User:Sir. Somerset/draftingtable/MarieKravis

Marie-Josée Kravis (born September 11, 1949) was a reknown economist in the 1970s and '80s, and held a Masters degree from the University of Ottawa. She is from Montreal, Quebec, and is the third wife of financier Henry Kravis.

Background
Born in Ottawa, Drouin joined the Hudson Institute in 1973 after earning an MA in economics from the University of Ottawa. From an executive committee's trustee, she became senior fellow in 1973, and director for Canada from 1976-1994.

Boards/Fellowships
Marie-Josée has been a power player in the US boardroom, with stints on the board of companies including Ford. She is a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, President of the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York, a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. She serves on the International Advisory Board of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and on the board of directors of Publicis,SA. She is a member of the Board of the Qatar Museum Authority. She has served on the Board of Directors of CIBC, The Standard Life Insurance CO, Hasbro Inc., Hollinger International, Vivendi Universal, Ford Motor Company and IAC/InterActiveCorp.

Drouin also served as vice-chair of Canada's Royal Commission on National Passenger Transportation, she was co-chair of a national commission on Prosperity and Competitiveness. She served on the binational dispute settlement panel established under the NAFTA agreement. She is on the boards of the Institute for Advanced Study and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. She was chairman of the Robin Hood Foundation and is presently co-chair of the Robin Hood Foundation's Advisory Board.

Career
Marie-Josée Drouin has been a regular columnist for La Presse, the Montreal Gazette and the Financial Post in Canada, and has contributed to the Wall Street Journal and numerous other publications. She hosted a weekly television show on the public television network, TV Ontario.

Publications
She is the author with Barry Bruce-Briggs of Canada Has a Future and with Maurice Ernst and Jimmy Wheeler of Western Europe: Adjusting to Structural Change.

Awards
In 1994, Marie-Josée Kravis was given the Officer of the Order of Canada award, and in 2006, she was recognized as a recipient of the Legion d'Honneur award.

Personal Life
Marie-Josée Kravis was previously married to Charles Dutoit in 1982 and is currently the wife of Henry Kravis, whom she met in the early 1990's, and was wed to in 1994. She has become a lofty figure on the New York political and philanthropic scene, as her and her husband have been active philanthropists in the United States and abroad.

Kravis and her husband reside in their homes in New York City, Southampton (New York), Meeker (Colorado), Palm Beach (Florida) and Paris (France). Their main residence is a Park Avenue triplex that features six bedrooms, circular staircases, wood-burning fireplaces in every room, and one of the largest living rooms in town.

Marie-Josée Kravis and her husband have attended the Bilderberg conference.Kravis was on the board of Conrad Black's Hollinger International from 1995 to 2003, and took the stand at his trial for fraud and obstruction of justice. Kravis testified that the board of directors knew nothing about the non-competition payments that enriched Black and David Radler.

Philanthropy
Along with her husband, Marie Josee Kravis is a major figure in the New York philanthropy community, and are together ranked as the 25th highest donating individuals according to The Chronicle of Philanthropy. Also along with her husband, she has been a major contributor to The Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, The Global Business Coalition on HIV/AIDS, TB and Malaria, and Carnegie Hall.

Kravis is also an active leader in the Henry R. Kravis Prize in Leadership, which is awarded for innovations in non-profit work. At the Mount Sinai Medical Center, she serves as a major patron and has helped to raise $30 million for their Heart Research Center. The center was named the Marie-Josée and Henry R. Kravis Center for Cardiovascular Health, which later merged with the Zena and Michael A. Wiener Cardiovascular Institute to form The Mount Sinai Heart Cardiovascular Research Institute. At the Museum of Modern Art, she was appointed as president in July of 2005, and has donated $10 million to the Museum. Additionally, she is a trustee at The Institute for Advanced Study and the Hudson Institute, as well as a supporter of the Metropolitan Opera, The New York Philharmonic, and the Hermitage Collection at Somerset House, London. She is a trustee and former Chairman of the Robin Hood Foundation.

Controversy
In 1976, while working as an economist at the Hudson Institute in Canada, Drouin accompanied Jean-Pierre Goyer, a minister in the government of Pierre Trudeau for whom she had previously worked on vacation in Mexico. The trip was controversial because only family members were allowed to fly free of charge with cabinet ministers. Goyer, however, defended the trip on the grounds that Drouin was his common-law wife.

Another controversy later on in life, involved her position as board member at Hollinger International, which had been controlled by Conrad Black who was later charged with fraud and obstruction of justice. Druin was forced to take the stand at Black's trial, and it was revealed that she had failed to spot the corporate malfeasance during her tenure. This resulted in her giving up seats on several other corporate boards, including Ford, Vivendi, and Barry Diller's IAC.