Sunday, November 22, 2009

Out Spotlight CVII

Today's Out Spotlight is the prolific Hollywood costume designer Orry-Kelly

John Orry-Kelly was born December 31,1897 Kiama, New South Wales in Australia, he grew up to study art there, becoming a tailor's apprentice and window dresser in Sydney.

Orry-Kelly was the professional name of John Orry Kelly, some sources cite his name as George Orry Kelly. Taking the name Orry was the name of an ancient King of Man. His father William Kelly, was born on the Isle of Man and was a gentleman tailor in Kiama.

He traveled to New York to pursue an acting career and ended up shared an apartment there with actors Charlie Spangles and Cary Grant. A job painting murals in a nightclub led to a job at Fox East Coast studios illustrating titles. He designed costumes and sets for Broadway's Shubert Revues and George White's Scandals.

During his time in New York, he became friends with Boston-born Mitchell ("Mit") Foster and MGM's biggest star William "Billy" Haines, who forced to enter a 'lavendar marriage' or choose his lover Jimmy Shields. It has been said that Kelly was the boyfriend of English circus performer Archie Leach, later known as Cary Grant during their time in New York. These early friendships became lifelong relationships.

Orry-Kelly headed west to Hollywood in 1932, where Cary Grant introduced him to the head of Warner Brothers' wardrobe department, where he stayed for eleven years.working for all the major studios (Warner Brothers, Universal, RKO, 20th Century Fox, and MGM), and designed costumes for all the great actresses of the day, including Bette Davis, Olivia DeHavilland, Katharine Hepburn, Ava Gardner, Ann Sheridan, and Merle Oberon.

At the time there was a triumverante of three gay costume designers in Hollywood Travis Banton, Andrian and Orry-Kelly. Each of them headed the costume department at one of Hollywood's three largest dream factories and each had their own special muse in the form of a great movie star. Travis Banton worked for Paramount Pictures and his most famous creations draped the gorgeous body of Marlene Dietrich; Adrian toiled at MGM, the studio at the very top of the heap, designing gowns for the enigmatic Greta Garbo; while Orry-Kelly punched the clock at working class Warner Bros. Not they were the only gay designers in Hollywood, but they have become the most known. Whereas Banton and Adrian were circumspect about there homosexuality (both of them would marry women for appearances sake), Orry-Kelly was considered by some to be the most outrageous queen in Hollywood. Although, by contrast, he designed far less extravagant and fanciful gowns than the other two men.

His style differed from those of other Hollywood designers. He avoided Adrian's black-and-white contrasts in favor of a wide range of grays. His fabrics were of as high quality as Banton's, but he disliked the Paramount love of "shimmer." Nonetheless, his costumes were never dull. He cut with style and enhanced with intricate details. Tiny pleats and piping created subtle surface shadows, as did the textured embroideries, open work, crocheted lace, and trapunto. Appreciating skilled handiwork, he even included handpainted fabrics for some of his designs. As more daring decoration, he might add polka dots or punctuate with rows of buttons.

However, decoration was not his aim when working with Bette Davis. As a former actor, he understood the necessity of depicting a character's depth. Davis demanded that each role have a life of its own, with costumes playing a significant part in defining each character's image. At times, Orry-Kelly virtually resculpted her body to achieve a desired effect, and their successes included Jezebel , Dark Victory , The Little Foxes , Now, Voyager , and many others. One of Davis's earliest and least favorite films, Fashions of 1934 , which stars some of Orry-Kelly's more imaginative creations, stands out as a delightful spoof of the fashion world.

His unpretentious style well served Warner Bros. He peopled its gritty gangster features with many a well-heeled moll. He'd take the kind of girl that "a man's man" could "go for," and wrap her in wools as beautiful as any fur. His costumes for The Maltese Falcon and Casablanca spoke with the rich spareness of Hemingway.

His costume work is now deemed classic, including 42nd Street, The Maltese Falcon, Casablanca, Arsenic and Old Lace, Harvey, Oklahoma!, Auntie Mame, and Some Like It Hot.

He won three Academy Awards for costume design (for An American in Paris, Cole Porter's Les Girls, and Some Like It Hot) and was nominated for a fourth (for Gypsy).

A longtime alcoholic, he died of liver cancer in Hollywood, California February 27, 1964 and 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 Warner. His Oscars went to Jack Warner's wife Ann.





25 comments:

  1. I am such a big fan of old Hollywood costume design I have been waiting a while to spotlight one of them. I have been a fan of Andrian, Edith Head - what she did with Grace Kelly's costumes, Orry-Kelly, Travis Banton, and Jean Louis (Monroe's dress for her Presidential Birthday Song)

    There was an awesome multipart documentary on AMC a few years ago called Hollywood Fashion Machine that chronicled costume design since the beginning of film. The talked to the stars, the studeo staff, and designers about what the costume designer did and how they influenced fashion then and now.

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  2. I love the clothes in old movies, it's one of the reasons I like watching them. Really enjoying the music you have up with the post today too.

    Speaking of old movies, sort of, Joseph Gordon-Levitt was on SNL last night, and for the opening he did Make Them Laugh from Singing in the Rain. He did a great job, even doing the flips off the walls. I'm sure a clip of it is out there somewhere, I highly recommend it for JGL and/or musical fans.

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  3. His costume work is now deemed classic, including 42nd Street, The Maltese Falcon, Casablanca, Arsenic and Old Lace, Harvey, Oklahoma!, Auntie Mame, and Some Like It Hot.

    Some Like It Hot (1959)

    Osgood: I called Mama. She was so happy she cried! She wants you to have her wedding gown. It's white lace.
    Daphne: Yeah, Osgood. I can't get married in your mother's dress. Ha ha. That-she and I, we are not built the same way.
    Osgood: We can have it altered.
    Daphne: Oh no you don't! Osgood, I'm gonna level with you. We can't get married at all.
    Osgood: Why not?
    Daphne: Well, in the first place, I'm not a natural blonde.
    Osgood: Doesn't matter.
    Daphne: I smoke! I smoke all the time!
    Osgood: I don't care.
    Daphne: Well, I have a terrible past. For three years now, I've been living with a saxophone player.
    Osgood: I forgive you.
    Daphne: [Tragically] I can never have children!
    Osgood: We can adopt some.
    Daphne/Jerry: But you don't understand, Osgood! [Whips off his wig, exasperated, and changes to a manly voice.] Uhhh, I'm a man!
    Osgood: [Looks at him then turns back, unperturbed]: Well, nobody's perfect!

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  4. Fascinating spotlight. Makes me want to watch some of those old movies to look just at the costumes.

    I recorded snl last night but have not yet viewed. I love J Gordon. He's such a good actor.

    I read Jake's Brothers comments. Nice to hear him speak again, though I can see why Disney keeps him quiet. He rambles a bit, so is at risk to blurt out the wrong thing.

    Pics of Austin at the USO thing were great too. No ring, but he is wearing a chain.

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  5. Stephen Schaefer from the Boston Herald blogged the pressed conference for Brothers that happened yesterday .

    As other leading sure things fade “Brothers,” which Lionsgate is releasing Dec. 4th, looks to soar in year-end awards categories. Director Jim Sheridan is a longtime Academy Awards favorite and there has been sometimes vocal, enthusiastic reaction at screenings of this intense, incredibly dramatic but dramatically credible remake of a 2004 Danish film of the same name. It helps that the cast, child actors who have grown up before our eyes and are now playing adults, are at the top of their game: Tobey Maguire, Natalie Portman and Jake Gyllenhaal. I thought a day later of the impact James Dean, Natalie Wood and Sal Mineo had in “Rebel Without a Cause” and I don’t the comparison is far-fetched here.

    The Boston Herald will run features the week “Brothers”’ opens on Tobey Maguire and Natalie Portman.

    Here are Jake Gyllenhaal and Jim Sheridan from Saturday:
    QUESTION: WHAT ARE YOU FEELINGS ABOUT REMAKES AND HOW DO THEY APPLY TO THIS ONE IN PARTICULAR?
    GYLLENHAAL [makes a goofy grin that he has to answer this question and then tries to be serious]: I think that we all felt a tremendous responsibility and a little bit of a burden to remake a film. I think because the first version of the film was so extraordinary. I think that Jim [Sheridan], all of us, everyone approached each character – I don’t want to speak for everybody but I think we all did watch the movie and each one of the actors gave an extraordinary performance. I think in transposing it to America I think you clearly start to see that there are differences, cultural differences and reactions to situations that are different depending on the culture, and I think we all looked at that as a great opportunity and then having Jim was…where are you from again? [he laughed at his own joke about the very Irish filmmaker]. Just coming from Ireland, it was interesting in terms of how he would say behaviorally, he’d say or expect the character to act and then how in America an American would respond to a situation. There was one moment where – I don’t know if you remember this, Jim – where Natalie’s character tells my character that Tobey has been killed. We did talk for a little while about me falling in the snow and making snow angels. I don’t know if you remember that?


    QUESTION: YOU ALL KNOW EACH OTHER. WAS THERE A LOT OF REHEARSAL ON THIS? OR WAS THERE A LOT OF STAYING IN CHARACTER TO GET THE PROPER TONE ON SET AND CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THAT, THE ATMOSPHERE IN MAKING THE FILM?
    GYLLENHAAL: It was great to be in a remake because you really have a new sense…[laughs]. Naturally, because all know each other, I found that we all had fascinating complications and fascinating interactions just as the people that we are. There was very little to do as a result of that. So often you have to create some kind of back story but because of the real life, people have very often said to me that I look like Tobey and so I thought that it was a perfect casting thing, that Jim put us together. We really just made a movie so that I could say that I look a little bit different from Tobey. So to all those cab drivers in New York, I’m not Spider-Man. I think that was just inherent. It was there. It existed and it took very little to make that happen. A little uncomfortable on set sometimes because what it is real also sometimes is what it is being pretended. At the same time, as an actor, I think it was great food for a great meal.

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  6. QUESTION: THE ROLES AND CHARACTERS YOU PLAY IN THIS MOVIE ARE VERY DIFFERENT FROM WHAT YOU’VE DONE BEFORE. WHAT KIND OF THINGS DID YOU LEARN ABOUT YOURSELF IN DOING THIS PROJECT, AS AN ACTOR AND AS A PERSON?
    GYLLENHAAL: I’m going to talk about Tobey. Can I talk about Tobey? [laughs]
    SHERIDAN: Where I come from and you’re working with actors you’re all the time trying to stop them performing. These guys were so still I was like, ‘Oh my God, I don’t have any work to do.’ American actors are so used to the medium of film.
    GYLLENHAAL: Did you say ‘stale’?
    SHERIDAN: I didn’t say ‘stale.’ I wouldn’t say stale. The difficulty with Jake is he’s kind of like, you know the way that other actors are really intense and they come on and you’re like, ‘Oh my God.’ Jake is kind of like that but he’s got a 360 degree intensity. You never know where he’s looking. He’s kind of in the scene but he’s kind of looking around himself. It takes a bit of getting used to and it took me a few weeks to get used to Jake’s approach which is very unique in my experience. He just thinks he’s in real life — and he’s up on the screen. Jake is just the same now as on the thing, up with the kid, up with his sister’s kid. He keeps joking even when I get serious and all, don’t you?
    GYLLENHAAL: I think you just described me as a crazy person. ‘Jake has no idea of reality’.
    QUESTION: IS THAT A TRUTH ABOUT YOU, JAKE?
    GYLLENHAAL: Well, I can say that I think watching Tobey in the movie, that’s sort of the most extraordinary truth of it, watching somebody do something like that. I can only speak from personal experience but I have been blessed to watch actors who people didn’t feel were a certain way or could perform a certain thing do that. I’ve been honored to watch that. It’s always nice to see when people, journalists and people who never thought of someone one way, and then seeing them that way. I watched him go from the first part of the movie [BEFORE MAGUIRE’S CHARACTER GOES OVERSEAS] and then we had a Christmas break inbetween and then he had another week and when he came back he was another person and he was another person than what he was in the first couple of weeks that we started shooting. That was an extraordinary transformation, not only to watch as an actor but as a person and as an audience member. And now watching the movie I feel that way, too. I think that’s what we could talk about. I mean, I could talk about Natalie, too, but then I think she would probably freak out. I’ll stick with Tobey.


    Read the rest at Boston Herald.com

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  7. SHERIDAN: ... He just thinks he’s in real life — and he’s up on the screen. Jake is just the same now as on the thing, up with the kid, up with his sister’s kid. He keeps joking even when I get serious and all, don’t you?

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  8. SHERIDAN: ... He just thinks he’s in real life — and he’s up on the screen. Jake is just the same now as on the thing, up with the kid, up with his sister’s kid. He keeps joking even when I get serious and all, don’t you?

    Wanted someone else to notice that this before I said anything.

    Interesting Sheridan saying that seems he slipped. If timelines are correct - Baby T was born in Oct, and Brothers started in November 27. of 2007. That would have made Jake a brand new Dad and Sheridan would probably known and seen. It was also the first movie that started the closed set trend for Jake, right up unto Love and Drugs.

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  9. LAOD is a closed set?November 22, 2009 at 6:00 PM

    From WFT2:

    Jim sounds a like Jake there, not making a lot of sense IMO. I think he means that up on the screen: the kid: one of the girls that plays his daughter, in real life: his niece . The rest sounds like he's drunk.

    Jake doesn't make a lot of sense in this press conference and neither does Sheridan. They actuall y sound bored. Would explain why Jake is back on set filming , doesn't look like he will be at the NY premiere tonight.

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  10. LaOD is not a closed set but he has had closed sets for Brothers,a good chunk of Nailed and Prince of Persia.

    Tweets have said that Jake and Anne are filming today and tomorrow. It might be that they are trying to get things done early this week so people can go head out for Thanksgiving. LaOD should be close to wrapping as well. I'm sure they are against the clock with the weather in Pittsburgh too.

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  11. Interesting statement indeed, Special.

    Other than that, though, Jake makes absolutely no sense here! I have sat down cold and read this whole thing and I have to say that the guy makes no sense whatsoever. Maybe it's just way over my head as you all know I know nothing about movies or acting.

    But Jake is speaking in tongues here as far as I'm concerned. Went totally over my head.

    Back from the lake!!! What a great time. Today was deadly. Too many great finds.

    Today, we had the best time replaying & replaying this Hallmark card that I got my friend. We had present opening this weekend for a belated birthday celeb. I got her one of those singing/talking cards. It was one with those little pink & green gal/guys, have you seen them?

    It was a belated b-day card and it was hilarious!! We played it over and over. That was the best thing on the way home plus seeing quite a few deer.

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  12. Jake & Natalie looked great in the pictures of the press conference, though. She's beautiful there.

    And for the JIS crowd, you have to ask why, why on earth he wouldn't hook up with someone like Natalie who looks more his age? Just like Tom said. Can it be any more evident than these pictures from the press conference? Jake looks so young in those couple of pictures.

    Whenever that next Reekefest is, I'm going to remember these pictures and then I'm going to gag at the sight that is Reeke. And ask why.

    lol. Seriously.

    But that's all I'm going to say about that. Whenever is whenever.

    Hey, that is Auntie Mame!!! I love Auntie Mame! I haven't watched that for ever.

    My John Denver & the Muppets Christmas dvd came while I was gone. I'm so excited.

    You missed it! You missed the birthday!!

    Nooooooooooo

    lol, that's ^^^ from that card.

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  13. It was one with those little pink & green gal/guys, have you seen them?

    It's Hoops & Yo-yo

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  14. I think the first kid reference is to the movie, given the context. But i find the bit about staying up with his neice very odd.

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  15. LOL, thank you, Hallmark!! That's their names. I couldn't remember at all.

    You missed it! You missed the birthday!!

    Nooooooooo!!!

    Did you get a present?

    Not even a presennnnnnnnttttttt!!!

    ohhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!


    LOLLL you missed it!!! you missed the birthday!!

    Sorry. I'm losing it here. I love that card.

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  16. There's two kids in the movie. Wouldn't Sheridan say kids then?

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  17. i'm in FL for the weekend with my BFF Karla, and we watched a couple of jake movies during my visit: Donnie Darko sat night and Proof tonite. DD was awesome and while Proof was - of course - very weird and less than awesome, J was still great - cute, charming, etc - in it. He didn't really sell me on him being a math geek at all, but wtfe. i didn't care. i should've, but i was just so happy to see him looking wonderful that i checked my Give a Shit at the door.

    anyway... after watching those movies, i felt a bit revitalized about being a Jake Girl and i realized that i should be more interested in what's going on with him now. so, when i came here, i was very interested to see some quotes by him. I started reading the first one very diligently, but after about the third I Think, i started to waver, and i didn't read any others past the first one. I did read some other comments that made me feel better, since it seems like i'm not the only one who felt like that was a sack of words with no real meaning behind it.

    what's going on with our boy. i'm not looking forward to the next reekefest at all. ugh. s.

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  18. I'm glad someone else could not make any sense of what Jake was saying. And honestly, I try very hard to understand what people are saying, even if they can barely communicate- an essential skill required for my job - and I would have a very hard time summarizing Jake's thoughts here. I read once that his Dad helped him prepare for interviews. Now that they are on the outs, Jake must be winging it. Still, usually publicists help actors by giving them some buzz words and talking points but it sure does not sound that way here.

    The dress Natalie is wearing in that link just posted is beautiful. I love the color. She looks great. Very classic features.

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  19. Jake and his dad are on the outs? Who was that man he was with the other week in Manhattan then?

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  20. Ang went to the premiere too

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  21. Matthew Bomer was there, too! Damn!!!

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  22. I'm touched by Ang's presence there. I know you all know about his working with Jake on BBM but Ang directed Tobey twice--in Ride with the Devil and The Ice Storm. How great he was there!

    Interesting HR review--

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