The thought of a billionaire’s lifestyle may conjure up images of Great Gatsby mansion-buying and jet-setting at the drop of a hat. But the life of an heiress with the wealth of two billion-dollar American businesses looks a lot different.
Mitzi Perdue was born into the Sheraton hotel family, and at just the age of 26, she and her siblings inherited their father, Ernest Henderson’s, controlling stake of the business. The success of her family’s $12.2 billion hospitality company meant she was now sitting on a considerable nest egg.
Her fortune would only swell after marrying her late husband Frank Perdue, the “chicken king” who led America’s largest chicken producer, Perdue Farms, which brought in over $10 billion in revenue last year. The double heiress has the riches to retire and live a life of extravagance, but it’s in her nature to look at wealth differently.
“The Hendersons and the Perdues did not encourage extravagance,” Perdue told Fortune in a June 2025 interview. “In both families, nobody wins points for wearing designer clothes.”
The 84-year-old has access to a trust from her family’s billion-dollar business, alongside the wealth from the Perdue empire. Yet she still lives just like anybody else: taking her shoes to the cobbler instead of buying new ones, riding the subway, flying economy, and living in a modest apartment instead of a house.






