October 25, 2008

Going Out in Style

And at the End, All the Comforts of the Carlyle

Marie-Dennett McDill loved the Carlyle Hotel.
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So when Mrs. McDill, who grew up in society in Washington and was enjoying an outdoors life in South Woodstock, Vt., learned she had terminal cancer this summer, her family immediately booked her a suite on the eighth floor for an open-ended stay, but one they sadly knew would not be open-ended enough.
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It lasted 10 weeks. Mrs. McDill died in her sleep in the Carlyle last Wednesday.
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Even as she was dying, she would take walks in Central Park in the daytime, and in the evening sit in a back booth in Bemelmans Bar, looking at the whimsical illustrations of New York City on the wall by the artist Ludwig Bemelmans, best known for the Madeline children’s books, and listening to Mr. Harris play. She loved Cole Porter, and she would pass requests to the waiter.

Posted by Jill Fallon at October 25, 2008 11:46 AM | Permalink
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