Adele Balkan | |
---|---|
Born | August 27, 1907 |
Died | November 20, 1999 | (aged 92)
Nationality | American |
Occupation | costume designer |
Adele Balkan (August 27, 1907 – November 20, 1999) was an American costume designer whose career spanned 40 years working on motion pictures during Hollywood's Golden Age of Classical cinema. Her credits for Paramount, Universal Studios, RKO, and 20th Century Fox include work on “ Mighty Joe Young,” “ The Blue Angel” (with May Britt), and The Fly.
Balkan began her career in 1932 as a sketch artist on Cecil B. DeMille's Cleopatra. [1] Much of Balkan's subsequent work was as a sketch artist assisting chief designers such as Edith Head, Travis Banton, Marjorie Best, Howard Greer, Irene, Charles LeMaire, Vittorio Nino Novarese, Renié, and Edward Stevenson. [2]
In an interview, Balkan described the role of the sketch artist and the potential for the relationship between the illustrator and designer. "The sketch artist was, primarily and solely, to sketch the design that the designer gave them. The designer created, and the sketcher illustrated. If the sketch artist knew how to create something, and if the designer was fond of that person, they'd kind of work together sometimes, and it gave the sketch artist a chance to create, and it gave the designer another pocket to take from. And they did it, and I mean, it was understood, nobody got excited about it." [3]
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences interviewed Balkan shortly before her death in 1999. In this transcript, she discusses the suggestion, made by Edith Head, to make the costume sketch in the shape and proportions of the actress who would wear the garment. "That was very bad. They came out thick and short.... They had no sweep, they had no movement. You have to exaggerate. You have to really make a sketch that everybody's excited about. The producer, the director, the star. And then you have to work to make her look like that." [4]
Balkan was born in Berkeley, California, in 1907, and lived in Berkeley and San Francisco, California, until the age of 10, when her father, a traveling salesman, moved the family to Boston, Massachusetts, and New York City, New York. Later, the family resettled on the West Coast. A dancer as a child, she studied with Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn at Denishawn and auditioned for Ziegfeld and George White's Scandals. She entered art school after graduating from Berkeley High School, eventually graduating from Cooper Union. [5] After moving to Los Angeles in 1934, Balkan sought a job at Paramount. "I wanted to be [at Paramount], because I had seen Travis Banton's name on the screen for credit for the costumes, in the movies, and I loved his work. I didn't realize at the time that he was the finest designer that the business has ever had. I only know I knew that I liked his things and I wanted to work at Paramount. So I took my little portfolio and I went out there." [6]
(as costume designer)
1965
John Goldfarb, Please Come Home!
1960
Flaming Star
1959
The Blue Angel
1959
A Private's Affair
1959
Blue Denim
1958
The Fiend Who Walked the West
1958 The Fly
1958
From Hell to Texas
1958
The Young Lions
1957
The Way to the Gold
1956
Three Brave Men
1955
Seven Cities of Gold
1952
The Narrow Margin (uncredited)
1951
Two Tickets to Broadway (uncredited)
1949
Mighty Joe Young (costumes)
1948
The Boy with Green Hair (gowns)
1948
Bodyguard
1948
They Live by Night (uncredited)
1948
The Arizona Ranger (uncredited)
1948
Fighting Father Dunne
1947
Trail Street (gowns)
1946
Criminal Court (uncredited)
1946
Riverboat Rhythm (uncredited)
After retiring from the film industry, Balkan became a full-time artist and exhibited her costume sketches at the L.A. County Museum of Art and Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences. [1]
Adele Balkan | |
---|---|
Born | August 27, 1907 |
Died | November 20, 1999 | (aged 92)
Nationality | American |
Occupation | costume designer |
Adele Balkan (August 27, 1907 – November 20, 1999) was an American costume designer whose career spanned 40 years working on motion pictures during Hollywood's Golden Age of Classical cinema. Her credits for Paramount, Universal Studios, RKO, and 20th Century Fox include work on “ Mighty Joe Young,” “ The Blue Angel” (with May Britt), and The Fly.
Balkan began her career in 1932 as a sketch artist on Cecil B. DeMille's Cleopatra. [1] Much of Balkan's subsequent work was as a sketch artist assisting chief designers such as Edith Head, Travis Banton, Marjorie Best, Howard Greer, Irene, Charles LeMaire, Vittorio Nino Novarese, Renié, and Edward Stevenson. [2]
In an interview, Balkan described the role of the sketch artist and the potential for the relationship between the illustrator and designer. "The sketch artist was, primarily and solely, to sketch the design that the designer gave them. The designer created, and the sketcher illustrated. If the sketch artist knew how to create something, and if the designer was fond of that person, they'd kind of work together sometimes, and it gave the sketch artist a chance to create, and it gave the designer another pocket to take from. And they did it, and I mean, it was understood, nobody got excited about it." [3]
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences interviewed Balkan shortly before her death in 1999. In this transcript, she discusses the suggestion, made by Edith Head, to make the costume sketch in the shape and proportions of the actress who would wear the garment. "That was very bad. They came out thick and short.... They had no sweep, they had no movement. You have to exaggerate. You have to really make a sketch that everybody's excited about. The producer, the director, the star. And then you have to work to make her look like that." [4]
Balkan was born in Berkeley, California, in 1907, and lived in Berkeley and San Francisco, California, until the age of 10, when her father, a traveling salesman, moved the family to Boston, Massachusetts, and New York City, New York. Later, the family resettled on the West Coast. A dancer as a child, she studied with Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn at Denishawn and auditioned for Ziegfeld and George White's Scandals. She entered art school after graduating from Berkeley High School, eventually graduating from Cooper Union. [5] After moving to Los Angeles in 1934, Balkan sought a job at Paramount. "I wanted to be [at Paramount], because I had seen Travis Banton's name on the screen for credit for the costumes, in the movies, and I loved his work. I didn't realize at the time that he was the finest designer that the business has ever had. I only know I knew that I liked his things and I wanted to work at Paramount. So I took my little portfolio and I went out there." [6]
(as costume designer)
1965
John Goldfarb, Please Come Home!
1960
Flaming Star
1959
The Blue Angel
1959
A Private's Affair
1959
Blue Denim
1958
The Fiend Who Walked the West
1958 The Fly
1958
From Hell to Texas
1958
The Young Lions
1957
The Way to the Gold
1956
Three Brave Men
1955
Seven Cities of Gold
1952
The Narrow Margin (uncredited)
1951
Two Tickets to Broadway (uncredited)
1949
Mighty Joe Young (costumes)
1948
The Boy with Green Hair (gowns)
1948
Bodyguard
1948
They Live by Night (uncredited)
1948
The Arizona Ranger (uncredited)
1948
Fighting Father Dunne
1947
Trail Street (gowns)
1946
Criminal Court (uncredited)
1946
Riverboat Rhythm (uncredited)
After retiring from the film industry, Balkan became a full-time artist and exhibited her costume sketches at the L.A. County Museum of Art and Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences. [1]