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lite.cnn.com - on gopher - inofficial | |
ARTICLE VIEW: | |
Jackie Kennedy’s lipstick-stained glass is just one piece of the | |
history at Phnom Penh’s Raffles Le Royale Hotel | |
By Lilit Marcus, CNN | |
Updated: | |
10:55 PM EDT, Thu August 28, 2025 | |
Source: CNN | |
In 1967, four years after her husband President John F. Kennedy was | |
assassinated and she became the most recognizable widow in the world, | |
Jacqueline Kennedy visited Cambodia. | |
When she arrived in the capital city of Phnom Penh amid a | |
generation-defining war, there was no question where she would stay — | |
the Hotel Le Royal, the toniest address in town. Opened in 1929 and | |
inaugurated by the then-King Sisowath Monivong, the hotel came by its | |
name honestly. | |
In honor of the former first lady’s visit, the hotel’s bartender | |
created a special cocktail: the Femme Fatale. Made with cognac, | |
Champagne and crème de fraise, then garnished with a frangipani | |
flower, it’s served in a long-stemmed coupe glass. It’s fizzy, | |
elegant, and the perfect thing to drink while hiding from Phnom | |
Penh’s hot, humid weather. | |
Four decades later, much about the hotel has changed — but the Femme | |
Fatale remains on the bar menu. | |
The story doesn’t stop there. | |
Much of the hotel’s finery was dumped into storage following the | |
country’s brutal civil war, untouched. After the property was | |
purchased by the Raffles group in 1996, a worker supposedly found the | |
exact glass Kennedy had drunk her Femme Fatale out of — thanks to a | |
mark from her lipstick on the rim — and rescued it amid the hotel | |
renovations. | |
Now, the glass, along with a few photos of Kennedy’s trip to Phnom | |
Penh, is displayed in a vitrine outside the hotel’s Elephant Bar. | |
The hotel also has a Kennedy suite, where a portrait of the former | |
first lady hangs, seeming to look admiringly over the pristine white | |
linens and cool tile floors. A vintage copy of the Life magazine issue | |
about Kennedy’s Cambodia trip, sourced by Raffles on eBay, is on a | |
hallway table, already opened to the relevant page. | |
From First Lady to global celebrity | |
“I call that her transitional period,” says Elizabeth J. Natalle, | |
author of “Jacqueline Kennedy and the Architecture of First Lady | |
Diplomacy,” of Kennedy’s post-White House, pre-remarriage years. | |
At that point, Kennedy was arguably the most famous and talked-about | |
woman on the planet. Her love life was as scrutinized as her outfits. | |
Accompanying Kennedy on her trip was David Ormsby-Gore, a British | |
aristocrat and former ambassador to the United States. The two visited | |
, the massive UNESCO-listed complex in northern Cambodia, together. | |
Though they kept their relationship low profile at the time, letters | |
auctioned off after both their deaths revealed the depth of their love | |
– including the reveal that Kennedy had . | |
Natalle believes that Kennedy was suffering from undiagnosed PTSD after | |
witnessing her husband’s assassination. But while Kennedy dreaded the | |
idea of riding in an open-top car convoy – similar to the one she’d | |
been traveling in on November 22, 1963 – she agreed to do it as a | |
goodwill gesture toward Prince Sihanouk, her host in the Southeast | |
Asian country. | |
Yes, she was a celebrity, but she was not a politician. Therefore, she | |
carried a unique kind of soft power, notes Natalle. As a widow, she | |
possessed a respected dignity, and as she was no longer the sitting | |
first lady, her position was neutral. | |
“Soft power is the antidote to military policy and official | |
government diplomacy,” says Natalle. “First ladies have a kind of | |
credibility just because they’re first ladies. They’re not an | |
official part of the government, they don’t have a job description, | |
they’re not in the Constitution.” | |
Though visiting Cambodia while an American-backed war was raging across | |
the border in Vietnam may have seemed like a political gesture, Kennedy | |
insisted that she was simply in the country to visit Angkor Wat and | |
other historical sites. | |
Her vacation was a carefully orchestrated performance. Public | |
opposition to the Vietnam War in the US was at its height, and official | |
relations between the US and Cambodia had been cut off in 1965. As a | |
result, Kennedy needed an official invitation from the king to get into | |
the country. | |
Then there was the question of logistics. There were no direct flights | |
between the US and Cambodia – a fact still true to this day. Finally, | |
a solution: she flew on a commercial flight to Bangkok, then was taken | |
on to Phnom Penh via a US Air Force C54 that had been granted special | |
permission to land. | |
A Francophone, Kennedy had helped her husband during his political | |
career by translating French books and political speeches, including | |
material about Cambodia, which had been part of French Indochina. | |
According to Natalle, she was known for granting access and interviews | |
to French-speaking journalists on her travels, even if she snubbed the | |
English-speaking ones. | |
And she’d long been known as a lover of history, art and architecture | |
following similar “transitional era” visits to countries like | |
Greece and Spain. | |
“She was interested in ancient civilizations,” says Natalle. | |
“Angkor Wat would probably be part of that. It was the way in which | |
she would praise her hosts and the site itself as something of | |
significance.” | |
A changing hotel for a changing Cambodia | |
Sitting near the banks of the Ton Le Sap River and two miles from the | |
Royal Palace, the Hotel Le Royal has lived many lives. | |
It survived the darkest period in modern Cambodian history, when the | |
ultra-Maoist controlled the country. From 1975 to 1979, at least 1.7 | |
million Cambodians were killed by the regime. Many Cambodians were | |
pushed out of or escaped from Phnom Penh into the countryside. | |
After the Khmer Rouge years, Hotel Le Royal was renamed the Solidarity | |
Hotel and played host to international journalists and aid workers who | |
were flowing into the country. When the Raffles group bought the hotel | |
in the 1990s, they settled on the name Raffles Hotel Le Royal. | |
After all these years, the Raffles Le Royal remains an important | |
address in Phnom Penh. Angelina Jolie, Charlie Chaplin and Charles | |
DeGaulle have also stayed there. | |
In 2012, President Barack Obama visited Cambodia as the final stop on a | |
diplomatic tour around Southeast Asia and was photographed sitting on a | |
couch at the Raffles, talking on his phone. | |
He wasn’t in the Kennedy Suite, though. | |
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