Opinion

Anthony O’Reilly, Flashy Irish Tycoon Who Led Heinz Company, Dies at 88

Anthony J.F. O’Reilly, a high-flying, charming, Irish-born former chairman of the H.J. Heinz Company, who also owned newspapers, luxury brands and trophy homes in France and the Bahamas, only to lose nearly everything in his eighth decade, died on May 18 in Dublin. He was 88.

The Irish Times and other Irish newspapers, citing a family spokesman, reported that he died in a hospital. No cause was given.

From his earliest days, Mr. O’Reilly, who was known as Tony, displayed an embarrassment of gifts. He was an elite-level rugby player while still in his teens — the “redheaded pinup boy of Irish rugby,” as The Guardian put it. His talent for business was equally precocious. At 26, as the marketing head of the Irish Dairy Board, he created the brand Kerrygold to sell Irish butter to English grocery shoppers, and it is still one of the country’s best known global exports.

Mr. O’Reilly in 1960, when he was an elite-level rugby player. The Guardian described him as the “redheaded pinup boy of Irish rugby.”Credit…Hulton Archive/Getty Image

Mr. O’Reilly was recruited by Heinz to run its businesses in Britain in 1969, then moved to the company’s Pittsburgh headquarters, where he rose to be chief executive and the first chairman from outside the Heinz family. Under his leadership, Heinz’s value increased twelvefold; Business Week called him “one of the world’s most charismatic businessmen.”

“He has a million stories and tells all of them well,” a Heinz director, Richard M. Cyert, told Business Week in 1997. “When you sit down to lunch with him, it’s like going to a movie theater for entertainment.”

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