
Paris, Sept. 21 (Reuters): Regularly named France's richest person and for years the wealthiest woman in the world thanks to her L'Oreal inheritance, Liliane Bettencourt lived her life surrounded by the scent of money, politics and more than a touch of scandal.
The one-time society beauty died in Paris during Wednesday night at the age of 94, her daughter Francoise said in an email. While private to the last, she maintained close ties to three French Presidents during her lifetime and was never far from the society pages.
For most of her nine decades she was better known for who she was than for what she did, even though her first job, at the age of 15, was as an apprentice in a L'Oreal factory, mixing cosmetics and labelling bottles of shampoo.
Bettencourt was the daughter of L'Oreal founder Eugene Schueller, to whom she was always close. In 1950, at the age of 28, she married Andre Bettencourt, a government minister of the 1960s and 70s under President de Gaulle.
During those years, neither Schueller nor Bettencourt were able to shake accusations of pro-Nazi sympathies and anti-Semitism despite their close association with Francois Mitterrand, the former Socialist President.
Liliane inherited the L'Oreal empire when her father died in 1957 but running the company fell to Francois Dalle, another friend of Mitterrand's, who built the business into the $100 billion company it is today.
It was after her husband's death in 2007 that the heiress' own life took centre stage. She became embroiled in a public fight with her only child, Francoise Bettencourt-Meyers, when her daughter went to court to accuse photographer and socialite Francois-Marie Banier of taking advantage of her mother's frailty. Banier denied wrongdoing.
The scandal widened to include prominent politicians in 2008, when Bettencourt-Meyers gave police secret recordings of conversations between her mother and her wealth manager, taped by Bettencourt's former butler.