Liliane Bettencourt, the L'Oréal cosmetics heiress and the world's richest woman, has died at her home in a chic Parisian suburb. She was 94.
Bettencourt's daughter, Francoise Bettencourt Meyers, said in a written statement Thursday that her mother "left peacefully" overnight in Neuilly-sur-Seine.
Liliane Bettencourt was the only child of Eugene Schueller, who founded L'Oréal in the early 20th century. Forbes magazine estimated her fortune to be worth $39.5 billion this year.
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According to Bloomberg, "L’Oreal owes its origins—and its name—to Aureole, a nontoxic hair colorant Schueller developed in 1907 and sold to Parisian beauty salons. Two years later, the young chemist registered his business under the name Safe Hair Dye Company of France."
L'Oréal Chairman and CEO Jean-Paul Agon expressed "great admiration" for Bettencourt. Agon said she "always looked" after the company and its employees and "she has personally contributed greatly to its success for many years."
Born in 1922 in Paris, she married French politician Andre Bettencourt at the age of 27.
Her husband notably served as a minister at the end of the 1960s and beginning of the 1970s. He died in 2007.
Liliane and Andre Bettencourt with their daughter during his induction into the French Academy of Fine Arts in 1988.
Getty
Liliane Bettencourt inherited the L'Oréal fortune upon the death of her father in 1957.
When the company went public six years later, she continued to own a majority stake.
As the world's leading beauty company, L'Oréal generated sales amounting to 25.8 billion euros in 2016 and employs 89,300 people worldwide, according to the company.
In 1988, Bettencourt was asked by a journalist how her wealth had affected her personal relationships. “Obviously, it’s surely more comfortable to be certain that you are loved for your soul,” she said. “But I didn’t have this concern.”
She added that when she did wonder if she was loved for her money, “I have smiled and said to myself, ‘If it’s more, so much the better.’”
Bettencourt's name has been involved in a politico-financial scandal known in France as the "Bettencourt Affair," which has wound its way through French courts and newspapers for years.
The case stemmed from a 2007 complaint filed by Bettencourt's daughter accusing one of her mother's closest friends, the photographer Francois-Marie Banier, of manipulating the elderly widow into giving him artwork and cash.
Liliane and Andre Bettencourt attend Queen Elizabeth II’s visit to Rouen in 1972.
AFP/ Getty
In 2015, a French court handed Banier a three-year prison sentence on charges of swindling millions of euros from Bettencourt by taking advantage of her weak mental state. The court acquitted a former ally of former President Nicolas Sarkozy in the case.
Sarkozy's former campaign treasurer, Eric Woerth, was acquitted on charges of "abuse of weakness" and taking donations from Bettencourt during the 2007 presidential election campaign.
Sarkozy himself was cleared in 2013 of preliminary charges.
Bettencourt is survived by her daughter, Francoise, who was born in 1953.
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