Jump to content

George Halley (couturier)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
George Halley

George Halley (born December 11, 1930) is an American fashion designer awarded the Coty Award in 1968 shortly after opening his fashion house in New York City.

Life and career

[edit]

Born George Halley Sickle and raised in Alliance, Ohio, Halley worked on his family's farm until graduating high school. He initially tried for a scholarship at an art school in Cleveland, but the program was full. In 1949, at the age of 18, he hitchhiked to New York City to pursue his interest in fashion. His first job in New York was as an assistant to Baron Max von Waldeck, a designer from Austria. He worked with the Baron on some gowns and was allowed to show his own sketches to certain customers. The actress Rose Marie wrote of the Baron in her autobiography Hold the Roses: “He was adorable, with the accent and all – about forty, bald, and sort of pudgy. I loved him. I ordered three gowns . . . . I must say they were the most beautiful gowns I have ever seen or owned.”[1]

Halley then started working as a porter at Lord & Taylor, but soon moved to draping the store's windows for Christmas. He progressed to working in the backrooms of several Seventh Avenue dress firms. He never received formal training, but did work for Charles James, Jo Copeland for Pattullo, Andrew Arkin, Richard and Sidney Blauner, Jeunesse, Tzaims Luksus, and Jane Derby, as well as the photographer Richard Avedon. While Halley was working for Arkin, Diana Vreeland, the editor-in-chief of Vogue at the time, saw a dress of Halley's that she liked. Afterwards, she often gave him space in her magazine, and once wrote him that seeing his dresses provided “the greatest possible pleasure.” Among the women he designed for were Dionne Warwick, Julie Andrews, Lauren Bacall, Julie Wilson, and Alexis Smith.[2]

His first own collection consisted of "romantic" gowns in silk and satin that evoked the antebellum South. It was considered "too individualistic" by his employer, who fired him. However, it won him the backing of the husbands of two of his most devoted customers and he became a trendsetter. Halley's first show under his own label was in 1966 in the garden at the New York restaurant Lutece, later ranked by the Zagat Survey as the best restaurant in America for six consecutive years. As a thank you, Halley painted a portrait of Andre Surmain, Lutece's owner. Surmain was so pleased that he sent the picture to his mother in Gibraltar and kept a photo of it over Lutece's bar.[3]

Halley's 1968 collection won the Coty award and made him known in fashion circles throughout the U.S.[4] Prominent fashion publicist Eleanor Lambert said that one of his collections “blew a clean wind of change through this taste-minus style period.” Women's Wear Daily called him "a designer in a lovely world of his own.” Halley opened his fashion house on West 56th Street in Manhattan. His label lasted for about ten years.[5]

Private life

[edit]

Halley was introduced to his future wife, Claudia Morgan, by Yvonne Presser, who was later known as the highest-paid runway model. Morgan told Halley that she had heard he could find good clothes for low prices, and asked him to buy her a cocktail dress on a limited budget. She was amazed when he returned with four. Both Morgan and Presser were models for designer Norman Norell. When Halley and Morgan married in 1958, Norell gave her away, and she wore a wedding dress of antique brocade that Norell had designed.[6]

Halley later started a new line named for his wife. Claudia served as an inspiration and a critic of his work, and had a say in the choice of fabric. He once said: “I never design anything Claudia wouldn’t wear.” They separated in 1978.[7]

Halley lives in the New York City area with his partner Yoshi Shimano. He continues to paint and to design and sew clothing for friends. He made several of the dresses his friend Julie Wilson wore in her cabaret performances, including the one pictured in her New York Times obituary.[8]

In the 21st Century

[edit]

Halley's work has continued to be recognized decades after the end of his label. A 2013 auction sold nearly 40 vintage Halley dresses. In 2015, he was listed among the 10 designers to add to one's vintage collection: “Feathers, crystals, hand painted fabrics and fine workmanship are all things to expect from a George Halley gown.”[9]

Several of his pieces are listed in the collection of the Costume Institute of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. His work has appeared on websites such as Etsy and Pinterest.[10]

In 2012, he and a friend published a book on the work of Norma Grauman of Brody Embroidery. Halley had been a customer and good friend of Grauman, whose company (operating from the 1930s to the 1980s) specialized in work for high fashion designers, theatrical productions, and the Ringling Brothers Circus.[11]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ "Vintage Fashion Guild : Label Resource : Halley, George". vintagefashionguild.org. Retrieved 2022-09-30.
  2. ^ "Vintage Fashion Guild : Label Resource : Halley, George". vintagefashionguild.org. Retrieved 2022-09-30.
  3. ^ "Ah, creme de la creme Lutece dies a la mode". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2022-09-30.
  4. ^ Marilyn Bender, “Coty Awards Are Voted to George Halley and Luba of Elite,” The New York Times, June 21, 1968; Women's Wear Daily, June 11, 1970; The Coty American Fashion Critics' Awards were created in 1942 by the cosmetics and perfume company Coty, Inc. to promote and celebrate American fashion, and encourage design during the Second World War. Linda Welters and Patricia A. Cunningham, eds., Twentieth-century American Fashion (Oxford: Berg Publishers, 2005), 116.
  5. ^ Vintage Fashion Guild, https://vintagefashionguild.org/label-resource/halley-grorge/ (accessed December 28, 2017); Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising Museum, http://blog.fidmmuseum.org/museum/2015/09/george-halley.html (accessed 12/29/17); “Designer for a Divine Woman,” San Bernardino Sun, July 20, 1967.
  6. ^ Staff, W. W. D. (2012-04-30). "Yvonne Presser Dies at 78". WWD. Retrieved 2022-09-30.
  7. ^ Marian Christy, “Halley riding fashion world crest,” Beaver County Times, December 4, 1971; Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising Museum, http://blog.fidmmuseum.org/museum/2015/09/george-halley.html (accessed 12/29/17); Halley interviews.
  8. ^ Holden, Stephen (2015-04-07). "Julie Wilson, Sultry Cabaret Legend and Actress, Dies at 90". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-09-30.
  9. ^ Leslie Hindman Auctioneers, catalog of Sale 262 - Vintage Couture and Accessories, September 10, 2013, http://catalogues.lesliehindman.com/asp/search.asp?viewing_option=1&sale_no=262&st=D&sortby=LOT_DESCENDING&pg=29&ps=25 (accessed January 1, 2018); Cherie Federau, “The 10 Designers to Add to Your Vintage Collection,” Harper’s Bazaar, August 6, 2015, http://www.harpersbazaar.com/fashion/designers/g6046/cherie-federau-shrimpton-couture-top-vintage-designers/ (accessed January 1, 2018).
  10. ^ https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/94841; https://www.etsy.com/market/george_halley; https://www.pinterest.com/bethjacksonw/george-halley/ (accessed December 28, 2017).
  11. ^ George Halley and Marie Bardos, ed., Embroidery by Miss Norma for George Halley, 1960 to 1975 (New York: Blurb Inc., 2012), http://www.blurb.com/b/3750543-embroidery-by-miss-norma-for-george-halley (accessed January 1, 2018). Another embroidery firm, Penn & Fletcher, Inc., acquired Brody’s machinery and Grauman’s archives, and has continued in business. https://pennandfletcher.com/ (accessed January 15, 2018).

References

[edit]

Bardos, Marie. Interviews with George Halley, 2011.

Bender, Marilyn. “Coty Awards Are Voted to George Halley and Luba of Elite,” The New York Times, June 21, 1968.

Christy, Marian. “Halley riding fashion world crest,” Beaver County Times, December 4, 1971.

Clemence, Judith. “Halley: ‘It's time for women to conform in dressing,’” The Palm Beach Post, March 14, 1971.

“Designer for a Divine Woman,” San Bernardino Sun, July 20, 1967.

Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising Museum, http://blog.fidmmuseum.org/museum/2015/09/george-halley.html (accessed 12/29/17).

Federau, Cherie. “The 10 Designers to Add to Your Vintage Collection,” Harper’s Bazaar, August 6, 2015. http://www.harpersbazaar.com/fashion/designers/g6046/cherie-federau-shrimpton-couture-top-vintage-designers/ (accessed 1/1/18).

Goldman, John J. "Ah, creme de la creme, Lutece dies a la mode – NYC French eatery catered to the rich, famous, powerful," Chicago Tribune, February 16, 2004. https://www.chicagotribune.com/2004/02/16/ah-creme-de-la-creme-lutece-dies-a-la-mode/ (accessed 12/29/17).

Halley, George and Marie Bardos, ed. Embroidery by Miss Norma for George Halley, 1960 to 1975. New York: Blurb Inc., 2012. http://www.blurb.com/b/3750543-embroidery-by-miss-norma-for-george-halley (accessed January 1, 2018).

Holden, Stephen. “Julie Wilson, Sultry Cabaret Legend and Actress, Dies at 90,” The New York Times, April 6, 2015. https://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/07/arts/music/julie-wilson-sultry-cabaret-legend-and-actress-dies-at-90.html?ref=topics (accessed February 12, 2018).

Rose Marie. Hold the Roses. Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky, 2002.

Vintage Fashion Guild. https://vintagefashionguild.org/label-resource/halley-grorge/ (accessed December 18, 2017).

Welters, Linda and Patricia A. Cunningham, eds. Twentieth-century American Fashion. Oxford: Berg Publishers, 2005.

“Yvonne Presser Dies at 78,” Women’s Wear Daily (2012), http://wwd.com/business-news/human-resources/model-yvonne-presser-dead-at-78-5883368/ (accessed December 28, 2017).