Orry-Kelly was the professional name of Orry George Kelly, who was born today, December 31, in 1897. He was an Australian-American Hollywood costume designer. Until being overtaken by Catherine Martin in 2014, he was Australia's most prolific Oscar winner, having won three Academy Awards for Best Costume Design.
Vogue reports:
Orry-Kelly, born Orry George Kelly in 1897 in Kiama, Australia, and the subject of the documentary Women He’s Undressed, directed by Gillian Armstrong, was a master at making screen goddesses look beautiful. He put Ingrid Bergman in her white suits in Casablanca, created Leslie Caron’s ingenue looks for An American in Paris, encased Shirley MacLaine’s gams in poison-apple-green stockings in Irma La Douce, made Natalie Wood’s Gypsy stripper gowns, and was responsible for the coin outfits barely covering the chorines in Busby Berkeley’s Gold Diggers of 1933.
Ingrid Bergman in Casablanca |
But there is a dark vein running through this tale. In a rabidly homophobic Hollywood, Orry-Kelly lived as openly and as bravely as a gay man could. (In his New York days, he cohabited and purportedly had a very cozy relationship with Archibald Leach, who went on to become Cary Grant.)
His three Academy Awards for Best Costume Design were for An American in Paris, Cole Porter's Les Girls, and Some Like It Hot, and he was nominated for a fourth for Gypsy.
Orry-Kelly worked on many films now considered classics, including 42nd Street, The Maltese Falcon, Casablanca, Arsenic and Old Lace, Harvey, Oklahoma!, and Auntie Mame. He designed for all the great actresses of the day, including Kay Francis, Olivia de Havilland, Katharine Hepburn, Dolores del Río, Ava Gardner, Ann Sheridan, Barbara Stanwyck, and Merle Oberon.
Orry-Kelly was known for his ability to "design for distraction" to compensate for difficult figure shapes. He also had the job of creating clothes for the cross-dressing characters played by Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon in Some Like It Hot. His skill is shown by the fact that while Some Like It Hot was in production, Cutris and Lemmon would go into the ladies' room after eating lunch without being spotted as men. He wrote that when he finished draping Dolores del Río in white jersey, "she became a Greek goddess ... she was incredibly beautiful". The elegant clothes he designed for Bergman's character in Casablanca have been described as "pitch perfect".
A longtime alcoholic, Orry-Kelly died of liver cancer in Hollywood on February 24, 1964. He was interred in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Hollywood Hills. His pallbearers included Cary Grant, Tony Curtis, Billy Wilder and George Cukor and his eulogy was read by Jack L. Warner.
1 comment:
The one in the picture is William "Billy" Haines that's not Orry Kelly
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