Donald B. Marron, financier, art collector and philanthropist, dies at 85

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Donald B. Marron, financier, art collector and philanthropist, dies at 85
Marcel Ospel, UBS’s chief executive, left, and Donald Marron, then chief executive of PaineWebber, in 2000. Marron, a prominent financier with decades of executive leadership and a major figure in the New York art world, died on Dec. 6, 2019, in Midtown Manhattan. He was 85. Don Hogan Charles/The New York Times.

by Mariel Padilla



NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE ).- Donald B. Marron, a prominent financier with decades of executive leadership and a major figure in the New York art world, died Friday in Manhattan. He was 85.

Catherine Marron, his wife, said he had been en route to a colleague’s holiday cocktail party and was getting out of a car when he had what appeared to be a heart attack.

Catherine Marron said he had only planned to stop by the event for 30 minutes before returning to his home on the Upper East Side to watch a movie with his family.

A lifelong resident of New York City, Marron was educated in city public schools and attended Baruch College in Manhattan but did not complete a higher degree, Catherine Marron said.

“He was super smart and always had an entrepreneurial spirit,” she said. “He went to one year of college and then left to create his own business and support his mother, brother and sister.”

Marron, who was 6-foot-6, was an entrepreneurial force who began his Wall Street career as a teenager. He took a trainee’s job for less than $50 a week at the New York Trust Co., which later merged with the Chemical Bank. At New York Trust, he moved into the investment research department.

He was a thoughtful person who knew how to listen, but had a “steely determination” in pursuing power, Bill Moyers, a television journalist, commentator and one of Marron’s closest friends, told The New York Times in 1987.

In 1967, Marron served as president and chief executive of Mitchell Hutchins, a research-oriented brokerage firm, and oversaw its transformation from a predominately retail-oriented firm into one of Wall Street’s premier stock research firms. He sold it to PaineWebber Group Inc., an American investment bank and stock brokerage firm, in 1977.

Marron was a founder of Data Resources Inc., a pioneering economic forecasting firm, with Harvard economist Otto Eckstein in 1968. The firm became the largest nongovernmental source of economic data in the world, according to an online biography from New York University, where he was a trustee. Marron served as chairman until McGraw-Hill purchased the firm for $103 million in 1979.

In 1980, Marron became the chairman and chief executive of PaineWebber. During his 20-year tenure, PaineWebber grew into one of the nation’s largest full-service securities firms, before it was acquired by the Union Bank of Switzerland, better known as UBS.

When UBS and PaineWebber merged in 2000, UBS became the world’s largest wealth manager, according to the New York University biography. Marron was named chairman of UBS America, a position he held until the early 2000s.

“There were other companies that came calling for PaineWebber, but he waited until he got a company that could really take care of the employees,” Catherine Marron said. “That shows who he was.”

In 2000, Marron founded and chaired Lightyear Capital LLC, a New York-based private equity firm focused on financial services investing.

Donald Baird Marron was born on July 21, 1934, in Goshen, New York.

He attended public schools and Baruch College, then the Baruch School of City College of New York, but left college with almost enough credits to graduate at age 17, when most students were just finishing high school.

In addition to his business career, Marron was a passionate art collector who spent considerable time scouring galleries, auction houses and artists’ studios.

“He’s always loved art,” Catherine Marron said. “He started collecting Hudson River School paintings when he was young and had no money.”

In 1975, Marron became a trustee of the Museum of Modern Art and a key figure in the museum’s expansion in the early 1980s. He was elected president of the museum’s board of trustees in 1985.

Catherine Marron said she met Marron at a cocktail party held at the museum; they were married in 1985. She later served as chairwoman of the New York Public Library and co-chairwoman of the High Line, and was a contributing editor at Vogue magazine.

Donald Marron spent more than three decades compiling a vast collection of postwar art that included paintings, drawings and sculpture by Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Lucian Freud and Jasper Johns, among others. As a supporter of art in the workplace, Marron lined the walls of UBS PaineWebber’s offices nationwide with works from his collection.

“We all spend probably a third of our lives in our offices,” Marron told The Times in 2005. “Therefore, if you can expose us to another aspect of creativity in our time, it’s a good thing, particularly in the securities business.”

Marron donated part of the UBS-owned collection — which was valued at about $15 million — to the Museum of Modern Art, where it was exhibited in 2005.

As the art market exploded in recent years, attracting dabblers and speculators, Marron remained an old-fashioned collector — passionate about the art itself, rather than looking to flip it for a profit or impress visitors to his home.

Recently, he opened his own private gallery in midtown Manhattan, which he filled with major works from his own collection. He had no interest in making it public, however, and enjoyed time spent among the works on his own or with friends.

He developed personal relationships with the artists he collected, like Brice Marden, Ed Ruscha and Mark Grotjahn.

Marron was also a philanthropist and active in government and public policy. In addition to being a trustee of New York University, he was a member of the Board of Overseers and Managers of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center and a director of the Partnership for New York City, and also was involved with the Coalition for the Homeless, according to the New York University biography.

Marron was a member of the President’s Committee on the Arts and Humanities, the chairman emeritus of the Center for the Study of the Presidency, a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and a trustee of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, where he helped developed the framework for Social Security and pension reform legislation, according to the biography.

He was also a former director of the New York Stock Exchange, governor and vice chairman of the Securities Industry Association and governor of the National Association of Securities Dealers, according to a biography on Lightyear Capital’s website.

Beside his wife, Marron is survived by their two children, William Marron and Serena Marron; two children from a previous marriage, Jennifer Eldridge and Donald Jr., an economist who served on the Council of Economic Advisers during the George W. Bush administration; his sister, Carol Ray, and his brother, Kenneth.

© 2019 The New York Times Company










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