Taylor Burton Diamond
Diamonds have no mercy. "They will
show up the wearer if they can," says one character in The Sandcastle,
an early novel by British writer Iris Murdoch. But is it applicable to Elizabeth
Taylor? Those well-publicized gifts which she received from her fifth husband,
the late Richard Burton, certainly enhance her appearance and do not look out
of place on her. A rapport is established between the jewel and its wearer.
Richard Burton's first purchase for Elizabeth Taylor was the 33.19-carats emerald-cut
Krupp diamond, in 1968. This had formerly been part of the estate of Vera Krupp,
second wife of the steel magnate, Alfred Krupp. Taylor wore this stone in a
ring. Next came the magnificent pearl known as La Peregrina for which Burton
paid £15,000.
Weight: 69.42
carats pear shape
For Elizabeth Taylor's fortieth
birthday in 1972 Richard Burton gave her a heart-shaped diamond set with rubies
in a pendant. "I would have liked to buy her the Taj Mahal," he remarked,
"but it would cost too much to transport. This diamond has so many carats,
it's almost a turnip." Then he added, "Diamonds are an investment.
When people no longer want to see Liz and I on the screen, then we can sell
off a few baubles." By far
the best known of Richard Burton's purchases was the 69.42-carats pear shape,
later to be called the Taylor-Burton diamond. It was cut from a rough stone
weighing 240.80 carats found in the Premier mine in 1966 and subsequently bought
by Harry Winston.
After the rough piece of 240.80 carats
had arrived in New York, Winston and his cleaver, Pastor Colon Jr, studied it
for six months. Markings were made, erased and redrawn to show where the stone
should be cleaved. There came the day appointed for the cleaving. In this instance
the usual tension that surrounds such an operation was increased by the heat
and the glare of the television lights that had been allowed into the workroom.
After he had cleaved the stone, the 50-year-old cleaver said nothing--he reached
across the workbench for the piece of diamond that had been separated and looked
at it through horn-rimmed glasses for a fraction of a second before exclaiming
"Beautiful!"
This piece of 78 carats was
expected to yield a gem weighing around 24 carats, while the larger piece, of
162 carats, was destined to produce the pear shape whose weight had originally
been expected to be about 75 carats.
In 1967 Winston sold the
pear shape to Harriet Annenberg Ames, the sister of Walter Annenberg, the American
ambassador in London during the Presidency of Richard Nixon. Two years later,
she sent the diamond to Parke-Bernet Galleries in New York for auction.
The diamond was put up for
auction on October 23, 1969, on the understanding that it could be named by
the buyer. Before the sale speculation was rife as to who was going to bid for
the gem, with the usual international names being bandied about by the columnists.
The name of Elizabeth Taylor was among them, and she did indeed have a preview
of the diamond when it was flown to Switzerland for her to inspect, then back
to New York under precautions delicately described as "unusual".
The auctioneer began the
bidding by asking if anyone would offer $200,000, at which the crowded room
erupted with "Yes". Bidding then continued to climb and with nine
bidders active, rushed to $500,000. At $500,000 the individual bids increased
in $10,000 steps. At $650,000 only two bidders remained in the fray. When the
bidding reached $1,000,000, Al Yugler of Frank Pollack, who was representing
Richard Burton, dropped out. Pandemonium broke out when the hammer fell and
the entire room stood up, so that the auctioneer could not identify who had
won the prize, and he had to call for order. The winner was Robert Kenmore,
the Chairman of the Board of Kenmore Corporation, the owners of Cartier Inc.,
who paid the record price of $1,050,000 for the gem, which he promptly named
the "Cartier". The previous record price for a jewel had been $305,000
for a diamond necklace from the Rovensky estate in 1957.
As well as Richard Burton,
Harry Winston had also been an under-bidder at the sale. But the former was
not finished yet and he was determined to acquire the diamond. So, speaking
from the pay-phone of a well-known hotel in the south of England, he spoke to
Kenmore's agent. Sandwiched between the lounge bar and the saloon, Burton negotiated
for the gem while continually shoving coins into the box.
Patrons quietly putting away
their drinks would have heard the actor's ringing tones exclaiming, "I
don't care how much it is; go and buy it." In the end Robert Kenmore agreed
to sell it, but on condition that Cartier were able to display the stone, by
now named the 'Taylor-Burton', in New York and Chicago. He did not deny that
Cartier had made a profit: "We're businessmen, and we're happy that Miss
Taylor is happy."
More than 6,000 people a
day flocked to Cartier's New York store to see the Taylor-Burton, the crowds
stretching down the block. Shortly afterwards Taylor wore the Taylor-Burton
in public for the first time, when she attended Princess Grace's fortieth birthday
party in Monaco. It was flown from New York to Nice in the company of two armed
guards hired by Burton and Cartier. In 1978, following her divorce from Richard
Burton, Taylor announced she was putting the diamond up for sale and was planning
to use part of the proceeds to build a hospital in Botswana. In June of the
following year Henry Lambert, the New York jeweller, stated that he had bought
the Taylor-Burton for nearly $5,000,000. By December he had sold the Taylor-Burton
to its present owner, Robert Mouawad.
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