal from 2001, in which he recorded sexual encounters with 37 different women. The journal also includes numerous entries in which Kennedy writes positively of Richardson but makes only passing mention of Richardson's purported mental health issues.[31] According to Kennedy, Richardson passed the journal along "to her sisters with instructions that, if anything happened to her, [it should be] published in the press".[32][33]
Her funeral, organized by theKennedy family, was held at St. Patrick's Catholic Church in Bedford.[34][35] On May 21, 2012, a memorial service organized by the Richardson family was held at theStandard Hotel inManhattan.[36] A legal battle between her widower and her brother, Thomas W. Richardson, ensued over which family should have control over her remains.[36]
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. won the court case and buried her beside his aunt,Eunice Kennedy Shriver and her husband,Sargent Shriver, at St. Francis Xavier Cemetery in Centerville, Massachusetts. Several days later, Kennedy moved Richardson's remains to an empty plot in the cemetery, and put up a gravestone there.[37] Media at the time reported that Kennedy negotiated to buy fifty plots surrounding Richardson's grave, and this was confirmed when Saoirse Kennedy Hill, Mary's niece, was interred beside her in 2019.[38]
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)…not to mention this month's Couple-of-the-minute, John Samuels IV and Mary Richardson, back from a romantic Roman summer and on her way to Brown where all her best friends are named Kennedy.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)