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Moya Olsen Lear, i.e. Mrs. William P.:
She Is Our Lady of Perpetual Motion

Anybody thinks Mrs. William P. Lear is a shrinking violet just
hasn't met this spunky, witty, very talented lady whose credentials
include induction into the Women in Aviation Pioneers, the Nevada
Business Leaders, the Board of Trustees in the Museum of Flight
in Seattle, and the Nevada Opera Association.
Moya Lear lives in a beautiful home in Verdi, NV, outside Reno,
on forty acres through which the drinkable Truckee River courses
its way. Moya has done over her house several times, one of which
tickles my funny bone. The Lears' home, called River House, is/was
oil heated and had automatic tank refill. A few years back the
young man operating the oil refueler filled the Lears' tank and,
upon his return to the tank farm turned in his slip. Five hundred
and twenty gallons. The manager gave it a cursory glance then
turned ashen. "My God, son, the Lears' tank holds only 300
gallons." The oil company sponsored the next do-over.
Moya came by her wit and charm by careful selection of antecedents.
Her father, Ole Olsen, was a gifted vaudevillian who partnered
up with Chic Johnson. Olsen and Johnson were a hilarious team,
playing all over USA but particularly noted for their smashing
hit, Hellzapoppin, which played on Broadway and set records as
one of the longest running hits ever. Moya was the head guru backstage
and into that hubbub came William Powell Lear, who wooed and married
her in 1942, the one and only man in her life.
After Bill Lear sold Lear Jet to Charley Gates they settled in
Beverly Hills, but not for long. Bill had his own Lear Jet and,
on a trip to Alaska, met a man who changed their whole lives.
His name escapes me but he persuaded Bill that he ought to come
to Reno. "There is a great opportunity to buy Stead Airport,
all 3,000 acres, and develop it," he told Lear.
So Bill schlepped off to Reno and spent a lot of time there. Finally
Moya wrote him a letter, which she still has, from this mansion
in Beverly Hills. It said, "My darling, I want you to know
that I will never, never move to Reno, Nevada." Moya has
now spent over a quarter century there and says, "The only
way that I will ever move from River House is feet first."
Stead Airport became a cash cow for the Lears.
Life with Bill Lear was no picnic. He could be irascible, impatient
(patience was not his strong suit), profane, demanding and tough.
His peccadilloes were legendary but he had but one true love and
that was Moya, the knowledge of which sustained her throughout.
Moya was his fourth wife, and his last. Moya's devotion to her
children John, Shanda, David and Tina can only be compared to
a lioness guarding her cubs. She virtually lives for them, bestowing
gobs of love on them as well as her grandchildren and great grandchildren.
I spoke with her recently. All the family were thereI said "What's
the head count, Moya?" She replied, "Heavens, I have
no idea."
Her generosity is also noteworthy. She gave a million dollars
to the Reno Opera Guild. She established a garden in downtown
Reno. Its centerpiece is a large granite stone on which is mounted
a brass scale model of a Lear Jet Model 23, the first one. She
gives much time to civic projects yet makes time to give speeches
around the country. She is an excellent speaker, her charm and
wit shining through with more requests for her appearance than
she can fulfill.
After Bill died she became chairman of LearAvia, with every one
of the hundred employees ready to work gratis to make the Learfan
successful. If Bill had lived there would be hundreds of Learfans
flying worldwide. There were 295 on firm order when the Arabs
bought in and mismanaged the whole schmear down the tube.
Moya's life with Bill did have many great moments. They flew worldwide,
meeting heads of state, kings and queens, movie stars. Frank Sinatra
bought a Lear Jet and months later in Bill's office in Wichita
Bill asked Frank, "How do you like your Lear Jet?" Sinatra
said, "Bill, it's off the wall." Nixon, Glenn, Goldwater,
Ford, Kaye, Bush, Armstrong, Thatcher, Truman, Mantz, Beech, Hope
and King Michael are all names on Moya's Christmas card list.
There were many memorable flights. In 1939 Bill and Moya enroute
Santa Monica-LGA crashed in Bill's Staggerwing Beech after the
engine failed. They landed in a muddy field and the airplane tipped
over. No one was hurt. It was only the second flight that Moya
had ever taken.
In June 1956 Bill and Moya flew their twin Cessna into Moscow,
Lear being the first private pilot allowed to land in the Soviet
Union.
Moya was the perfect wife for Bill Lear. Besides loving her and
savoring her counsel he was very generous. After he sold Lear
Jet he had mucho dinero so one day he said," OK, Mommie,
now you can have that diamond ring." So Moya called Tiffany's,
who made house calls for select clients. The man came over, and
unrolled the black velvet containing a king's ransom in diamonds.
"I want that one," she said. "That will be eight,"
said the Tiffany person. So Bill wrote a check for eight thousand.
"No, Mr. Lear, the diamond is eighty thousand..." Lear
didn't blanche. He tore up the check and wrote a new one for eighty.
The diamond really is beautiful, just like its owner, Moya Olsen
Lear.
By Torch Lewis
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