Good evening.

Thank you so much for answering my question! I've only been looking at this site and forum for a long time, so I'm very happy to get replies from members whose names I've often seen and admired.
I'm sure that Mr. Giglio was both a valet and a secretary. I have no objection to that.
I just checked and found that he was also described as a valet in the text of "a night to remember". I don't know why Mr. Walter Lord described him as a valet, but I'm sure that's how he was portrayed in the movie with the same title, and when it was more difficult to find primary sources than it is now, the impression given by the images may have contributed to the widespread perception of Mr. Giglio as a valet.
(The subtitled DVD of this film seems to be out of print in Japan, and unfortunately I have not been able to see it yet. ......)
Luckily Mr. Guggenheim and Mr. Giglio have their exact adres listed on this very list and give their adres as Avenue Montaigne in Paris, France. Sadly I cannot confirm the exact adres as either number 57, 59 or 67 due to the handwriting. However, I believe number 57 is the most likely choice.
On Google maps it shows a large, luxurious terraced house if you type number 57 down. Since Mr. Giglio joined Mr. Guggenheim to France so I believe it is possible that he stayed at this very same adres.
Thank you so much. I was referring to the record with this very address on it. I also read this number as 57. I don't know if this was their home at the time, but it's fun to think that they may have eaten and slept together frequently outside of Titanic.
No offence intended but on a lighter note, I sometimes refer to the pair as "Gig and Gug" for short while indulging in my habit of scribbling notes about Titanic related events.
What a cute abbreviation! I refer to them simply as G&G. When two of their names are in a row, there are a lot of "g "s, which makes them easy to spot when reading the material.
This is a speculation, but with Giglio and Mme. Aubart, do you think Guggenheim swung both ways?
I have thought about whether or not they were romantically linked. Mr. Giglio was the same age as Mme. Aubart and had the same talent for music as she did. Also, Mr. Giglio was, in the words of Mis Peggy Guggenheim, a "lovely young egyptian" and a "beautiful boy. I'm sure he was a truly beautiful young man. However, as Mr. Thomas Krom and Mr. Arun Vajpey said, there is a lot of information about Mr.Guggenheim's love for many women, but I have yet to read any rumors or descriptions that he was bisexual. I can't say for sure what their sexuality was with the little information I have, so I'll just say that I haven't found any evidence that they were a couple.
