Friday, December 28, 2012

18 - The Long Wait 1997

RITZ  HOTEL, Madrid

 


The Goya Restaurant 1997


     My brother worked for a brief time for the billionaire buyout king Henry Kravis and his socially motivated new bride, Marie-Josée.   His well paid job was that of  preparing food on their private jet, much of which was discarded at the end of each flight.  It didn’t work out for very long, but while it did, Dickie had an intriguing view of life at the top.  In the few months he was with them, they seemed to travel just about everywhere.


Dickie, the in-between years
  While in Madrid, he discovered the Ritz.   He told me about an old Spanish woman he had observed in the hotel’s elegant Goya Restaurant, and to look out for her as an interesting anecdoctal bit of Ritz folklore.  I was not disappointed.


It turned out that she lived next door and she lunched there most days, usually  wearing the same worn and long-outdated leopard coat.

Luis, the chatty maitre d’hotel, said she was 92 and occasionally travelled to Switzerland (“probably looking for a miracle fountain of youth cure,” he volunteered).

Luis 1997

Some days she would be delightful, other days quite the contrary.  A week earlier he had asked how she was.  Her reply was chilling:  “This is not a hospital.  You needn’t concern yourself with how I am.  I come here to eat, not to answer your questions.”

On the particular afternoon I first saw her, however, she was exceedingly friendly, and the staff was falling over itself to be in her good graces.  It was the week before Christmas, but despite the season, she ordered homemade vanilla ice cream.  I remember, because I ordered it, too, and it was delicious.   Elvis Presley was singing "Blue Christmas" in the distance, and I wondered if it made her melancoly or if she understood the words.

On another occasion her son had joined her for the Sunday buffet.   I was told he accompanied her once a week.  As was the case this time, he often brought papers for her to sign, and they didn't always find her favor.  I couldn’t hear what they were saying, and wouldn’t have understood the language anyway, but her tone was unmistakably impatient and demanding.  As my little granddaughter once said of someone, "Her voice was not kind."

Clearly, relationships were not her strong point.

The son, a little scruffy and none too young, himself, seemed rather lost.  He impressed me as someone in the process of waiting.

The wait has now certainly ended, and if the dowager’s son is still alive, his life is no doubt rather more comfortable today.

The Ritz, Madrid



SIDEBAR --CESAR RITZ (1850 - 1918)

César and Marie-Louise Ritz circa 1890

       César Ritz, founder of the hotel that made his name an instantly recognizable synonym for elegance and luxury, was born into an exceedingly modest family in a Swiss mountain village that would have made my Aberdeen look citified.  He spent his childhood tending goats alongside twelve siblings, and in 1863 at age 13 was sent to do an apprenticeship to become a waiter.  

 Summarily dismissed after a trial period, he later remembered his first boss telling him he need never expect to find success working in a hotel.  “To become  a hotelier, you need a special talent and flair,” he was told. “and you have neither!"

Undeterred by such an inauspicious career debut, he soon worked his way to Paris, and from waiter and dish washer in a working class brasserie to general manager of any number of fine hotels in Switzerland, Italy, Monaco and London.  And all this before he was 30! 

Hotel Ritz Paris 2009
 
Of his own name-bearing hotels, there were only three –first and foremost the Paris landmark in 1898, then London, finally Madrid.  No others were ever real Ritz Hotels, at least not created by the founder himself.

He saw the completion of his life-long dream with the opening of the Paris Ritz.  By that time he was already famous on both sides of the Atlantic, and some clever publicist had coined the moniker “hotelier to kings, king of hoteliers,” which stuck.  He is reputed to have invented the motto “The customer is always right ” while managing the Savoy Hotel in London.


The London Ritz 2012


Ritz was a workaholic before the term existed, and he suffered from what was then called a nervous collapse during the building of his London hotel.  He remained nominally head of the Ritz empire, but he never really recovered, and had little control after the early years of the century.  Marie-Louise, his wife and an astute manager herself, increasingly took over the day-to-day running of the Paris hotel

Approached by King Alfonso of Spain about building a similarly prestigious hotel in Madrid, Ritz agreed to a kind of consultancy.  With declining health ever more incapacitating, he continued to participate in the Spanish project until its completion in 1910, but never took an active part in its management.

Ritz died in 1918 after more than a decade of ill health.  His widow, Marie-Louise, was still living at the Paris Ritz when she died in 1961 at age 93.


The main foyer, The Madrid Ritz  (photo Orient Express)

 


Your input is welcomed:  hotel-musings@hotmail.fr

Next Friday:  "The best and the worst" AND "The Movie List"

  [Photos are mine, unless otherwise credited]



CROSS REFERENCING … a look at other postings
The (Paris) Ritz Hotel is also featured in blog No. 25, "The Importance of a morning suit" Feb. 22, 2013 (to access, click on above title).


14 comments:

Rosanne in New South Wales, Australia said...

Thank you, Frank, I love stories of people's lives.......Have a great New Year!

24/7 in France said...

Interesting to know that the "Ritz" name was a person and not just a chain name. Have a wonderful new year!

Martin in Amsterdam said...

Fascinating Frank, I hope you have many more hotel 'adventures' in 2013. The old French word 'Sojourner' is probably more appropriate but either way have a wonderful New Year.

Joel in Fredericksburg, VA. said...

How much nicer it is to begin the day reading your interesting blog than the way I usually do: perusing the day’s disasters in the NY Times. If I were very, very rich, I would be tempted to move into the cocoon of a grand and luxurious hotel and just wait for the rest of the world to fall apart, as it seems to be doing.

My late friend Barbara Clare, who was very east side Manhattan but whose roots were North Carolina, told me she had an aunt who had been a chorus girl and had traveled around the world staying in fine hotels. She spent the last years of her life in a nursing home and was under the merciful delusion that she was still on tour and staying in a grand hotel....

Richard Pleasants said...

as someone always in the "service industry" I particularly enjoyed reading about the Ritz and Caesar and Marie-Louise. Let's hope the son found the "long wait" worthwhile.
Looking forward to enjoying the next few posts with you in France.
Dickie

Marina in Amsterdam said...

After reading your fascinating story about the Ritz family I wanted to know more about Marie-Louise. She apparently was a great business woman, intelligent, energetic, cosmopolitan and multi-lingual.

As they say, behind every great man there is a great woman. Wishing you and Brenda a happy New Year .

DC Reader said...

Loved today's musings. Love that woman!

Frank Pleasants said...

To Marina in Amsterdam:

I agree and find it quite moving that this strong and undoubtedly very clever lady was still working and going about her business in the Ritz in the 1950's when the average person wouldn't have dreamed that the old lady in question could actually be Madame RITZ!

It's certainly a rare case (and maybe unique one) of a family name finding itself in the dictionary as both a noun and adjective (ritzy)in any number of languages!!

Thanks for sharing.

Anonymous said...

I didn't know Ritz was a person, well hadn't asked myself the question en fait...
The hotels seem more interesting with the history. Thanks Frank, I always read your blog and really enjoy
Have a nice week-end, and happy new year!
Lorna

Pilar in Paris said...

What a good looker lad your brother!! His hair pepper and salt in such young head is beautiful!

Regarding The Ritz, I always knew about this hotel (though never put a foot in it), even early in my childhood. Through my parents I knew that a famous general,
General Martinez Campos gave carte blanche to two staff of the Ritz to start the best restaurant in Madrid, the "El Hockey." It was
very elegant and exclusive and in the 50's and 60's was a must among the very wealthy. It apparently has now lost some of its luster (but just in case, here's the address: El Hockey, Calle Amador de los Rios 6 Madrid)

Next time you are in El Ritz, if you have a walk in the nearby park El Retiro, perhaps you will see the equestrian statue of the grandfather of that general.

A great pleasure to read your hotel musings!

Jenny in Fayetteville, N.C. said...

Enjoyed your info on Mr. Ritz. How nice to have your name mean elegance!

Patsy said...

Love reading your posts! Happy New
Year.

Jen in Sydney said...

It was so interesting to read about the Ritz Hotels and of course the accompanying photographs make you realise just how luxurious these places are.

Poor Bren. A very rare picture of her looking glum, but I suppose if you are going to suffer with a broken arm you couldn’t be in a better place that the foyer of the Ritz Hotel.

Chef Michael Glatz said...

Frank, I am so enjoying your writings and photographs, they transport me to another place and time whenever I read them. I feel so connected... then realize we have Richard in common!

I hope I can perhaps join Richard on one of his future visits, I'd appreciate the opportunity to meet you in person.

Until then, thanks for sharing, keep the stories coming! Wishing you all the best in the New Year!
-Chef Michael