[c] Following the assassination and the media coverage that had focused intensely on her during and after the burial, Jackie stepped back from official public view, apart from a brief appearance in Washington to honor the Secret Service agent, Clint Hill, who had climbed aboard the limousine in Dallas to try to shield her and the President. In the 1970s, she led a historic preservation campaign to save Grand Central Terminal from demolition and renovate the structure in Manhattan. John's mother Rose observed Jackie as not being "a natural-born campaigner" due to her shyness and being uncomfortable with too much attention. [234] She set a new fashion trend with beltless, white jeans with a black turtleneck that was never tucked in and instead pulled down over her hips. "[194], On May 23, 1994, her funeral Mass was held a few blocks away from her apartment at the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola, the Catholic parish where she was baptized in 1929 and confirmed as a teenager and asked for no cameras to film the event for privacy. Ginnifer Goodwin portrays her in the 2013 television film Killing Kennedy. Jackie took some time to accept, because she had been assigned to cover the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in London for The Washington Times-Herald. [207], She remains one of the most popular First Ladies. After two years of legal wrangling, Jackie eventually accepted a settlement of $26 million from Christina Onassis—Aristotle's daughter and sole heir—and waived all other claims to the Onassis estate. [63] At the time, she and John were campaigning for his re-election to the Senate, and they posed with their infant daughter for the cover of the April 21, 1958 issue of Life magazine.[67][b][which?] Her father was of English, as well as French, German, Scottish, Scots-Irish/Northern Irish, and distant Dutch, ancestry. "[305] Holmes also stated both should be watched due to covering different periods of Jackie's life. [189] In her memoir Living History, Clinton wrote that Jackie was "a source of inspiration and advice for me". [231] Jackie's first choice for her Inauguration Day coat was originally a purple wool Zuckerman model that was based on a Pierre Cardin design, but she instead settled on a fawn Cassini coat and wore the Zuckerman for a tour of the White House with Mamie Eisenhower. Jacqueline’s sister was socialite and public relations executive Lee Radziwiłł. [289] Neil Genzlinger thought Bisset "should have known better" in taking on the role[290] while Kristen Tauer wrote Bisset portraying Jackie as a mother was a "different central light than many proceeding films". [15][28] Although she retained a relationship with her father, Jackie also regarded her stepfather as a close paternal figure. John Fitzgerald Kennedy was the 35th President of the United States. [170] He died of respiratory failure at age 69 in Paris on March 15, 1975. Titled "Jacqueline Kennedy: The White House Years," the exhibition focused on her time as a First Lady. The First Lady returned to the United States on October 17, 1963. [117] She continued to wear the blood-stained pink suit as she boarded Air Force One and stood next to Johnson when he took the oath of office as president. Aristotle Socrates Onassis (/ oʊ ˈ n æ s ɪ s /, US also /-ˈ n ɑː-/; Greek: Αριστοτέλης Ωνάσης, romanized: Aristotélis Onásis, IPA: [aristoˈtelis oˈnasis]; 20 January 1906 – 15 March … White viewed the ordeal as validation of the measures the Kennedy family, Jackie in particular, were prepared to take to preserve President Kennedy's public image. [262] Brown was nominated for a television BAFTA as Best Actress and a Golden Globe as Best Actress in a Miniseries or Television Film. rcds.appendChild(rcel); [159], After Robert Kennedy's death in 1968, Jackie reportedly suffered a relapse of the depression she had suffered in the days following her husband's assassination nearly five years prior.