Halston(1932-1990)
- Costume and Wardrobe Department
- Costume Designer
- Actor
Born Roy Frowick Halston on April 23, 1932 in Des Moines, Iowa, Halston
was a product of America's heartland. He led a classic Iowa childhood
playing in soap box derby races, fishing, visiting farms, and the like.
Halston took an interest in sewing from his mother, and from an early
age he showed a special interest in making hats. Halston would make his
own for his mother and sister (his first hat appeared on the cover of
Harper's Bazaar in 1960). Halston attended Indiana University in 1952
for one semester. The family moved to Chicago in late 1952 where
Halston enrolled in a night course at the Chicago Art Institute and
took a day job as a window dresser. Halston continued to design hats
and finally obtained his break when a small story on his fashionable
creations appeared in the Chicago Daily News. It was at this time that
his middle name Halston, would become his professional moniker. His hat
sales took off and he began designing for a celebrity and show biz
clientele. In 1957, Halston opened his first major shop, the Boulevard
Salon, on the second floor of 900 Michigan Avenue. In 1959 Halston left
Chicago for NYC to work for the famed French milliner Lilly Daché,
where he proved to be a hardworking and dedicated employee. He was
named co-designer at Daché after only one year. Following that Halston
accepted a position at Bergdorf Goodman, a fashionable New York
department store, where he charmed his clients and made a grand name
for himself. After two-years at Bergdorf he succeeded in becoming the
store's first designer to have his name placed in the hats he designed.
He became adept at courting and manipulating the press at Bergdorf's.
In 1962 he designed the famous pill box hat worn by Jackie Kennedy at
the President's Inaugural making the Halston name a household word.
Later that year he was bestowed the Coty's Fashion Critics Award. In
1966 Halston designed his first ready to wear collection for Bergdorf
Goodman and while there Halston continued creating magic with his hat
creations. Women's Wear Daily heralded him as "New York's Top
Milliner". He opened his own salon in 1968 and became the toast of New
York's fashion society. His close circle of friends and clients would
come to include some of the most alluring and fascinating men and women
in the world, among them Liza Minnelli, Barbara Walter, Martha Graham,
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, Andy Warhol and Elizabeth Taylor. Halston's
career sky-rocketed during the 1970's and his designs set the standard
for American designers. He was the undisputed high priest of fashion.
The Halston name became synonymous with classically cut, simple, spare
and elegant designs, a phenomenally successful fragrance line Halston
by Halston for women X12 and Z14 for men, and the fabric known as
"Ultra suede". His designs became ubiquitous as we went on to design
and license his name on thirty-one different licensing products
including a range of home linen, uniforms for Braniff International
Airlines and a line of luggage for Hartmann. Throughout most of the
seventies he epitomized the glamour, as well as the decadence of the
era, becoming a central figure in the nightlife scene of New York's
Studio 54 disco.