Tessa Georgina Kennedy is a British interior designer, whose clients include multi-national corporations, royalty, celebrities and many European hotels, restaurants and clubs. Her elopement with society portrait painterDominick Elwes made headlines in 1957.
At age 18, Kennedy became a cause célèbre after she eloped with painter, Dominick Elwes. On, Geoffrey Kennedy obtained a restraining order against Elwes. However, the High CourtTipstaff was not authorized to apprehend Elwes in any place outside England and Wales. After attempting to wed in Scotland, while being pursued by the press, the young couple eloped to Havana, Cuba. Mobster Meyer Lansky provided accommodation for them at the Habana Riviera, and the couple were wed in a civil ceremony on, When Castro's revolution threatened the stability of the country they were forced to flee aboard a raft with two National Geographic photographers who were sailing to Miami, Florida. The couple flew to New York where they applied for a marriage license on 31 March. The following day they were wed again at Manhattan Supreme Court. They returned to England aboard the in early July. On 16 July, Elwes handed himself over to the authorities while waiting for charges against him to be heard. Elwes was eventually released from custody, but Kennedy was ordered to remain a ward of court.
Career
After studying at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, Kennedy started her career in the 1960s at the London design firm of David Mlinaric, whose clients included Mick Jagger and Eric Clapton. In 1968, after spending three years working as partner with Mlinaric, she won a competition to design the Grosvenor House Hotel, launching her own company with Michael Sumner that same year. In 1986, she reformed as Tessa Kennedy Design, Ltd., a company which has won several design accolades. Her clients have included De Beers, Stanley Kubrick, George Harrison, King Hussein of Jordan and London hotels Claridge's, The Berkeley, and The Ritz for which she was voted Designer of the Year. Kennedy also renovated rooms at Michael Winner's Woodland House. A member of the British Interior Design Association, Kennedy was the first woman to work inSaudi Arabia with her own company. Following two years as President of the and three years on the International Board, she made a Fellow of the International Interior Design Association.