Everything about Kirk Kerkorian totally explained
Kerkor "Kirk" Kerkorian (born
June 6,
1917) is an
Armenian-American billionaire, and president/
CEO of
Tracinda Corporation, his private holding company based in
Beverly Hills, California. Kerkorian is known as one of the important figures in shaping the city of
Las Vegas, Nevada and, with architect
Martin Stern, Jr. the "father of the
megaresort."
Kerkorian splits his time between his residences in Beverly Hills and
Nevada.
One of the richest residents of Beverly Hills, he may also be the most private. He almost never gives interviews and seldom appears in public. Even though his charitable foundation has dispensed more than $200 million and a school, he's never allowed anything to be named in his honor.
His net worth in 2008, according to
Forbes Magazine, is $16.0 billion, making him the world's 41st richest person.
Biography
Kirk Kerkorian was born on
June 6,
1917 in
Fresno, California, to
Armenian immigrant parents. Dropping out of school in 8th grade, he became a fairly skilled amateur boxer under the tutelage of his older brother, fighting under the name "Rifle Right Kerkorian" to win the Pacific amateur welterweight champion.
Flying
In
1939, he met
Ted O'Flaherty, for whom he installed wall furnaces that heated water. O'Flaherty was taking flying lessons, and having taken no interest Kerkorian took a guest seat one day and was converted on the views of the Californian coast.
On sensing the oncoming
World War II, and not wanting to join the
infantry, he learned to fly at the Happy Bottom Riding Club in the
Mojave Desert - adjacent to the
USAF's Muroc Field, now
Edwards Air Force Base. In exchange for flying lessons from pioneer aviatrix
Pancho Barnes, he agreed to milk and look after her cattle.
On gaining his commercial pilot's license in six months, Kerkorian learned that the British
Royal Air Force was ferrying
Canadian built
de Havilland Mosquitos over the north
Atlantic to
Scotland. The Mosquito's fuel tank carried enough fuel for 1,400 miles, while the trip directly was 2,200 miles. Rather than take the safer route Montreal-Labrador-Greenland-Iceland-Scotland route (although, going further north could mean the wings icing and distorting, and the plane crashing); Kerkorian preferred the direct "Iceland Wave" route which blew the planes at jet-speed to Europe - but it wasn't constant, and could mean ditching. The fee was $1,000 per flight, but the statistics were that only one in four completed the journey. In May
1944, Kerkorian and his
Wing Commander J.D. Woolridge rode the wave and broke the old crossing record. Woolridge got to Scotland in six hours, 46 minutes; Kerkorian, in seven hours, nine minutes. In two and a half years, Kerkorian delivered 33 planes, logged thousands of hours, traveled to four continents and flew his first four-engine plane.
After the war, having saved most of his wages, Kerkorian spent $5,000 on a
Cessna. He worked as a general aviation pilot, and made his first visit to
Las Vegas in
1944. After spending much time in Las Vegas during the 1940s, Kerkorian quit gambling and in
1947 paid $60,000 for
Trans International Airlines, which was a small air-charter service which flew gamblers from Los Angeles to Las Vegas. He then bid on some war surplus bombers, using money on loan from the
Seagrams family. Gasoline, and especially airplane fuel, was in short supply at the time, so he sold the fuel from the planes' tanks, paid off his loan - and still had the airplanes. He operated the airline until
1968 when he sold it for $104 million to the
Transamerica Corporation.
Kerkorian and Las Vegas
Kerkorian made his first visit to Las Vegas in 1944 as a
Cessna pilot. In 1962, Kerkorian bought 80
acres (32.3
hectares) in
Las Vegas, across
The Strip from the Flamingo, for $960,000. This purchase led to the building of
Caesars Palace, which rented the land from Kerkorian; the rent and eventual sale of the land to Caesars in 1968 made Kerkorian $9 million.
In 1967, he bought 82 acres (33 hectares) of land on Paradise Road in Las Vegas for $5 million and, with architect
Martin Stern, Jr., built the
International Hotel, which at the time was the largest hotel in the world; The first two performers to appear at the hotel's enormous
Showroom Internationale were
Barbra Streisand and
Elvis Presley. Presley brought in some 4,200 customers (and potential gamblers), every day, for 30 days straight, breaking in the process all attendance records in the city's history. Kerkorian's
International Leisure also bought the
Flamingo Hotel (which later sold the Flamingo to the
Hilton Hotels Corporation in 1970). The International Hotel is known today as the
Las Vegas Hilton. Until about 2000, the Flamingo was known as the
Flamingo Hilton.
In 1973 he purchased MGM, the famous movie studio. Again with architect Martin Stern Jr., Kerkorian and MGM opened the original
MGM Grand Hotel and Casino, larger than the
Empire State Building and the largest hotel in the world at the time it was finished. On
November 21,
1980, the original
MGM Grand burned in a fire that was one of the worst disasters in Las Vegas history. The Las Vegas Fire Department reported 84 deaths in the fire; there were 87 deaths total, including three which occurred later as a result of injuries sustained in the fire. Amazingly, the MGM Grand reopened after only 8 months. Almost three months after the MGM fire, the
Las Vegas Hilton caught fire, killing eight people.
In 1986, Kerkorian sold the MGM Grand hotels in Las Vegas and
Reno for $594 million to
Bally. Spun off from
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer,
MGM Mirage owns and operates several properties, including the
Bellagio, the current
MGM Grand resort complex (where the
Marina Hotel once stood),
The Mirage,
Treasure Island, the
New York-New York, and what was once the
Boardwalk in Las Vegas. They also own the
Beau Rivage Casino in
Biloxi, Mississippi.
MGM
In 1969, Kerkorian appointed
James T. Aubrey, Jr. as president of MGM. Aubrey downsized the struggling MGM and sold off massive amounts of historical memorabilia, including
Dorothy's ruby slippers (from
The Wizard of Oz). Kerkorian sold MGM's distribution system in 1973, and gradually distanced himself from the daily operation of the studio. In 1979, Kerkorian issued a statement claiming that MGM was now primarily a hotel company; however, he also managed to expand the overall film library and production system with the purchase of
United Artists in 1981. In 1986 he sold the studios to
Ted Turner.
Turner kept ownership of the combined MGM/UA for 74 days. Both studios had huge debts and Turner simply couldn't afford to keep them under those circumstances; to recoup his investment, he sold all of United Artists and the MGM trademark back to Kerkorian. The studio lot was sold to
Lorimar-Telepictures, which was later acquired by
Warner Bros.; in 1990, the lot was sold to
Sony Corporation's
Columbia TriStar Pictures in exchange for the half of Warner's lot they'd rented since the 1970s. Also in 1990, the MGM studio was purchased by Italian financier
Giancarlo Parretti, but Parretti defaulted on the loans he'd used to buy the studio and sold the studio back to Kerkorian in 1996.
In 2005 Kerkorian sold MGM once more to a consortium led by Sony. He retains a 55% stake in
MGM Mirage.
On
22 November,
2006 Kerkorian's Tracinda investment corporation offered to buy 15 million shares of
MGM Mirage to increase his stake in the gambling giant to 61.7% from 56.3%, if approved.
General Motors
Kerkorian once held 9.9 percent of G.M. shares. According to press accounts from
June 30,
2006, Kerkorian has suggested that
Renault acquire a 20 percent stake in GM to rescue GM from itself. A private letter sent to
Rick Wagoner was released to the public to add pressure upon the General Motors executive hierarchy. Those talks have since failed.
On Wednesday
November 22,
2006 Kerkorian sold 14 million shares of his GM stake. It is speculated that this action was due to GM's rejection of Renault and Nissan's bids for stakes in the company as both of these bids were strongly supported by Kirk. The sale resulted in GM share prices falling 4.1% from its Monday
20 November price. The sale lowered Kerkorian's holding to approx. 7.4% of GM. On
November 30,
2006 Tracinda Corp. investment firm said it had agreed to sell another 14 million shares of General Motors Corp., cutting Kerkorian's stake in the automaker to half of what he owned earlier that year. Later on he sold all but 5% the remaining shares of GM.
Daimler-Chrysler
On
April 5,
2007 Kirk Kerkorian made a $4.58 billion bid for the
Chrysler Group, the U.S. arm of
Daimler-Chrysler. Since Daimler-Chrysler announced they were interested in selling the Chrysler division on
February 14, large investors such as
Cerberus Capital Management,
The Blackstone Group and
Magna International each announced intentions to bid on the company. Kerkorian's bid, while not expected, isn't surprising given his long involvement in the U.S. automobile industry. During the bidding process, he'll be aided by his close associate
Jerome York who was a former CFO at both Chrysler and
IBM. As of
May 14,
2007 80% of the Chrysler arm of Daimler-Chrysler was sold to Cerberus for $7.4 billion.
Personal life
Married three times, Kerkorian met his second wife Jean Maree Hardy, a former dancer at the
Thunderbird, in Las Vegas. The marriage produced Kerkorian's two daughters, Tracy and Linda and three grandchildren. Kerkorian's personal holding company - Tracinda Corp - is a
portmanteau of the two daughters names. Also named after his two daughters, Kerkorian's
Lincy Foundation
has made huge charitable contributions, much of this to Armenian causes.
Kerkorian's third marriage was to professional
tennis player
Lisa Bonder, 48 years his junior, which under a
prenuptial agreement lasted for one month in
1999. He subsequently was involved in a breach of privacy suit filed against him by
Steve Bing. Kerkorian claimed Bing was the father of Bonder's daughter, which was later established by
DNA testing. On
August 10,
2006, the
Los Angeles Times reported that Kerkorian's attorneys were being sued by Bonder because of their connection to former high-profile private investigator
Anthony Pellicano, who presently faces a 110-count federal indictment for racketeering, wiretapping, witness tampering, and other charges. Bonder's attorney alleges that Kerkorian's lawyers hired Pellicano to wiretap telephone calls illegally between him and Kerkorian's ex-wife in order to gain a tactical advantage in the divorce proceedings.
Kerkorian often plays tennis with
Alex Yemenidjian
. He has a penchant for expensive clothes (especially custom-made outfits by Italian designer
Brioni), but drives relatively low cost vehicles such as a
Pontiac Firebird,
Jeep Grand Cherokee and a
Ford Taurus.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Kirk Kerkorian'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://kirk_kerkorian.totallyexplained.com">Kirk Kerkorian Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |