Suzanne Blumel (Suzanne Blum), lawyer: born Niort, France 24 November 1898; married 1934 Paul Weill (died 1965), Georges Spillmann (died 1980); died Paris 23 January 1994.
Suzanne Blum (lawyer) Suzanne Blum (24 November 1898 in Niort, France – 23 January 1994) was a French lawyer and writer under the pseudonym L.-S. Karen with three crime novels. As a lawyer, she joined the bar in 1922 and worked on several famous cases, notably representing Warner Brothers against Igor Stravinsky in a copyright case, and Rita ...
Suzanne Blum (24 November 1898 in Niort, France - 23 January 1994) was a French lawyer and writer, under the pseudonym L.-S. Karen with three crime novels. A lawyer, she joined the bar in 1922 and during her career, she worked on several famous cases, notably representing Warner Brothers against Igor Stravinsky in a copyright case, and Rita ...
Suzanne A. Blum (born 1978) is an American professor of organometallic chemistry at the University of California, Irvine. Education. Blum studied chemistry as an undergraduate at the University of Michigan. As evidenced by the 2000 Departmental newsletter ...
Jump to navigation Jump to search. French lawyer and writer. Suzanne Blum (24 November 1898 in Niort, France – 23 January 1994) was a French lawyer and writer under the pseudonym L.-S. Karen with three crime novels. A lawyer, she joined the bar in 1922 and worked on several famous cases, notably representing Warner Brothers against Igor Stravinsky ...
Upon the death of the Duke of Windsor, she looked after the assets of Wallis Simpson, the Duchess of Windsor and gradually became her single representative, until her death in 1986 ; Blum's presence and actions during these years is the subject of controversy.
Blum studied chemistry as an undergraduate at the University of Michigan.
Prof. Blum's research focuses on the development of new reactions based on "early" transition metals and on monitoring reaction intermediates by a combination of fluorescent and analytical methods.
Among them were a pair of earrings made of rubies, emeralds and diamonds; a bracelet with round brilliants on platinum; a watch-bracelet with two snake chains; a gold Cartier watch; a gold cigarette box with a map of Europe, inscribed 'David from Wallis 1935 Christmas'; and a gold tiepin with a blue enamel 'E' under a crown.
The Duchess could not sign because her hands were twisted with rheumatoid arthritis, so Blum sent the clerk to the Duchess's room to gain her verbal assent. The clerk began to read the document in French.
There are dangers for rich widows who have considerable worldly goods, if they are frail, more so if their affairs are handled by a dishonest lawyer and an avaricious banker, their health overseen by a doctor acting on the lawyer's instructions. The Duchess was suffering from the early symptoms of Crohn's disease.
By that time, the Duchess was ill and the Duke had been diagnosed with inoperable throat cancer. Within ten days of the Queen's visit, he was dead aged 77. Although it might not have been apparent at the time, the reins were slipping from the Duchess's hands.
Blum never dared enter the Duchess's presence again - at least not until the Duchess could no longer speak. But the Duchess would pay heavily for her scorn. After that day, Blum did exactly as she pleased. She sold jewellery from the Duchess's multimillion-pound collection without her permission, set about publishing love letters between the Duchess and the Duke and appointed herself keeper of the Windsor flame.
Blum had once merely been an adviser, summoned when required. Now the relationship had been twisted to her utter advantage.
Blum had what she wanted; she was ready for the Duchess to die. By the spring of the following year, the Duchess ceased speaking. She had almost ceased to exist as a person. Wallis could hardly move without assistance, being turned to the right and left, moved from her bed to a couch, and then back again.
But it is Maitre Suzanne Blum, the duchess' eccentric, paranoid octogenarian French lawyer, who becomes the central character.
Blackwood notes that Maitre Blum should be grateful to him for not revealing the contents of a telegram sent by the duke to Joachim von Ribbentrop, Hitler's foreign minister, offering his services to Hitler.
Lady Tomkins said: "Suzanne Blum is rather a splendid old girl. She defends the duchess like a lioness with her cubs."
She speculates that a woman who wanted to be a queen and a man who did not want to be a king made their alliance for reasons that included more than love.
Vickers described her as. “A Satanic figure was waiting and watching, narrow-eyed and dangerous, wearing the mantle of good intentions to disguise her inner malevolence.”. Elsewhere, Caroline Blackwood wrote that Maitre Blum was “ruthless,” “a terrifying clown,” and a “malignant old spider”.
Pasternak writes that Wallis was “imprisoned” by Maitre Blum who banned the Duchess’ friends from seeing her and that nurses, hired by the lawyer, were “drugging the Duchess”. Simultaneously, Maitre Blum was either selling off or giving away the Duke and Duchess’ various possessions.
Ms Schutz approached the Queen’s private secretary Sir Martin Charteris; however, “The Queen’s lawyer came to Paris with a doctor and Blum wouldn’t let them through the door.”. Elvire Gozin, who was her nurse from 1976 to 1986, said the Duchess was “a prisoner in her own home”.
Still, those around the Duchess fought to try to protect her. Ms Schutz approached the Queen’s private secretary Sir Martin Charteris ; however, “The Queen’s lawyer came to Paris with a doctor and Blum wouldn’t let them through the door.”
A Royal Jewelry Feud Finally Comes to Light. Lady Pamela Hicks told the story of her father’s battle with Wallis Simpson, and because this is 2019, it happened on a podcast. By Erin Vanderhoo f.
The lawyer Pamela was discussing is most likely Suzanne Blum, who was given power of attorney for Wallis in 1973, a year after Edward’s death, and later organized an auction of many of her belongings at Sotheby’s after Wallis’s death in 1986. Around the time that Mountbatten began asking about the jewels, her health was deteriorating, and she suffered from what biographer Anna Pasternak called “lapses of senility,” in her recent book The Real Wallis Simpson. Other biographers have claimed that before his death, Edward had warned Wallis to be careful around Mountbatten. He was never able to recover the jewels, and in 1979, he died as the result of an IRA bombing on a ship. (He was a mentor to Prince Charles, whose grandson, Prince Louis is said to be named after the late earl .)