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    True Icons

    Trailblazing Dallasites honored at The Family Place's annual luncheon

    Lindsey Wilson
    Oct 17, 2024 | 6:14 pm

    The director, producer, and star of the film It Ends With Us, Justin Baldoni, was the special guest at The Family Place's 28th annual Texas Trailblazers luncheon on October 4 at the Hilton Anatole.

    VIPs joined luncheon co-chairs Lauren Black, Nakita Johnson, Clarisa Lindenmeyer, and Lauren McKinnon, alongside honorary chairs Lindsay and George Billingsley, at a small meet-and-greet with Baldoni next to the ballroom.

    2024 The Family Place Texas Trailblazer luncheonCameron Cadenhead and Megan TownsendPhoto by Tamytha Cameron and Celeste Cass

    Besides sipping sparkling water and Aperol spritzes, the mini reception gave everyone a chance to purchase raffle tickets for three packages:

    • A luxury getaway to Sedona, Arizona, provided by Planet Lincoln. The three-night stay at Seven Canyons Resort included daily golf for four and award-winning dining and luxury accommodations.
    • Gift cards, gift certificates, and VIP shopping experiences from some of Dallas’ finest retailers, such as Nicholson Hardie, St. Bernard Sports, Tootsies Dallas, Tory Burch Highland Park, Starpower, and Stanley Korshak, along with a rare Jimmy Choo luxury bracelet.
    • A priceless Justin Baldoni memorabilia package including signed books and a signed original movie poster from Baldoni’s film collection.

    Once the crowd of more than 800 was invited into the Chantilly Ballroom and took their seats, The Family Place CEO Tiffany Tate welcomed attendees and outlined the nonprofit's mission.

    The Family Place is the largest provider of family violence services in Texas, serving more than 44,000 people in 2023. Programs include a 24-hour hotline, three emergency shelters — including the state's only shelter for men and their children — a transitional housing program with 25 apartments, three counseling centers, two medical clinics, a dental clinic, a job readiness program, violence prevention education programs for schools, court-ordered supervised visitation, court-ordered counseling for abusers, and legal services. All survivor services are free and provided in both Spanish and English.

    Tate introduced the new Paige Flink Icon Award, given to someone who embodies the spirit, heart, and relentless drive of retired CEO Paige Flink. Tate shared that during the three decades that Flink served as CEO, she took the organization from a single shelter to a leading force in North Texas, building innovative programs, creating vital partnerships, and challenging the way our community responds to domestic violence.

    After joking that it should be called the "Get ‘Stuff’ Done Award," Tate and Flink brought inaugural recipient Jamie Williams to the stage.

    2024 The Family Place Texas Trailblazer luncheonPaige Flink Icon Award recipient Jamie Williams and Paige Flink.Photo by Tamytha Cameron and Celeste Cass

    “If we want to talk about ‘getting things done’, I cannot think of anyone more of a ‘doer’ than Jamie," said Flink. "For years, she has used her strategic vision and partnerships to enact real, sustainable change. Her ability to turn investments into transformative results are why she is an icon and the perfect inaugural recipient of this award.”

    The luncheons four chairs each shared sobering facts about domestic violence, especially in Dallas, including that 1 in 3 women and 1 in 7 men in Texas have been the victim of severe physical violence by an intimate partner in their lifetime — a reminder that statistically that represents one of the four co-chairs on stage or two guests seated at each table.

    Johnson shared a graphic of the domestic violence calls to the crisis hotline by ZIP code to highlight that domestic violence knows no boundaries and crosses every socioeconomic, racial, and geographic divide.

    McKinnon also took a moment to recognize all the men in the room, as The Family Place invites men to not just join the discussion on family violence, but encourages them to be advocates within the community. This year The Family Place also introduced the Men Ending Domestic Violence Auxiliary Group.

    Following a meal that leaned into autumn flavors — toasted butternut squash salad, sage-rubbed chicken, charred Brussels sprouts with maple-thyme au jus — a video highlighted the inspiring work of the “grandmother of Juneteenth,” Dr. Opal Lee.

    2024 The Family Place Texas Trailblazer luncheonDione Sims, Texas Trailblazer Award recipient Dr. Opal Lee, and The Family Place CEO Tiffany Tate.Photo by Tamytha Cameron and Celeste Cass

    Dr. Lee is this year’s recipient of the Texas Trailblazer Award, which recognizes those who have achieved remarkable success and opened doors of opportunity for countless others. A standing ovation welcomed the 98 year old to the stage, with Dr. Lee reminding the crowd that, “if people can be taught to hate, they can be taught to love.”

    Guests were then encouraged to donate to The Family Place, with projected graphics outlining how each dollar donated helps survivors. Battery-operated candles set at each chair, to help shine a light on domestic violence, flickered on as the donations poured in, bolstered by a $50,000 match from the Hollman Family Foundation.

    The finale was the keynote conversation with Baldoni, an advocate for redefining masculinity, and moderator Natalie Nanasi, associate professor of law and director of the SMU Judge Elmo B. Hunter Legal Center for Victims of Crimes Against Women. Baldoni is also known for his role as Rafael in the long-running CW show Jane the Virgin; his talk show Man Enough, which is described as a disruptive panel series that explores what it means to be a man today; and as a speaker at the 2017 TEDWomen Conference.

    2024 The Family Place Texas Trailblazer luncheonModerator Natalie Nanasi and featured speaker Justin Baldoni.Photo by Tamytha Cameron and Celeste Cass

    Baldoni discussed his recent film, an adaptation of Colleen Hoover's novel, and his decision to bring it to the screen:

    When I first read "It Ends With Us," I found myself judging the character. I found myself as a man thinking ‘well just leave, just leave, he is clearly abusing you.’ And I didn’t like how that made me feel; I didn’t like that I was judging her. By the end of the book, it all made sense and I understood it, and it had a pretty profound effect on me and I can only imagine the effect that it had on so many women and survivors, and so many in which they didn’t necessarily know they were in abusive relationships. So that’s one of the reasons why I wanted to develop this book into film. I thought that if this book could help so many women, I can’t imagine what a movie could do.

    He also touched on breaking through gender roles, how women are viewed and treated in society, and how domestic violence affects everyone, regardless of class, age, or gender.

    Spotted applauding in the crowd were Family Place board chair Harold and Bunny Ginsburg, Joyce Goss, Greer Goss, Lynn McBee, Carol Seay, Caren Prothro, Michelle Goolsby, Senator Royce and Carol West, Lindsay Jacaman, Holly Krug, Kristin Hallam, Kit Sawers, Emily Maduro, Susan Scullin, Jess Bass Bolander, Delia Jasso, Mary Bowman Campbell, Jimmy Heimpel, Ana and Jim Yoder, Vinette and Mike Montgomery, Sally Pretorius Hodge, Katie Flowers Samler, Calvert Collins-Bratton, Chuck Steelman, Lisa Singleton, Venise Stewart, Gayle Sands, Stephanie Seay, Tanya Rice, Caren Lock, Nancy Scripps, and Priya Murphy.

    2024 The Family Place Texas Trailblazer luncheon

    Photo by Tamytha Cameron and Celeste Cass

    Bryan DeSena, Jenny Grumbles, Cheryl Camin Murray, Lauren Reach, Christin Livesay.

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    Roll call of the rich

    19 Dallas-area billionaires make 2025 Forbes list of richest Americans

    Amber Heckler
    Sep 9, 2025 | 5:08 pm
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    Nineteen Dallas-Fort Worth billionaires have landed on Forbes' prestigious list of the 400 richest Americans in 2025. And it's been a good year for this elite club: America's wealthiest billionaires are $1.2 trillion richer in 2025, bringing their collective worth to a staggering $6.6 trillion.

    The annual Forbes 400 list is a definitive ranking of the wealthiest Americans, using interviews, financial data, and documentation provided by billionaires and their companies.

    "It’s been a year unlike any we’ve seen in the four decades we’ve tracked America’s billionaire class,” said Forbes senior editor Chase Peterson-Withorn in a press release. "The super-rich at the very top are richer than ever — and between the White House and the booming stock market, they’re as powerful as they’ve ever been."

    The richest Dallas resident in 2025, according to Forbes, is Elaine Marshall and her family, who are stakeholders of Koch Inc., a multinational conglomerate corporation. Marshall, 83, inherited her late husband's 16 percent stake in the company after he died in 2006.

    The publication estimates her net worth at $30.9 billion (up from $28.3 billion last year) and Forbes proclaims her as the 8th richest woman in America, the fourth richest Texan, and the second richest billionaire in DFW. She also appears in Forbes' separate list of the world's richest billionaires.

    Fort Worth's Walmart heiress Alice Walton is the richest woman in America, and the richest billionaire in all of Dallas-Fort Worth, and she simultaneously holds the title as the richest woman in the world.

    Alice Walton Fort Worth's Alice Walton is the wealthiest woman in America - and in the world. Getty Images

    Walton's estimated net worth has risen to $106 billion this year, up from her 2024 net worth of $89.2 billion. Forbes says she is the first female centibillionaire (a person with a 12-digit fortune) in America. Now that's wealth.

    Here's how the rest of Dallas-Fort Worth's billionaires fared on this year's list:

    • Endeavor Energy Resources chairman Lyndal Stephens Greth and her family rank No. 35 nationwide with an estimated net worth of $27.4 billion. Last year: $32.3 billion.
    • Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones of Dallas sits at No. 50 in the U.S. with an estimated net worth of $19.6 billion. Last year: $15.2 billion.
    • Money manager Ken Fisher of Dallas ranks 86th nationally (for the second consecutive year) with an estimated net worth of $13.2 billion. Last year: $11.2 billion.
    • Banking and real estate mogul Andy Beal of Dallas holds the No. 101 spot nationally. His estimated net worth is $12 billion, unchanged from 2024.
    • Hotel and investment guru Robert Rowling of Dallas ranks 149th nationally with an estimated net worth of $8.8 billion. Last year: $8.6 billion.
    • Gas tycoon Kelcy Warren of Dallas ties for No. 192 nationally with an estimated net worth of $7.5 billion. Last year: $6.7 billion.
    • Oil and real estate titan Ray Lee Hunt and real estate bigwig H. Ross Perot Jr. of Dallas tie for No. 224 nationally with an estimated net worth of $6.5 billion. Last year: $6.9 billion and 4.6 billion, respectively.
    • Oil and investment mogul Robert Bass of Fort Worth ranks 244th nationally with an estimated net worth of $6.1 billion. Last year: $5.9 billion.
    • Media magnate and Cost Plus Drugs cofounder Mark Cuban of Dallas ranks No. 246 nationally with an estimated net worth of $6 billion. Last year: $5.7 billion.
    • Margot Birmingham Perot of Dallas, widow of tech and real estate entrepreneur H. Ross Perot Sr., and private equity firm cofounder Carl Thoma tie for No. 264 nationally with an estimated net worth of $5.7 billion. Last year: $5.3 billion and $4.4 billion, respectively.
    • Oil and gas honcho Trevor Rees-Jones of Dallas ties for 255th nationally with an estimated net worth of $5.9 billion. Last year: $5.1 billion.
    • Airplane leasing industry founder Steven Udvar-Hazy of Westlake ranks No. 339 nationally with an estimated net worth of $4.5 billion. Last year: $4.4 billion.
    • Oil heir Sid Bass of Fort Worth and oil and gas magnate Ray Davis of Dallas tie for No. 389 nationally with an estimated net worth of $3.8 billion. Last year: $3.7 billion and $3.5 billion, respectively.

    Jerry Jones, Cowboys movie premiere Jerry Jones saw his fortune go up this year. Photo by Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images

    New to the list is biotech billionaire David Dean Halbert of Colleyville. Halbert, 69, earned his billionaire status after his diagnostics firm, Caris Life Sciences, went public on the Nasdaq in June. Forbes estimates his net worth at $4.9 billion.

    Missing from the 2025 list is David Bonderman of Fort Worth, who died in December 2024. Bonderman, 82, was a founding partner of private equity firm TPG, was a board member of The Wilderness Society, and had a net worth of $6.4 billion.

    In all, 43 billionaires across Texas made it on the 2025 Forbes 400 list.

    Unsurprisingly, the richest person in America in 2025 is Austin-based Elon Musk. Musk, 54, saw his net worth skyrocket to $428 billion this year, or $184 billion more than his 2024 net worth. He claimed the No. 1 spot for the fourth time.

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