The Closing:
Edward Lee Cave
Founder of a 24-year-old residential brokerage firm
When is your birthday?
August 5, 1939. I'm a Leo.
Where do you live?
I live at 70th and Park, and I have a country house in Union, Connecticut.
Do you spend more time in New York or Connecticut?
I can't wait to get to Connecticut, and then by Sunday night I can't wait to get back to New York.
Are you married?
I'm a widower.
Do you date?
Not at my age. There are people I see and enjoy being with. There's no nefarious intent.
Where did you grow up?
I grew up in northern Virginia.
What was your first job?
My first job, which was a perfect way to begin, I was hired right after
I got out of school by Parish-Hadley, the decorating firm, because they
were just starting to do the White House with Mrs. Kennedy and they
needed someone who knew about art.
How did you get started in real estate?
I really started in '68 because my father helped me buy a small
apartment building in New York. It was a very, very prudent real estate
lesson, because I bought it in '68 for $110,000. I sold it in '77 --
when [the city was] going bust -- for $115,000.
What advice would you offer a younger version of yourself?
You've got to learn your product. You see, I've been in and out of
these buildings for 20 years by the time I started. When they wanted
something, they'd call me because they knew I know all about their
Picassos -- which was a Blue Period, which was Cubist. So they knew I
know how to live. That's why I sell prewar buildings, each of which is
a private club that represents a way of life -- because I've lived in
those buildings, I understand the way of life, the nuances.
Is it true that that Richard Nixon turned to you for help with an
apartment, and you advised him to give up trying to find a co-op and
instead purchase a private home, as it says in the book "The Sky's the
Limit" [by Steven Gaines] that came out a year or so ago?
That's what it was, but it was his attorney, not Nixon himself.
Though you travel in very refined circles, have you ever made what you'd consider a major social gaffe?
Oh, wonderful, [chuckles]. I went to a really grand dinner party in a
Fifth Avenue building, and we're having cocktails in the library, then
we walked into the dining room. It was, you know, ladies first and all
that, I was the last one out. You know what I did? I flipped the switch
to turn the lights out because I often do that when I leave an
apartment. That was a real occupational hazard. Nobody noticed at all,
but I did and I just thought it was so funny. There I am in a dinner
jacket turning the lights off.
What do you do in your free time?
I read voraciously. I don't watch television because in my boarding
school we didn't have television. I never got hooked on it. I'm a great
gardener. Maybe my plants don't agree. I started gardening when I was
in sixth grade. I would train myself to get up when the sun came out
because I had to go to school at 8:30, and run out and work in the
garden.
How much money do you have in your wallet right now?
Two $100 bills, which I always carry, two blank checks -- because all
of a sudden I see something, maybe in an antique store, and they don't
take a credit card so I write them a check -- and three credit cards, I
don't know how many $20 bills, and I always have six or eight $1 bills.
What do you read every day?
I read the front page of the New York Times, the front page of the
[Times] business section and obits. The obits are little tiny
biographies.
How often do you read?
I read every night and I usually wake up in the middle of the night and
read for 10 minutes so I don't worry about business, and go back to
sleep.
What do you have on your night table?
A new biography, "Andrew Carnegie" [by David Nasaw] is underneath "The
Green Hat" [by Michael Arlen]. I have a letter opener because I sit in
bed and open my mail when I get home at night. I usually have a pot of
flowers. I have a little, baby rose bush right now that's dying,
probably dead, because when the central heating came on it roasted it.
What keeps you up at night?
I've had somebody's apartment to sell for a long time -- about nine
months -- and I haven't sold it yet, and it really makes me mad.
What did you eat for dinner last night?
I had Christmas dinner with a friend. We always have Christmas dinner
together at the Carlyle. We always have grilled sole, because she's
always worried about her figure. And we each have a martini; I have
mine on the rocks, she has hers straight up. We never have dessert. And
we've probably been doing that for 20 years.
What should someone give you for Christmas?
A book that I haven't read. And I dare them to do that.
Interview by Lauren Elkies