Thursday, June 23, 2016

#TrulyEmpowering - Edith Head, California/Berkeley – Mu, 1968 Woman of the Year Designer to the Stars




 From now until August 14, 2016, a current exhibition going on at The Decorative Arts Center of Ohio in Lancaster, Ohio: Edith Head and Company: Costumes and Jewelry, 1924-2015, showcases 40+ costumes and 16 pieces of jewelry on display. Edith Head had an unprecedented career and this exhibition about her and her contemporaries highlights her talent and influence. She empowered women in the motion picture industry.


If you would like to connect with the Columbus (OH) alumnae chapter or Delta Zeta alumnae who might be attending the exhibition, please email Jessica Blevins, Columbus Alumnae Chapter President, at dzcolumbusalum@yahoo.com.
 
Chances are the movie credits on the screen at the height of Hollywood’s heyday would have included the name of Edith Head. A winner of eight Academy Awards for her costumes that dressed the stars for their motion pictures roles (a record that still stands today), she outdistanced anyone else. Good clothes, she said, “were the result of a pretty through-going knowledge of the people you are dressing.” As a designer she was actually part of a team, a team that translated a star into the different person he or she was playing.
Born in San Bernardino, California, in 1897, Edith Spare Ihnen received a BA from the University of California/Berkeley, and her MA from Stanford University. She later took art courses at the Chouinard Art School. It was while she was an art student in the late 1920s that she saw an advertisement for a sketch artist at nearby Paramount Pictures. She began her design career working for Howard Greer as that same sketch artist. Soon, she was designing clothes for minor characters and became Greer’s hardest working and most involved assistant.
Edith went on to She first designed the beautiful gowns that accented Mae West’s hourglass figure in her movies of the early and mid-1930s. Later, she won recognition when she designed the famous sarong for Dorothy Lamour in Jungle Princess in 1937. One of her most famous design projects was for Barbara Stanwyck in The Lady Eve (1941). She was the first woman at a major studio (Paramount) to become head designer. She had a talent for pleasing the stars, and many of them insisted that her services be written into their contracts. Later she would become the chief costume designer at Universal Studios.
In contrast to the glamour she created onscreen, Edith’s personal style was conservative: tailored suits, hair pulled into a bun with bangs, and tortoise-shell glasses. She authored two books, How to Dress for Success and The Dress Doctor, and worked with stars such as Elizabeth Taylor, Marlene Dietrich, Kim Novak, Bette Davis, Clark Gable, Robert Redford, and Audrey Hepburn.
She became Delta Zeta’s Convention initiate in 1960 and was active in the Southern California Lamplighters’ Flame Fantasy fashion shows in the 1960s and 1970s with her friend, Gail Patrick, Samford – Alpha Pi, actress and executive producer of the “Perry Mason” television series. She was Delta Zeta’s Woman of the Year for 1968. She died in Beverly Hills, California in 1981. A scholarship was established in her memory through the Delta Zeta Foundation.

And read more here about “A Conversation with Edith Head,” a one-woman show about Edith, which Delta Zeta’s Southern California alumnae enjoyed seeing.