The Guardian (USA)

Sir Tony O’Reilly obituary

- Martin Adeney

As Ireland’s best known and most flamboyant businessma­n, Sir Tony O’Reilly, who has died aged 88, was instrument­al in changing the image of his country from that of a commercial backwater into one of a booming “Celtic Tiger” economy. Never notably self-effacing, he once said: “The Irish in many countries concealed their identities. I got the Irish to be rather proud of the Irish.”

But the career of the titan who had once been Ireland’s richest man and a sporting hero ended in failure when, in a demonstrat­ion of hubristic over-reach, he was pursued through the courts for debts which, in spite of the sale of his houses and art collection, he was unable to pay, and he was declared bankrupt in 2015.

His achievemen­ts, in business, as first non-family chairman of Heinz, and in promoting Irish culture and working for peace in Ireland, were undeniable. His business contempora­ries acknowledg­ed him as one of the creators of modern Ireland. His ventures included a media empire that dominated the Irish press and for some years controlled the Independen­t newspaper in the UK, and oil and gas interests, as well as the Waterford Wedgwood china and glass company into which he and his brother-in-law were estimated to have sunk £400m before it went into receiversh­ip in 2009. Their losses sucked him dry and his fortune unravelled as the banks demanded repayment of his borrowings.

His earlier career as a rugby player encompasse­d 29 caps for Ireland; a record, still-standing, for the most tries (37) by a British Lion; and a final summons to play for Ireland at the age of 33, delivered at 2am in Annabel’s nightclub in central London. It was the stuff of a Boy’s Own story.

O’Reilly was born in Dublin, the son of a civil servant, Jack O’Reilly, who became inspector general of customs. The fact that Jack was not married to Tony’s mother, Aileen O’Connor (he had left his wife, Judith, and four children, but was not divorced), was only revealed to Tony by a schoolteac­her, and he kept the knowledge secret for years afterwards. His parents married after the death of Jack’s first wife. Educated at Belvedere college, a private Catholic school in Dublin, O’Reilly studied law at University College Dublin, qualifying first and third in Ireland in the two parts of his final profession­al exams.

But it was sport that marked him out; he was the redheaded pin-up boy of Irish rugby. A powerful three-quarter, first capped at 18, he was immediatel­y picked for the British Lions (now the British & Irish Lions) in 1955 and played in all four tests against South Africa. The following year he scored four tries for Ireland against both France and Scotland.

In 1958 he went to work in England as a management consultant before moving back to Cork to an agricultur­al products business. In 1962, as general manager of the Irish Dairy Board, the charismati­c O’Reilly demonstrat­ed his marketing skills with the launch of Kerrygold butter; a huge success, particular­ly, as he himself conceded, since precious little butter was made in County Kerry. His brand focus remained constant, although his detractors claimed his most successful brand was himself.

His next move to the Irish Sugar Board brought him to the notice of the American Heinz company. They made him their UK managing director and in 1971 moved him to the US headquarte­rs in Pittsburgh, where he became the company’s president in 1973, chief executive in 1979 and the first non-Heinz family chairman in 1987. It was a rare success for a nonAmerica­n, and drew both on his business achievemen­t and charm.

His leadership of Heinz lasted for 20 years, during which time its value multiplied 12 times. But sales fell in the early 1990s. In 1994 he took a cut to what was one of the most generous salaries in the US, amid accusation­s that his multifario­us interests were taking his eye off the ball and doubts about his corporate governance. Although the company was then restructur­ed and stabilised, O’Reilly regularly featured among BusinessWe­ek’s top five chief executives giving shareholde­rs worst value for their salaries. Commentato­rs pointed to the deal that allowed him to pursue his personal business interests in Ireland while employed by Heinz.

Starting with Irish politician­s such as Jack Lynch, and moving on from the Heinz family, he revelled in a huge circle of powerful friends in business, politics and show business, although some detected beneath his ebullient drive a desire to be liked that reflected an underlying insecurity.

Many of his famous friends would join his boards and charities, and this sometimes drew accusation­s of cronyism. His directorsh­ips included Mobil, Bankers Trust and the Washington Post. He was heavily involved in the Republican party and was even considered as a possible secretary of commerce under George Bush Sr.

But O’Reilly judged he would never leave a great mark on American life and refocused his interests in Ireland, where he had bought into a series of enterprise­s before leaving for Pittsburgh.

In 1973, he had put more than £1m into the Irish Independen­t newspaper company, becoming executive chairman of Independen­t News and Media (INM) in 2000 with a controllin­g stake. He built up a dominant position in the Irish press, with stakes in nine of the 12 leading titles, before his investment­s in the rival Irish Press Group were labelled “abuse of a dominant position” by the Irish Competitio­n Authority in 1995. He enjoyed the influence. Venturing into oil exploratio­n, he told Forbes magazine: “I have close contact with the politician­s. I got the [exploratio­n] blocks I wanted”.

O’Reilly internatio­nalised his ambitions, buying into newspapers and broadcasti­ng in South Africa (where he courted Nelson Mandela), Australasi­a and the UK. In Britain he bought shares in the loss-making Independen­t in 1994, describing it as his “calling card”. INM built up more than 200 newspaper and magazine titles and 130 broadcasti­ng outlets. An internatio­nal advisory board that included the actor Sean Connery, former rugby stars and North American and UK politician­s gathered at top locations twice a year.

But when the share price collapsed to a few cents in 2009, O’Reilly found himself under bitter attack from a rival Irish billionair­e, Denis O’Brien, who, after objecting to the group’s coverage of his business, had built up a stake in INM almost equivalent to O’Reilly’s. He demanded sales of assets, including the Independen­t newspaper.

In 2009 O’Reilly stepped down in favour of Gavin, the internatio­nal advisory board disappeare­d, and O’Brien nominees were included on a smaller main board, replacing some O’Reilly family members. Assets were sold and in 2010 the Independen­t was purchased by the Russian businessma­n Alexander Lebedev.

O’Reilly was also hurt by the failure of Waterford Wedgwood in 2009, which cost him his billionair­e status. He saw his purchase of the old-establishe­d company, Ireland’s biggest private employer, in 1993, as the start of a conglomera­te of famous brands. He was widely praised for supporting Irish traditiona­l industry, and poured in huge sums of money before its ultimate failure.

Other ventures had mixed success. His industrial holding company Fitzwilton, establishe­d with friends in 1970, started as a stockmarke­t favourite, and was intended to emulate Hanson. But it was only saved by a fire-sale of its investment­s in the mid-70s, just as O’Reilly was taking up the reins at Heinz. It was later taken private. In 2005 he made millions from the consortium that bought and re-sold Eircom, the former state telecommun­ications company, but his Irish oil exploratio­n was a failure, in which shareholde­rs lost millions and O’Reilly most of all.

He was stung by criticism that he had abandoned Ireland for the US. “Cut him and he bleeds green,” said one business associate. He himself said: “Every time I achieve something or fail to achieve something, I feel the weight of being a representa­tive of the hopes and aspiration­s and dreams of Irish round the world.”

In the US in the 70s, he establishe­d and energetica­lly promoted the Ireland Funds, specifical­ly to foster “peaceful and fruitful coexistenc­e in which both nationalis­t and unionist identities are mutually respected”. Conceived as a counterbal­ance to Noraid, which raised money for the IRA, it brought together leading Catholic and Protestant IrishAmeri­cans and has raised more than $500m for community projects. In the 2001 New Year’s Honours list, O’Reilly received a British knighthood for his work for peace in Ireland.

Famously described by Henry Kissinger as “a modern renaissanc­e man”, O’Reilly contribute­d generously to the arts and academia from his own pocket, as well as through the O’Reilly

Foundation, with major donations to Irish universiti­es, including the O’Reilly Hall at University College Dublin; the O’Reilly Institute at Trinity College Dublin; and a new library for Queen’s University Belfast. Other sponsorshi­ps included the O’Reilly theatre in Pittsburgh.

His social life was energetic, and he had homes in the Bahamas, France, the US, Dublin and various parts of Ireland, including a classical mansion, Castlemart­in in County Kildare, where he entertaine­d guests including Kissinger and the Hollywood actor Paul Newman.

But in later years the fortune of an increasing­ly reclusive O’Reilly drained away. Although he had once been worth nearly £1bn, the collapse of the Irish banks revealed just how overstretc­hed he had become. As they pressed for repayments, he had to use the proceeds of his holding in the smart meter company Landis and Gyr to halve his €70m debt to the Irish Bank Resolution Corporatio­n (the IBRC, which in 2011 took over the bankrupt Anglo-Irish Bank). Then in 2014,

AIB (the Allied Irish Banks) successful­ly sued him for €22m.

He sold his Irish estates, including his beloved Castlemart­in, “with 750 acres of the finest stud land in Ireland”, and made other disposals. A year later, the bank was still pursuing him for €14.3m and the court was told that O’Reilly was bedridden in New York after a back operation. His bankruptcy was declared in the Bahamas, where he had residence, in 2015 and he was finally released from it in January this year on the basis that the whole of his property had been released for the benefit of his creditors.

Insult had been added to injury when Sabina Vidunas, whom he had employed as his personal assistant and nurse for 15 years, sued him for refusing to honour promises to provide her with shares supposedly put into trust for her. It was a sad postscript to a remarkable life during which O’Reilly made a major contributi­on to a modern Ireland whose emergence he seemed to symbolise.

In 1962 he married Susan Cameron, an Australian pianist he had met on a Lions tour, and they had three sons and three daughters, including triplets. After their divorce, in 1991 he married Chryss Goulandris, of the Greek shipping family, with a fortune that exceeded his own, and a shared interest in the turf which included her own horsebreed­ing stables.

She died last year. O’Reilly is survived by his children.

• Anthony Joseph Francis O’Reilly, businessma­n, born 7 May 1936; died 18 May 2024

 ?? Photograph: Tony Andrews/ FT ?? Tony O’Reilly was the first non-family chairman of the US food conglomera­te Heinz and for some years controlled the Independen­t newspaper in the UK.
Photograph: Tony Andrews/ FT Tony O’Reilly was the first non-family chairman of the US food conglomera­te Heinz and for some years controlled the Independen­t newspaper in the UK.
 ?? Photograph: PA Images/Alamy ?? Tony O’Reilly playing for Ireland against England in the Five Nations Championsh­ips in 1970.
Photograph: PA Images/Alamy Tony O’Reilly playing for Ireland against England in the Five Nations Championsh­ips in 1970.

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