“Freud would say I must have missed some…stages,” Lange told me. Lange says he missed out on spring-break debauchery and wild nights drinking in college, so he’s been making up for it in middle age. Less publicized was his penchant for partying in the nude. Lange, a slow-talking midwesterner, was a big-shot investor with a degree from Harvard Business School and a reputation throughout Boston society as a generous philanthropist and kick-ass ballroom dancer. Masterminded by Boston philanthropist Peter Lynch, who grew it from $20 million in 1977 to $14 billion in 1990, Magellan became the world’s best-performing mutual fund, ultimately reaching $100 billion in assets under management at its peak. Outside of the Fluffernutters world, the well-tanned partier was Harry Lange, head of Fidelity Investments’ mammoth Magellan Fund, the closest thing the industry has to a household name. Hardly anyone, including Gross, knew Harry’s true identity. It was customary on Fluffernutters trips-as in the lifestyle in general-not to dwell on professions. Photographs by Brian FinkeĪmong Fluffernutters’ growing ranks during the mid-2000s was a tall, handsome man in his early fifties whom everyone knew, simply, as Harry. From left, entertainment staff perform for guests after dinner couples get up close and personal near a pool at the resort.
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