Jeanne Augier: Businesswoman whose Negresco Hotel epitomised the flamboyance of the French Riviera

The hotelier went from daughter of a pork butcher to creating a luxurious legend that entertained guests such as The Beatles, Picasso, Elizabeth Taylor and Jean Cocteau

Christine Manby
Wednesday 16 January 2019 16:24 GMT
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Jeanne Augier stands outside the Negresco with her beloved dogs
Jeanne Augier stands outside the Negresco with her beloved dogs (Getty)

The story of how Jeanne Augier came to epitomise the glamour and joie de vivre of the Cote d’Azur begins with a family tragedy.

The hotelier, who has died aged 95, was the daughter of a Breton pork butcher turned property developer. When her mother lost the use of her legs due to a medical error during a routine operation, Augier turned her thoughts to how she might make her mother’s life easier.

She wrote in her memoirs: “One day I heard of a hotel that had a huge elevator. I rushed to see it and was happy to see it could accommodate my mother’s wheelchair. We decided to buy the hotel.”

That hotel was the Negresco, the five-star belle époque beauty with the pink roof that dominates the Promenade des Anglais in Nice.

Augier in the Negresco’s decadent La Rotonde restaurant in 2010 (Getty)

The building was old and faded but under Augier’s auspices the Negresco became a luxurious legend, welcoming a glittering array of stars, from the Beatles to Liz Taylor to Picasso. Montserrat Caballe spent 500 nights there. A suite bears the opera star’s name. But it was Augier they all came to see. She counted Chagall and Cocteau as friends.

Augier was 34 and had just married her husband, lawyer Paul Augier, when she took over the hotel from her father, who suffered from depression, in 1957. She knew nothing about the hotel business at all but wanted to create a magical world that would make up for her parents’ misfortunes.

Together with her husband, Augier set about transforming the hotel into “a living ambassador of France … Blending a certain art of living with a collection representing all of the main currents of French art since the beginning of the 16th century”.

The hotelier with a portrait of Louis XIV in the background (Getty)

To that end, Augier amassed a collection of more than 6,000 artworks, to be displayed throughout the hotel. They included paintings by Dali, Rigaud and Boucher, and a giant banana yellow statue of a woman by Niki De Saint Phalle for the hotel’s lobby.

Augier eschewed the fashion for muted design, instead modelling the hotel’s room after France’s greatest palaces, in bold colours accented with lashings of gilt. In her personal appearance too, she chose to be bold, with her trademark red hair and bright lipstick.

Augier’s talent for decoration soon gained an international reputation. In 1965, the Shah of Iran commissioned her to transform a caravanserai in Isfahan into the country’s first luxury hotel. Augier was also responsible for the interior design of the Beverly Wilshire in Los Angeles. Her work for Russian travel agency Intourist brought her into the orbit of Nikita Khrushchev. In fact, Augier claimed that Khrushchev tried to chat her up, telling The Telegraph that the Russian premier “put his hand on my knee”. As Augier once told Le Figaro: “It’s true, I haven’t had a boring life.”

In sole charge of the hotel after her husband’s death in 1995, Augier fielded hundreds of offers to buy the Negresco every year. She is reputed to have told both the Sultan of Brunei and Microsoft billionaire Bill Gates that they couldn’t afford to buy her hotel. Gates presented her with a blank cheque. But money was never the most important thing to Augier. She was, in the words of a statement from the hotel’s board, a “relentless advocate of the disabled, people in difficulty and animal rights”.

Augier was a keen animal lover. The Negresco was rare in that it admitted pets, including Salvador Dali’s cheetah. Augier herself kept cats and dogs and campaigned against bullfighting. She told Le Figaro: “I love animals. They are the brothers, sisters and children I never had.”

With no heirs, in 2009 Augier bequeathed the Negresco to a fund, with the intention of protecting her hotel and the rights of its staff in the event of her death. The fund was also given the mission of “easing animal and human suffering”. On Bastille Day 2016, when terrorists struck on the promenade and 84 people were killed, the Negresco was used as a field hospital.

Jeanne Augier, French hotelier, born 1935, died 8 January 2019

From the archives: ‘The meek ahall inherit the Negresco’, from Wednesday 22 July 2009

By John Lichfield

The Negresco is one of the great landmarks of the Promenade des Anglais, Nice (Getty)

For almost a century, the Hotel Negresco in Nice has been the holiday destination of choice for film stars, millionaires, royalty and Soviet commissars. How many hotels can boast a metal chandelier designed by Gustav Eiffel? Or mink bedspreads in every room? Or a portrait of King Louis XIV, whose only counterparts are in the Louvre and the Palace of Versailles.

The octogenarian owner of the palatial, art-encrusted hotel, classified as a historic monument by the French state, has just re-written her will. On her death, the title deeds will be handed over to a charity which rescues homeless people and unwanted animals.

The Hotel Negresco, the 96-year-old queen of the Promenade des Anglais, is not going to become an animal shelter. Friendless animals and fundless humans will not be accommodated in its 141 bedrooms and suites which cost from €290 to €1,880 a night (£250 to £1,625). However, the ownership, and the profits of the hotel, have been bequeathed to a new foundation which is devoted to animals and the poor, created by the 86-year-old, animal-loving Negresco owner, Jeanne Augier.

Her motives are three-fold: to help the wretched, both man and beast; to keep together the staff of the last privately-owned luxury hotel in France; and to prevent the much sought-after Negresco from falling into the hands of an international hotel chain.

“I want to be sure, when I go, that my 260 colleagues are not sacrificed on the altar of profit,” she said. “It is my house and the staff are my children. I have received dozens of offers from international hotel groups. Some of them were very attractive indeed. But I was not tempted and, at 86, nobody is going to change my mind. I want this hotel to keep its soul and remain French-owned. Everything here is authentic. Nothing is fake.”

Ms Augier, a childless widow, has also bequeathed the rest of her property portfolio in Paris, Nice and Grasse (said to be worth more than €100m) to the Mesange-Augier-Negresco foundation.

One of the charity’s missions will be to campaign for animal rights and, in particular, to attack what Ms Augier calls the “barbarous” practice of bull-fighting. There may seem to be a contradiction between animal rights and mink bedspreads but the luxury hotel business is the luxury hotel business and fur is not shunned in France.

Ms Augier, a tiny woman with a will of iron who lives in the top storey of the hotel, has been talking of creating a foundation since the death of her lawyer husband, Paul Augier, in 1995. Now that the papers are signed, she said, she will be able to “die with a light heart”.

“I was an only child,” Ms Augier said, “when I was a little girl my only friend was Michou, a Pomeranian my mother gave me for Christmas. I always had a dog with me to replace the brother or sister I never had.

“Now I am alone again. And despite what other well-heeled people might think, I know that you can bring nothing with you to the two square metres which is our final home.

“There are lots of practical things the foundation can do, such as helping the animal refuge owner who just called me saying she has no more space for all the abandoned dogs that she receives.”

A story from ‘The Independent’, 22 July, 2009

Unlike many luxury hotels, the Negresco actively encourages guests to bring their pets with them. The hotel’s website states: “He can share your room where special equipment will be provided to ensure his well-being, including a rug and a water bowl. Our concierge staff is at your disposal to take your favourite animal for a walk. Price per animal, €17.”

The Negresco was a struggling hotel when Ms Augier’s father, Jean-Baptiste Mesnage, bought it at her suggestion in 1957. Even then, her motives were charitable. Her mother had become paralysed after an unsuccessful operation. Apart from hospitals, the Negresco was the only building in Nice with lifts wide enough to allow her mother to be taken outside while lying in her bed.

Ms Augier and her husband increased the staffing of the hotel four-fold and toured auction houses to buy scores of art works. Among her acquisitions was the Hyacinthe Rigaud portrait of Louis XIV which is hung with portraits of Louis XV and Louis XVI, giving the “Versailles Room” the appearance of a museum. The “Royal Room” boasts the Gustave Eiffel chandelier, with glass work by Baccarrat, one of two commissioned by Tsar Nicholas II.

Ms Augier’s work in restoring the grandeur of the Negresco was especially admired by two celebrated guests, who asked her to advise them on their own tourist undertakings. The first was the Shah of Iran. The second was the 1960s Soviet leader, Nikita Khruschev. As a result, Ms Augier was – improbably – an adviser to the Soviet tourist board, Intourist, for two years.

The Negresco is one of the great landmarks of the Promenade des Anglais, the thoroughfare which runs along the seafront in Nice.

Most of its rooms have sea views. It has its own beach, a Michelin-starred restaurant and a curving reception room with magnificent views over the “Baie des Anges”.

The hotel was built by a Romanian entrepreneur, Henri Negresco, in 1913. At the time it was regarded as a wonder of modernity, equipped with early vacuum cleaners and a pneumatic tube system to distribute letters to each room.

The First World War – when the Negresco became a hospital – helped to push its owner into bankruptcy. The hotel recovered in the 1920s and 1930s under Belgian ownership to become the most elegant hotel on the Cote d’Azur but slumped again during and after the Second World War.

Guests of the Negresco over the years have included Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dali, Ernest Hemingway, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Michael Jackson, Anthony Quinn, Catherine Deneuve, Charles Aznavour, Yves Montand and Gina Lollobrigida.

And, presumably, their pets.

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