Woolworth heiress Barbara Hutton stands near the entrance of Sidi Hosni, her palace in Tangier, Morocco, in 1961. Photograph by Cecil Beaton
Rear view of Longue Vue. Photography: Paul McClure
You see New Orleans is a city of extremes. It has a society so old and entrenched and
tight that no amount of begging, pleading and pledges to your favorite charity
could get you in. Yet in the same town,
it is possible to drink 24 hours a day – no bothersome bar closings on Bourbon
Street! – and when that still isn’t enough, you can sashay right out the door
with your drink in hand and finish it off in the street (or gutter); it’s perfectly legal.
That same sort of severe contrast exists at the
magnificent Longue Vue house and gardens, right on the edge of town. Approached down a long and gracious allée of live oak
trees that have been pruned and plucked into a perfectly graceful arch, sits a
fine example of a Louisiana Greek Revival plantation: columns, colonnades, mellow aged stone,
clearly from the 18th or 19th Century, right?
So wrong.
Longue Vue's Art Deco bathrooms. Photography: courtesy LVHG and Jeff McKay
Longue Vue
was one of the last truly great houses to be built in America.
And like other truly great houses, that took
talent, vision and a truly great
fortune.
Edgar and Edith Stern were just the right
people to produce this 20th Century masterpiece. He - born in New Orleans, was in cotton (and
eventually also banking, oil, lumber, communications, etc). She - born in Chicago, had a father who was
the chief executive and chief shareholder of Sears, Roebuck & Co. They met in New York City, married in 1921
and then off they moved to his hometown – New Orleans.
Portraits of Edgar and Edith Stern. Photography: courtesy LVHG and Jeff McKay
They built a lovely modest colonial house on
a modest (yet lovely) lot. They named it
Longue Vue, after the inn on the Hudson River where Edgar proposed to
Edith. Then Mr. Stern started buying up
the surrounding land. Then Mrs. Stern
took up gardening. Eight acres later, they hired landscape architect, Ellen
Biddle Shipman, who had done spreads for Astors, DuPonts and Fords, to make the
whole thing come together. But now there was a problem: they had the right gardens, but the wrong
house. Mrs. Stern, being way ahead of her time, felt
that the indoor/outdoor, house/garden component simply wasn’t happening. So, like any self-respecting mid-century
multi-millionaires would do, the Sterns kept the gardens and moved the
house. Down the road a piece actually. It’s still there.
Portrait of landscape architect Ellen Biddle Shipman and the gardens of Longue Vue. Photography: courtesy LVHG and Jeff McKay
After terminating their first choice of architect,
the renowned David Adler of Chicago, the Sterns allowed their landscaper, Mrs.
Shipman (by now known as “Lady Ellen” to Edith and Edgar), to chose architect
William Platt as a replacement. They
then proceeded to build a really new, really big, really grand, really gorgeous
classic Louisiana mansion that was a brilliant pastiche of every classic
Southern house in the area that they had always loved. And as it should, the new house, all 45 rooms
of it, now worked perfectly in its preexisting luxurious landscape.
Since everything else was being handled in a
topsy-turvy kind of way: the Stern’s
choice of interior decorator for the new house?
Enter “Lady Ellen”. Again.
The
Library. The Sterns
worked on their civic projects here at the partners desk. Photography: courtesy LVHG and Jeff McKay
Together, the Sterns and Mrs. Shipman created
an 18th Century in the 20th Century mash-up like no other
house of its kind. In its thousands of
square feet, priceless English and French antiques meet head on with the newest
of the new inventions of the time. There is ancient pine paneling from Surrey,
next to the first TV in town (it helped that Mr. Stern also owned the first
television station too). They designed
an authentic American Colonial room, but upholstered it in electric yellow
chintz from Rose Cummings. 18th Century figurative French perfume bottles sit directly under a trippy Wassily Kandinsky
abstract painting. Around a circa 1820 Sheraton
dining table, 1775 Chippendale side chairs are paired with the most cushy arm
chairs from Modern Manhattan. And while
in the dining room, take note of the crystal vases at each table setting still
stuffed with Mrs. Stern’s favorite cigarettes (menthol), arrayed on an
exquisite, hand embroidered Chinese table cloth. The china in the niches is just a small part
of the Stern’s collection of museum quality 18th Century Creamware; one of the largest in the country. But those divine tiny porcelain birds
sprinkled around the table? From
Woolworths.
Honest!
Edith was not without a sense of humor.
The Blue room. The
slate blue paneling and contrasting yellow chintz highlight the eclectic
collection of furnishings, including a 1750’s corner cabinet and a 1920’s
shell-shaped chair and settee.
Photography: courtesy LVHG and Jeff McKay
The Dining room. Always
the gracious hosts, the Sterns were known for their dinner parties featuring an
ever-changing guest list of notable characters. Photography: courtesy LVHG and Jeff McKay
Besides the expected numerous living rooms,
multiple dining rooms and scores of bedrooms, just trying to fathom the
functions of some of the rooms is mind-blowing. How about the Wrapping Room? This is a
room that exists solely as a place to wrap gifts and sort mail. Of course all the cabinetry is couture-made to
hold ribbon, paper, tape, etc. Please
keep in mind that this was waaaaaaaaaay before Candy Spelling came up with her
90210 version.
Just down the hall is the Flower Arranging Room. Where else are you supposed to arrange those
8 acres of cut flowers? Not only are
there several stainless steel sinks of different depths - not all flowers are
the same height you know - but the worktables are backed with mirror. Otherwise, how are you going to see the back
AND the front of your arrangement at the same time?
The Package Wrapping room left. This charming
workroom was designed for receiving mail and to wrap packages for all
occasions. Flower arranging room top right and below. Designed
to facilitate bringing the beloved gardens inside the house, this room could
accommodate the many arrangements that the Sterns placed throughout their house. Photography: courtesy LVHG and Jeff McKay
A Napping
Room? Got it. Complete with up-to-the-minute Murphy beds and
divine rose and aqua stenciling – the height of 1940’s faux naïf chic.
Sleeping porches are
most commonly used in houses without air-conditioning. This one had three
Murphy beds suitable for napping. Photography: courtesy LVHG and Jeff McKay
This is the wallpaper in Mrs. Stern's office
(which PS, is not open to the public) - The lily of the valley was also Christian Dior's favorite flower as well. Photograph: Jeff McKay
The Ladies Reception room top and bottom
left. The English mantel with a relief of Ceres, the goddess of the harvest,
the American overmantel mirror with verre eglomise panels, and the Chinese
export wares mix effortlessly in this room designed for female visitors. The
Ladies Powder room - which is located in the Playhouse bottom right. The rose pattern from the wallpaper
is etched into the windows above the vanity in this room. Photography: courtesy LVHG and Jeff McKay
The Art Gallery. An enclosed porch,
this room was reconceived in the 1960s by the Platt brothers as a gallery to
accommodate Edith Stern’s growing modern art collection. Among the
artists represented are Jaacov Agam, Lillian Florsheim, Naum Gabo, Pablo
Picasso, and Victor Vasarely. Photography: courtesy LVHG and Jeff McKay
Looking through a Lucite sculpture at the
golf course outside, one finds oneself in the Art Gallery. There are art
establishments in Chelsea that aren’t this big or luxe. Check out that curvy Deco tête-à-tête and Venetian chairs vying
with the Vasarelys; and Arps on mod
plinths, next to the Picassos. In the
1960’s, Mrs. Stern took a shine to Modern art – big time. And this “room” is the result.
A completely separate Playhouse, about as big as a mid-sized McMansion, sits just outside
the main house. It’s an Adult’s Only
affair with projection screen, stage, musician’s gallery and even a costume
room, for a little Broadway on the Bayou - and Marie Antoinette thought she had
it so good!
The Playhouse. Original photograph from the 1940s. Photo - The Times-Picayune
Top left; The Kennedys. Top right; Eleanor Roosevelt. Center; Jack Benny. Bottom; Pablo Casals
Yes, the Sterns were a class act: smart, rich, funny, fun, and occasionally,
frisky. They had great style. They had great taste, and the rich and famous
they entertained at Longue Vue knew it. The
Kennedys, Eleanor Roosevelt, Pablo Casals, even Jack Benny have all been
there. And then, incredibly, the Sterns
had the good sense to leave Longue Vue to the citizens
of New Orleans - just so you
and I could have a tiny little peek.
Time to join the party.
Longue Vue House and Gardens
#7 Bamboo
Road, New Orleans, LA 70124
Hours: Tuesday to Saturday from 10:00 am - 5:00
pm
Sundays from 1:00 pm - 5:00 pm
(504)-488-5488.
thank you so much! what a treat....
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