Olivier Chandon de Brailles

Olivier Chandon de Brailles
Nationality French
Born September 17, 1955
France
Died 2 March 1983
West Palm Beach, Florida

Olivier Chandon (September 17, 1955 - March 2, 1983), also called Olivier Chandon de Brailles, Oliver Chandon de Briailles, and Olivier Chandon Debrailles, was a French race car driver, heir to the Moët et Chandon champagne, and one-time boyfriend of the American model Christie Brinkley.[1][2]

Biography

Olivier Chandon de Brailles was the only son of Frederic Chandon de Brailles, chairman of the Moët-Hennessy group and heir to the Moët & Chandon champagne fortune.[1]

Chandon spoke five languages, was a race car driver and skydiver.

A graduate of Le Rosey in Switzerland, he served in the French Air Force and later moved to New York City. There he attended New York University to study marketing and worked in the sales department of United Technologies. Earlier, he began racing cars in Europe at age 18, whereby he assumed the shortened name of Olivier Chandon. He later resumed his race car career in the United States.[1]

On March 2, 1983, Chandon, a member of the New York-based Fred Opert Racing Team, was killed while driving a Ralt Formula Atlantic race car in a private practice session at Moroso Motorsport Park in West Palm Beach, Florida, while preparing for the upcoming Formula Atlantic season. Traveling over 100 miles per hour, Chandon's vehicle crashed through a barrier, fell into a canal and landed upside down, where he was pinned in his car at the feet and drowned in an otherwise survivable accident. Cause of the accident could not be determined - either the throttle stuck or it was a case of driver error.[1][3]

Chandon had a romantic relationship with model Christie Brinkley. The two first met at Studio 54 where she was holding a party to promote the 1982 Christie Brinkley calendar and than they became an "item" for the gossip magazines. Chandon had phoned her less than an hour before the accident to arrange to meet her in Palm Beach that evening. When told of the accident, a distraught Brinkley stayed in California.[1][4]

Olivier Chandon is buried in the Laferté-sur-Aube cemetery, in Haute-Marne, France.[5]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Motorsport Memorial
  2. Christie Brinkley biography at www.hollywood.com
  3. "Racer Drowned After Car Crashed". New York Times. March 4, 1983. Retrieved 2008-12-11.
  4. Chandon and Brinkley online photo
  5. Blake, Patricia; HP-TIME.com (March 14, 1983). "Rootless Cosmopolitan of the Age". Time Magazine.