LOS ANGELES (LVN) — The third episode of the television drama Love Story turns its focus to one of the most scrutinized figures in American public life, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, portraying her final months as she battled cancer in 1994.
Titled “America’s Widow,” the episode shifts from the romance between John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy to the former first lady’s declining health and the family’s private struggles behind the scenes.
The episode depicts Kennedy Onassis confronting non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, a diagnosis that followed health complications in late 1993. Historical records confirm she was diagnosed with the disease after doctors discovered swollen lymph nodes. Though she initially responded to treatment, the cancer progressed rapidly in 1994. She died May 19, 1994, at her Manhattan home at age 64, surrounded by family.
The series portrays intimate moments — including scenes suggesting she took deliberate steps to control her personal legacy — that are dramatized for narrative effect. Biographers and historians have documented Kennedy Onassis’ strong desire for privacy, particularly regarding personal correspondence and family matters, though specific private rituals remain unverified.
Naomi Watts portrays Kennedy Onassis in the episode, capturing both her public composure and the vulnerability of her final months. The production frames her as a central emotional anchor in the Kennedy family narrative, emphasizing her influence on her son, Kennedy Jr., whose life and marriage form the series’ broader storyline.
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The episode also revisits the “Camelot” symbolism Kennedy Onassis famously attached to her husband’s presidency after the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Historians widely credit her with shaping that enduring narrative in the days following the 1963 tragedy, reinforcing her role not only as a public figure but as a guardian of the Kennedy legacy.
Family members have previously voiced concern about dramatic interpretations of Kennedy family history in television projects. While dramatizations often blend documented fact with fictionalized dialogue and composite scenes, the core historical timeline presented in Episode 3 aligns with established records of Kennedy Onassis’ illness and death.
The episode has prompted renewed public discussion about how modern television portrays real-life political figures and the ethical boundaries between storytelling and historical accuracy.
Love Story is available on FX and Hulu, continuing its dramatized exploration of one of America’s most prominent families.


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