Chicago Sun-Times

Chicago socialite, charity fundraiser, friend to famous and powerful

- modonnell@suntimes.com | @suntimesob­its BY MAUREEN O’DONNELL, STAFF REPORTER

Bonnie Swearingen was a flamboyant, irrepressi­ble Chicago society figure and charity fundraiser who made headlines for her madcap comments and marriage to a Midwestern business titan.

In 1969, the former Bonnie Bolding, an Alabama beauty queen, Hollywood actress and New York stockbroke­r, married John Swearingen, who, as chief executive officer of Standard Oil of Indiana — which evolved into Amoco and now BP — was the most powerful oil executive of his generation.

Mrs. Swearingen died Aug. 2 at 87 in Birmingham, Alabama, according to Ridout’s Valley Chapel Funeral Home in Homewood, Alabama.

In another age, her parties, travel and fashion were chronicled in The New York Times and Town and Country. People magazine called her Swearingen’s “private energy source.”

While her husband retained the grave mien of one of the world’s most powerful CEOs, Mrs. Swearingen was suntanned, smiling and sparkling with jewels. She had a gift for rememberin­g names and a Southern drawl that seemed to thicken “when she felt she needed some extra oomph,” said former Sun-Times columnist Bill Zwecker.

“She was just always fun,” said Abra Prentice Wilkin, a friend and former Chicago newspaper columnist. “She always listened to what you said. She wasn’t looking over your shoulder.”

Mrs. Swearingen attended inaugurati­ons and coronation­s, hunted with former President Lyndon Johnson, entertaine­d or was entertaine­d by former Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, actor Kirk Douglas and comedian Bob Hope, and socialized with King Hassan II of Morocco, Egyptian first lady Jehan Sadat and the shah of Iran.

In 1985, she described meeting Prince

Charles to the Washington Post. “He said my dress was the loveliest one there,” she said. “If I were to see him today, I would say, ‘Why don’t you and I go on a private picnic together?’”

When she married Swearingen, who was her third husband and 15 years older, in New York in 1969, The New York Times quoted her saying, “All my husbands have been oil men who have been heads of their companies.”

“Her husband just adored her,” her friend Maureen Smith said.

“She and John always sent outrageous Christmas cards, where she was in feathers and sequins,” Wilkin said.

In 1981, a writer from People — who interviewe­d the Swearingen­s at their apartment overlookin­g Lake Michigan — said she liked saying, “I just love oil. If it could be made into a perfume, I’d wear it.”

In 1972, then-Chicago Daily News columnist Mike Royko wrote about what she’d told Town and Country magazine: “I eat natural honey with the honeycombs, especially before making love. This is what athletes take before a big game.”

She was born in Joppa, Alabama, one of seven children. Her father, Orin Bolding, was “a poor, itinerant Church of Christ minister,” according to People. At 6, she was blinded in one eye “when a playmate threw a pebble at her,” the magazine reported.

She entered the Miss Alabama contest four times, eventually making first runnerup. That led to a scholarshi­p to Samford University in Birmingham, where she was a drama student and cheerleade­r.

“I wanted to be Miss Alabama,” she said in 2006 while dedicating Samford’s Bonnie Bolding Swearingen Hall. “I knew that if I ever got on the stage in Atlantic City, I would be Miss America. But it was not to be.

“I learned then that it is not what you do that are successes, it’s the failures that make you what you are.”

She got a scholarshi­p to the Pasadena Playhouse and became a Hollywood bit player in the late 1950s, appearing with Charles Boyer in an Alcoa Hour drama on NBC-TV and the TV series “Cheyenne” and “Have Gun-Will Travel.”

In 1958, she married Texas oil executive

John David Manley III. Three years later, she married oil tycoon Oscar Sherman Wyatt Jr.

After reinventin­g herself as a Wall Street stockbroke­r, she became Swearingen’s second wife in 1969. They were married until his death in 2007.

“I look around me and still can’t believe that the little girl from Alabama with all of her enthusiasm and naivete is sitting with people like Imelda Marcos,” she once told People. “My God, honey, sometimes they even listen to me.”

Mrs. Swearingen was active in fundraisin­g. “She did, in her own stylish way, get a lot of good done,” Smith said. “She was involved in any number of charities.”

She is survived by her sister Margie Bolding. A celebratio­n of life is planned at a future date.

The 1981 People profile claimed a Chicago society doyenne dismissed her as “one of those Alabama Gabors,” the stunning, oftmarried acting sisters from Hungary.

In her death notice, Mrs. Swearingen got the last laugh, noting that she and the rest of the Bolding sisters, “all glamorous,” were “collective­ly and affectiona­tely known as the ‘Alabama Gabor Sisters.’”

 ?? SUN TIMES FILE ?? Mrs. Swearingen was a city society figure, former Alabama beauty queen and Hollywood actress.
SUN TIMES FILE Mrs. Swearingen was a city society figure, former Alabama beauty queen and Hollywood actress.
 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE ?? Bonnie and John Swearingen.
SUN-TIMES FILE Bonnie and John Swearingen.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States