Other Names: | Frank Shields |
Birth Date: | 16 May 1941 |
Birth Place: | New York City, New York, U.S. |
Death Place: | Palm Beach, Florida, U.S. |
Alma Mater: | University of Pennsylvania |
Children: | 4, including Brooke |
Francis Alexander Shields Jr. (May 16, 1941 - April 25, 2003) was an American businessman and an executive at Revlon in New York City. He was the father of actress Brooke Shields.[1]
Shields was born in New York City. He was the eldest son of Francis Xavier Alexander Sr., a top-ranking American tennis player and Davis Cup winner, and Italian Princess Donna Marina Torlonia di Civitella-Cesi.[2] He was of Italian, German, French and English ancestry. After his parents' divorce, his father married Katharine Mortimer in 1949.[3]
He attended the Buckley School in Manhattan and St. Paul's School in Concord, New Hampshire. He attended in the University of Pennsylvania. While at Penn, he captained the crew that rowed in the Henley Royal Regatta in 1962 and was a member of St. Anthony Hall.
Shields started his career with Loeb Rhoades. He then worked in sales and marketing for Revlon and Estee Lauder and was a part time exotic car mechanic. He also worked for Handy Associates, an executive recruiting firm in New York City.
He formed his own real estate firm, Frank Shields Associates, in Palm Beach, Florida in 1989.
In 1964, Shields married Maria Theresia "Teri" Schmon. They had a daughter, Brooke Christa Shields in 1965. They divorced when their daughter was five months old.[4]
In 1970, he married Diana "Didi" Lippert, former wife of Thomas Gore Auchincloss[5] (son of Hugh D. Auchincloss). They had three daughters: Marina Torlonia Shields, Olympia Torlonia Shields, and Christina Torlonia Shields.[6]
An avid hunter and fisherman, Shields spent much of his free time at Canoe Creek, at a camp he owned in rural west Florida.[7]
He was a longtime member of The Brook, The Bath and Tennis Club in Palm Beach, Florida, Piping Rock Club, and The Racquet and Tennis Club.
In 1980, Shields founded the Power Ten, a New York nonprofit organization supporting youth rowing and making contributions to the U.S. National rowing team and U.S. Olympic rowing team through the National Rowing Foundation and Row New York.[8] [9]
In 2003, Shields died in Palm Beach, of a "protracted illness" at the age of 61. After his death, the National Rowing Foundation offered the Frank Shields Fellowships.