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Maud Emily <I>Kahn</I> Marriott

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Maud Emily Kahn Marriott

Birth
Manhattan, New York County, New York, USA
Death
24 Oct 1960 (aged 63)
Manhattan, New York County, New York, USA
Burial
Brookwood, Woking Borough, Surrey, England Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Heiress, Socialite, Philanthropist. Lady Maud Marriott, better known as ‘Momo’, She was a famously glamorous social figure during the first decades of the 20th Century. Lady Marriott was the daughter of Otto Herman Kahn, an American financier, collector, philanthropist and patron of the arts, who was well known for his ability to entertain celebrities and dignitaries alike, a quality his daughter inherited. Otto Kahn created such a worldwide reputation for wealth and grace that it was said that F. Scott Fitzgerald used him as inspiration for his famous character Jay Gatsby in his novel The Great Gatsby. In 1920, Momo married John Charles Oakes Marriott, a British Army officer with an outstanding military career. During the Second World War they lived in Cairo, where her husband was stationed. She soon became known as one of the greatest society hostesses and organised a multitude of parties for the flourishing society out there and her husband’s Officers. One of these Officers was Evelyn Waugh, who later used her character in one of his novels. Although Lady Marriott was thought to have numerous flirtations due to her lifestyle, she was particularly close to Randolph Churchill, son of Winston Churchill, a fact that allowed Cairene society to believe they were lovers. Julian Amery, a close friend of hers, recalled, ‘Her routine was the same whether she lived in London, New York, Paris or wartime Cairo. She never rose before lunch. She spent an hour and a half reading in the bath before dinner. She gave luncheons and dinners almost daily and saw a constant stream of visitors in between and well into the night. She was, as a result, exceptionally well-informed’. In 1942, after a long series of parties, she returned to England, where her husband had been recalled. Sir Miles Lampson, British ambassador to Egypt wrote, ‘Cairo will hardly be the same place without Momo and her salon’. Lady Marriott settled in London, where she continued to live her lavish life until she passed away in 1960.
Heiress, Socialite, Philanthropist. Lady Maud Marriott, better known as ‘Momo’, She was a famously glamorous social figure during the first decades of the 20th Century. Lady Marriott was the daughter of Otto Herman Kahn, an American financier, collector, philanthropist and patron of the arts, who was well known for his ability to entertain celebrities and dignitaries alike, a quality his daughter inherited. Otto Kahn created such a worldwide reputation for wealth and grace that it was said that F. Scott Fitzgerald used him as inspiration for his famous character Jay Gatsby in his novel The Great Gatsby. In 1920, Momo married John Charles Oakes Marriott, a British Army officer with an outstanding military career. During the Second World War they lived in Cairo, where her husband was stationed. She soon became known as one of the greatest society hostesses and organised a multitude of parties for the flourishing society out there and her husband’s Officers. One of these Officers was Evelyn Waugh, who later used her character in one of his novels. Although Lady Marriott was thought to have numerous flirtations due to her lifestyle, she was particularly close to Randolph Churchill, son of Winston Churchill, a fact that allowed Cairene society to believe they were lovers. Julian Amery, a close friend of hers, recalled, ‘Her routine was the same whether she lived in London, New York, Paris or wartime Cairo. She never rose before lunch. She spent an hour and a half reading in the bath before dinner. She gave luncheons and dinners almost daily and saw a constant stream of visitors in between and well into the night. She was, as a result, exceptionally well-informed’. In 1942, after a long series of parties, she returned to England, where her husband had been recalled. Sir Miles Lampson, British ambassador to Egypt wrote, ‘Cairo will hardly be the same place without Momo and her salon’. Lady Marriott settled in London, where she continued to live her lavish life until she passed away in 1960.


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