- Getty, Sir J Paul, Jr.
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▪ 2004American-born British philanthropist (Sept. 7, 1932, Italy—d. April 17, 2003, London, Eng.), after years of bohemian dissipation, devoted his later life to doing good works with his inherited fortune. In 1959 Getty's father, J. Paul Getty, Sr., put him in charge of the Getty Oil operations in Rome, but he soon found himself drawn into the counterculture. In 1966 he divorced his wife of 11 years and married the glamorous Talitha Pol. Their life was one of unrestrained excess, and in 1971 Getty's wife died of a drug overdose. He moved to London and became a recluse, subsisting on little more than rum and heroin. A further blow was the 1973 kidnapping of his son J. Paul Getty III; a ransom too high for Getty was demanded, and Getty's father refused to help out until after the victim's ear had been mailed to a Rome newspaper. After his father's death in 1976, Getty began gradually to pull himself together, and in the 1980s he embarked upon a career as a philanthropist. He donated millions to the National Gallery and the British Film Institute and stepped in several times to prevent art treasures from being sold to American institutions. He amassed an exceptionally fine collection of antiquarian books and built a library on his Buckinghamshire estate to house them. A serious cricket fan, he built a replica of the Oval cricket ground on the estate, contributed money to support cricket clubs, and from 1993 published the Wisden annual and Wisden Cricket Monthly. Getty was given an honorary knighthood in 1986 in recognition of his charitable contributions and, after he became a British citizen, received the full honours in 1998.
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Universalium. 2010.