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Elaine Lorillard

Elaine Guthrie Lorillard
Duke Ellington and Elaine Lorillard.jpg
Duke Ellington and Lorillard
Born Elaine Guthrie
(1914-10-11)October 11, 1914
Tremont, Maine
Died November 26, 2007(2007-11-26) (aged 93)
Newport, Rhode Island
Cause of death Infection
Known for Newport Jazz Festival
Spouse(s) Louis Lorillard
Children Edith Lorillard
Pierre Lorillard
Parent(s) Walter Guthrie
Eliza Pray

Elaine Guthrie Lorillard (October 11, 1914 – November 26, 2007) was an American socialite who, with her husband Louis Lorillard, founded the Newport Jazz Festival.

Elaine Guthrie was born in Tremont, Maine to Walter Edward Guthrie and Eliza Pray Guthrie. After Phillips Exeter Academy, Harvard and serving in World War I, her father founded the family printing company in Boston, MA; her mother, called Lida, was a classical singer. Elaine attended the New England Conservatory of Music, and in 1943 she joined the Red Cross, where she taught piano and painting to orphans in Naples, Italy. It is in Naples where she met her future husband, Louis Livingston Lorillard (1919–1986), a United States Army Lieutenant. While serving in Naples, Elaine and Louis Lorillard shared an interest in listening to jazz, which, separately, they had first experienced when living in New York City before going overseas.

During a visit to Storyville Nightclub in Boston, Massachusetts with her brother Thomas T. Guthrie and his friend Professor Borne from Boston University in 1953, Elaine and Louis Lorillard met George Wein, who worked at the nightclub, and they discussed the possibility of bringing an outdoor jazz concert to Newport, Rhode Island, where they lived. With the guidance of John Hammond and George Avakian (record producers and executives at Columbia Records) they came up with a smashing list of performers. With a $20,000 grant from the Lorillards the first jazz festival in July 1954, attracted--a surprising number of--11,000 fans. The Lorillards continued to support the festival until 1961. The Lorillards maintained even after their divorce in the seventies that the Newport Jazz Festival was founded by Elaine and Louis Lorillard as a nonprofit organization, proceeds of which would have gone to local music education.

The 1956 movie High Society, with a storyline by family friend Cleveland Amory, documented the Lorillard's love story and marriage. Grace Kelly was chosen for her resemblance to Elaine Lorillard. Filmed in Newport, RI, there are scenes from the Lorillards' life, from a convertible passing their house, "Quatrel," on Bellevue Avenue, to their daughter sitting at their piano with Louis Armstrong.


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