She was born Liliane Henriette Charlotte Schueller on 21 October 1922 in Paris, the only child of Louise Madeleine Berthe (
née Doncieux) and
Eugène Schueller, the founder of L'Oréal, one of the world's largest cosmetics and beauty companies. When Liliane was five years old, her mother died, and she formed a close bond with her father, who later married Liliane's British
governess. At the age of 15, she joined her father's company as an apprentice, mixing cosmetics and labelling bottles of shampoo. In 1950, she married French politician
André Bettencourt, who served as a cabinet minister in
French governments of the 1960s and 1970s and rose to become deputy chairman of L'Oréal. Mr. Bettencourt had been a member of
La Cagoule, a violent French
fascist pro-
Nazi group that Liliane's father, a Nazi sympathizer, had funded and supported in the 1930s and whose members were arrested in 1937. After the war, her husband, like other members of La Cagoule, was given refuge at L'Oréal despite his politically inconvenient past. Eventually, the Bettencourts settled in a mansion built in 1951 and furnished in the
Art Deco style on rue de Delabordère in
Neuilly-sur-Seine, France. They had one daughter,
Françoise, who was born in 1953. In 1957, Bettencourt inherited the L'Oréal fortune when her father died, becoming the principal
shareholder. In 1963, the company
went public, although Bettencourt continued to own a majority stake. In 1974, in fear that the company would be nationalised after the French elections, she exchanged almost half of her stake for a three percent (3%) stake in
Nestlé S.A. As of December 2012, Bettencourt owned 185,661,879 (30.5%) of the outstanding shares of L'Oréal, of which 76,441,389 (12.56%) shares were effectively held in trust (for her daughter). The remainder were owned as follows: 178,381,021 (29.78%) shares owned by Nestlé, 229,933,941 (37.76%) shares were publicly held, and the remainder were held as treasury stock or in the company savings plan. The Bettencourt family and Nestlé acted in concert pursuant to a shareholders' agreement. Bettencourt ended her board director tenure on 13 February 2012 and her grandson, Jean-Victor, was appointed as board director. Bettencourt's daughter and her daughter's husband (Jean-Pierre Meyers) are also members of the board of directors. Bettencourt generally shunned media attention and granted few interviews. From 2007, she faced intense media scrutiny and publicity over her relationship with
François-Marie Banier, the estrangement with her daughter Françoise and her alleged funding of conservative French politicians, including former French president
Nicolas Sarkozy. In August 2012, she sold her private island,
D'Arros Island, to a
Seychelles-registered conservation business linked to the Swiss Save our Seas Foundation, for £60 million. Bettencourt died on 21 September 2017. The funeral service was held at Église Saint-Pierre in
Neuilly-sur-Seine. ==Philanthropy==