
The Letter That Reportedly Split JFK Jr and Carolyn Bessette for a Year – What the 'Love Story' Didn't Show
A new television drama revisits one of the most famous romances of the 1990s. But a key chapter in that relationship tells a far more painful story than viewers see on screen.
"Love Story" revisits the chemistry, courtship, and marriage of John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette, presenting their romance as a sweeping saga shaped by fame and fascination.

John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette Kennedy at the Brite Night Whitney annual fundraising gala on March 9, 1999, at the Whitney Museum in New York. | Source: Getty Images
Yet biographer Elizabeth Beller's book, "Once Upon a Time: The Captivating Life of Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy," reveals a chapter that cuts far deeper than what viewers see on screen — a painful fracture that nearly ended them before they ever made it to the altar.
The Anonymous Letter That Blew It All Apart
In the series, an anonymous letter briefly rattles the golden couple. There is tension, yes — but reconciliation follows quickly. But the reality, according to Beller, was far more brutal.

Carolyn Bessette and John F. Kennedy Jr. during a reception at Chateau de Malagny, circa 1996. | Source: Getty Images
Beller wrote that Kennedy received an anonymous letter around 1992, during a time when he was still on and off with actress Daryl Hannah. The letter allegedly came from someone within elite New York social circles and accused Bessette of being "a user, a partier," and claimed she was "out for fame and fortune."
The confrontation unfolded at El Teddy's in Tribeca — not in private, not gently, but across a dinner table. "John presented Carolyn with a letter," Beller wrote. He then read the accusations aloud.

John F. Kennedy Jr. and Caroline Bessette photographed in New York, circa 1996. | Source: Getty Images
What happened next stunned even those familiar with the couple's fiery dynamic. After reading it, he allegedly "tossed the piece of paper at her, stood, and walked out the door." And just like that, the fairytale cracked.
Calls. And Calls. And Silence.
The fallout was not resolved with a grand romantic gesture. "Within a week of the scene at the restaurant, John tried to call Carolyn. And call. And call and call and call," Beller wrote.

Carolyn Bessette posing for a portrait on August 25, 1992, in New York. | Source: Getty Images
But this time, there was no answer. According to the book, Bessette refused to return his calls for a year. During that stretch of silence, she reportedly dated model Michael Bergin — who makes only a fleeting appearance in "Love Story." The real-life timeline, however, was far less tidy.
By 1993, Beller wrote, "Somehow John convinced Carolyn to try again. And she gave it a shot." Still, the damage lingered. "But Carolyn was guarded about the revival of John, treading carefully."

Carolyn Bessette at a Calvin Klein Fashion Show on April 10, 1994, in New York. | Source: Getty Images
The identity of the letter's author has never been revealed. It's a mystery that still lingers like smoke over the ruins of that dinner.
A Romance That Refused to Follow a Straight Line
The early years of their relationship were anything but smooth. Accounts in "JFK Jr.: An Intimate Oral Biography" describe a complicated beginning in which both were seeing other people. RoseMarie Terenzio recalled that when they first connected at Calvin Klein, "Daryl was still in the picture."
She added that Bessette "wasn't sitting by the phone waiting for his call — it was the opposite." Keneddy, however, was reportedly smitten.

John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette at the kick-off party for The Warhol Look: Glamour, Style, Fashion event at the Whitney Museum on November 6, 1997, in new York. | Source: Getty Images
Brian Steel said Kennedy once told him he was "completely enchanted by this woman, Carolyn Bessette." At the time, he was still involved with Daryl. Steel remembered asking, "What about Daryl?" He replied, "I think we're going to break up.... I met her at Calvin Klein."
But enchantment did not equal stability. If anything, she was the one holding the power in those early days. After meeting at the Calvin Klein showroom in 1994, Kennedy reportedly asked her out more than once — and more than once, she declined.

Calvin Klein and Carolyn Bessette at the City of Hope fundraiser on October 28, 1992, in New York. | Source: Getty Images
"She didn't think he was serious," said close friend Gustavo Paredes, son of Jackie Kennedy's personal assistant. "He couldn't believe she turned him down. It had never happened before."
For a man accustomed to admiration and near-universal acceptance, her refusal was almost unthinkable. Those close to Kennedy later said he had finally "met his match." But after he was photographed holding hands with Daryl at a movie premiere, Bessette reportedly cut off contact entirely.
In a moment that feels almost unbearably maternal, her mother sent her a newspaper clipping with a handwritten plea, "Dear Carolyn, please get on with your life. Love, Mom," followed by a sad face.

Carolyn Bessette on Madison Avenue in New York | Source: Getty Images
Soon after the death of Kennedy's mother, his relationship with Daryl ended. He and Bessette reunited, this time with deeper commitment and far more at stake. Yet even before that reunion, the emotional timeline had already grown complicated.
Carole Radziwill recalled meeting Bessette in 1991 in the Hamptons. But the following weekend, Kennedy returned to the same beach house — this time with Hannah.
"The following weekend, John came back to the beach house, this time with Daryl, who he had been off and on with for a couple of years," Radziwill said in "JFK Jr.: An Intimate Oral Biography." "He said he needed to try one last time to see if their relationship could work."

Carolyn Bessette and John F. Kennedy Jr. at the Municipal Art Society's Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Medal Awards on April 6, 1998, in New York. | Source: Getty Images
She added, "They stayed together for several more years and seemed happy. Although there were many times I saw John and he'd ask me about Carolyn because we stayed in touch a bit and I just knew he still had a longing for her."
Even when he attempted to recommit elsewhere, those close to him sensed something unfinished. Carolyn, it seemed, never fully left his thoughts.
Fame: The Thief of Joy
At first, their romance was surprisingly ordinary. "The early years were kind of not that unusual for two people meeting in New York City and juggling careers," Beller said.

John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette at the annual John F. Kennedy Library Foundation dinner and Profiles in Courage Awards on May 23, 1999, at the Kennedy Library in Boston, Massachusetts. | Source: Getty Images
Bessette was 26, rising within Calvin Klein, surrounded by friends and an active social life. But there was another, quieter tension simmering beneath the surface — one involving the most formidable woman in his life.
"Carolyn became increasingly irked that he wouldn't introduce her to his mother," Beller wrote. "'I took him to meet my mom,' Carolyn told a friend."
For Bessette, the omission stung. Beller later explained, "I think it was hard for him to take anything other than his work too seriously at that moment. If Carolyn met Jackie, I think he knew that that would sort of become a life of its own. And maybe he wasn't quite ready for that."

Carolyn Bessette and John F. Kennedy Jr. at the Newman's Own George Awards at the US Customs House in 1999 in New York. | Source: Getty Images
The introduction never happened. After Kennedy and Bessette married in 1996, Beller said he regretted that decision. "I know that he did regret it," she said. "That's one of the things that he said to several friends, one of his main regrets was not introducing the two of them." It was a private sorrow that would never be corrected.
Then the flashbulbs came. "She saw fame as the thief of joy," Beller revealed, describing how paparazzi began staking out her apartment and trailing her movements. Intimate moments became tabloid currency.

Carolyn Bessette and John F. Kennedy Jr. at the 1999 White House Correspondents' Dinner. | Source: Getty Images
He understood the cost in a way few could. "What was hard for him was the knowledge," Beller said, explaining that photographers behaved differently when she was with him. "They would call her names to specifically upset her."
Consultant Kumar Nair said the experience shook her deeply. "As a PR she knew the machine of fame intimately, but to be the subject of this very machine, was probably an extraordinary, disorientating life shift for her," he stated.
Yet those who knew her told another story. Journalist Liz McNeil said, "The friends we interviewed for our book… all talked about how warm she was. How generous." She quoted Terenzio, who once said, "She had a way of making you feel like Cinderella."

Carolyn Bessette and John F. Kennedy Jr. after Michael Kennedy's funeral in 1998 in Boston, Massachusetts. | Source: Getty Images
The Wedding That Stopped the World
On September 21, 1996, the couple married in a small, intensely private ceremony at the First African Baptist Church on Cumberland Island, Georgia. About 40 guests attended. There was no grand cathedral and no roaring crowds. Instead, there was secrecy — and breathtaking simplicity.
Her Narciso Rodriguez gown became instantly iconic. Photographer Denis Reggie captured the newlyweds descending the church steps at dusk in what would become one of the most enduring images of the 1990s.
"It was an incredibly magical moment," Reggie stated. The groom lifting her hand to his lips was spontaneous, he added — not staged. "It was indicative of the way the wedding was — natural and of the moment."
She had one request about the image released to the public. "Show the dress. My dear friend designed the dress," she said, according to Reggie.
Tumult Beneath the Surface
In the final months of their lives, however, friends said pressure mounted. McNeil revealed they were under "an incredible amount of stress" due to personal losses and professional demands.
Meanwhile, Terenzio said they were discussing starting a family and searching for a home outside Manhattan. "I think they were having difficulties," Terenzio stated.
Still, they were planning ahead. They intended to attend a family wedding together and had discussed marriage counseling. "The last few weeks were tumultuous and difficult but they were together," Terenzio added.

John F. Kennedy Jr. planting a kiss on Carolyn Bessette's cheek at the annual White House Correspondents dinner on May 1, 1999, in Washington, D.C. | Source: Getty Images
On July 16, 1999, tragedy struck. The small plane John F. Kennedy Jr. was piloting crashed into the Atlantic Ocean near Martha's Vineyard. He, Bessette, and her sister were killed. The National Transportation Safety Board ruled that haze and darkness were contributing factors.
In the decades since, endless debates have swirled around their marriage — the pressures, the myths, the blame. But long before the iconic wedding portrait and the devastating crash, a single anonymous letter reportedly tore them apart for nearly a year — exposing just how fragile even the most celebrated love stories can be.
