Tales of Aspen


Aspen ... It takes 13 long minutes to make it to the
top of Aspen Mountain, in one of the new European-
made gondolas. So while traveling in the six-passenger
enclosed-bubble vehicles, skiiers here break out their
cellular phones. With luck, their faxes can be waiting for
them. Since this is Aspen, the little hut at the summit
offers two telecopiers. Why waste time
Faxes and phones are fine on the slopes, but cigarets
are not. On a recent gondola trip, long-time resident
Melanie Griffith lit up. Fellow passengers pleaded,
Please put that out. She refused, igniting a local media
storm.
After they’ve caroused the night before, Aspenites
invariably spend the next day working off the toxins ...
jogging in the snow, monoskiing, snowboarding in the
backcountry, or mountain biking with studded tires.
For indoor exercise, Grand Champions, near the air-
port, is the place where Barbra Streisand and other Fast
Folk go. The Aspen Club is out. Anybody can get in
there, the high rollers protest. But the hottest workout
is a daily hour ($75) with private trainer and Flemish
import
Jean-Robert, whose exercises often seem to
involve ski poles.
Jean-Robert ... he dropped the last
name years ago ... keeps his client list a secret, divulg-ing
only that it includes 50ish women who can pay me.
This is one of the few places in the country that shows
little sign of the recession. Dozens of luxury shops have
opened, including Bulgari. I compare Aspen not to
Sante Fe, but to Gstaad, says manager Marta Ortega,
Its more Europeans and fewer Texans
here,and they like to shop well.


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Jean Robert Gym Corp. All rights reserved.