ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: MONDAY, May 14, 1990                   TAG: 9005140249
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: A3   EDITION: EVENING 
SOURCE: TONY GERMANOTTA LANDMARK NEWS SERVICE
DATELINE: CHARLOTTESVILLE                                LENGTH: Medium


BIG-MONEY SPLIT SMALL FRY AT HOME

Across the Big Pond and up in the Big Apple, the split between the "billionaire and the belly dancer" has been a sensation.

But the pending divorce of John and Patricia Kluge, America's richest couple, has caused hardly a ripple in this stately town of Jefferson and Monroe.

The Kluges, who own 10,000 acres and several mansions just down the road from the historic Monticello and Ash Lawn estates, announced late last month that they were amicably ending their nine-year marriage.

The Daily Progress in Charlottesville broke the story April 21, reporting that John Kluge, the 76-year-old billionaire, had retired from the palatial 45-room Albemarle House to his nearby Morven estate and stud farm.

"They have reached a firm settlement," Patricia Kluge's attorney told the Charlottesville paper. "Obviously, she received assets."

Almost immediately, speculation began on the size of the settlement.

In New York, word leaked from High Society sources that the Mrs. had signed a prenuptial agreement giving her the annual interest on $1 billion.

If true, that would conservatively amount to $85 million a year for living expenses. And, the reports said, she gets to live with their 6-year-old adopted son in Albemarle House, a massive brick mansion set into the woods on the side of a rolling hill and fronted by their private golf course and cattle ponds.

Town and Country magazine has referred to the home as "the grandest estate to have been built in America since the '20s."

Across the Atlantic, the British tabloids were trumping their U.S. counterparts. They dragged out unsavory 20-year-old nude pictures of Patricia Kluge, 41, and played the marital troubles on their front pages.

"Exit for the Queen of Excess," blared an April 24 centerfold spread in the London Daily Mail. "A billion-dollar divorce payoff for Patricia Kluge, the social climber driven by a royal obsession," another headline said.

The London Daily Express of the same day was only slightly more restrained. Its front-page story was headlined: "The Richest Ex-Wife in The World."

The story declared that "Ex-belly dancer Patricia Kluge, who once dispensed explicit sex advice in a Soho magazine, could eventually become one of the world's wealthiest women."

According to their account, Patricia Kluge would net about $160 million a year in her divorce payoff.

The Kluge divorce seemed to stun the stateside social set more than any of the old scandals.

Newsday's columnist, James A. Revson, reported on April 23 that "New York society is reeling" from the news of the divorce. Even the staid New York Times jumped on the Kluge divorce bandwagon last weekend, but the Times' treatment was much more reverent.

"On the social circuit this week," it said, "there was talk of the attractive way John and Patricia Kluge. . . are dissolving their marriage of nine years."

In Charlottesville, where academia, agriculture and the jet set meet at the edge of the Blue Ridge, the divorce has been accepted calmly.

"A lot of people kind of expect it of the very rich," said Del. Mitchell Van Yahres, who owns a tree surgery business in Charlottesville that counts most of the nearby estates as customers, including the Kluges' grounds.

"I don't know that they're very active socially around here," he said, adding that the divorce was probably more the talk "of that group from Hollywood, New York, Palm Beach and Scotland."

"It's not that we are so used to things like this," said Paul Saunier, a prominent Charlottesville conservationist and former UVa official. "My impression is that the community is reacting very calmly because they think it's been handled with much more civility than most of the types of suits of this kind."

The Kluges have been among the area's biggest benefactors, donating to a wide variety of large and small causes in Charlottesville.

But there is no fear that they will abandon Albemarle Farms, both men said. "She likes the outdoors, the farm, the hunting and so forth," Saunier said.



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