![]() Auchincloss in 1945 and again in 1947.Īnd - hang on here - we’re even told why: “Even though Hugh was not able to sustain an erection, he was able to produce sperm … used a kitchen utensil along the lines of a turkey baster - though it would be incorrect to say that this was the specific instrument she used no one can quite remember ….” ![]() Auchincloss was incapable of impregnating Mrs. ![]() Janet was 37 Hugh was 58, and had had three children by two previous wives. The big reveal, according to his publisher’s press release, is that (supposedly) their mother, Janet Auchincloss, performed do-it-yourself artificial insemination in order to get pregnant twice after she divorced their father and married her second husband, Hugh D. Spoiler alert: He adores Jackie and abhors Lee. He wrote “After Camelot” in 2012 and, six years later, he now presents “Jackie, Janet and Lee: The Secrets of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, Janet Auchincloss and Lee Radziwill.” In 2000, he wrote “Jackie, Ethel and Joan: The Women of Camelot,” which became a two-part series on CBS-TV in 2001. Randy Taraborrelli, who’s been mining two of those three veins for the last 20 years. If you wrote “How JFK made love to Marilyn Monroe on 150 calories a day,” you’d have an instant success. Nothing sells like books on sex, diets and the Kennedys. ![]()
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