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A Karsh Exhibit Of Your Own, For $1,800 A Night

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  • A Karsh Exhibit Of Your Own, For $1,800 A Night

    A KARSH EXHIBIT OF YOUR OWN, FOR $1,800 A NIGHT

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    By The Canadian Press | 5:33 AM
    Halifax Chronicle Herald, Nova Scotia
    July 18 2007

    OTTAWA - For almost two decades, Yousef and Estrellita Karsh called
    Suite 358 at the Chateau Laurier home.

    Now the simple yet elegant, multiroom suite is home to the likes of
    Ernest Hemingway, Pablo Picasso and George Bernard Shaw.

    They are portraits, of course. Karsh portraits.

    And on Tuesday no less than Estrellita Karsh herself was there to
    reopen the newly refurbished apartment where she and her renowned
    photographer husband lived and entertained between portrait sessions
    with many of the greatest leaders, celebrities and cognoscenti of
    the 20th Century.

    "It was a wonderful apartment; we loved being there," Estrellita
    Karsh said in an interview. "And, more than anything, we loved being
    in the Chateau.

    "They all became our family. A hotel, by its nature, is a transient
    place. And we were there, permanently. So that made a huge difference
    in the relationships with the staff. We were the Ma and Pa Kettle of
    the hotel."

    She hasn't stayed in the suite since the couple moved out in 1998, but
    she has often visited and says the "spirits" in the suite remain "very,
    very good," much as they did the first time the couple walked in.

    "It's just one of those apartments where your heart leaps, you know
    it's 'it.' And we did know."

    One's heart might leap at the price: $1,800 a night to sleep with
    the ghosts of greatness.

    Virtually everybody who was anybody sought immortality through the
    lenses of Karsh's cameras.

    Known worldwide as Karsh of Ottawa, his sixth floor studio at what is
    now called the Fairmont Chateau Laurier became a waypoint for titans of
    the 20th Century. And if they couldn't come to him, Karsh went to them.

    Kennedy, Castro, Hepburn, Einstein, Churchill, Mandela, Schweitzer,
    Kruschev. Presidents and prime ministers. Kings and queens.

    Scientists and doctors. Authors, composers and artists. The list
    seems endless.

    "When the famous start thinking of immortality, they call for Karsh
    of Ottawa," George Perry once wrote in London's Sunday Times.

    Karsh, born in Turkey on Dec. 23, 1908, left his native land to escape
    the persecution Armenians endured and came to Canada in 1924 to live
    with his photographer uncle in Sherbrooke, Que.

    He dreamed of becoming a doctor but didn't have the money for medical
    school. After a brief apprenticeship his uncle sent him off to Boston
    to study photography under eminent portraitist John H. Garo.
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