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Bill Belew

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Occupation
  
Fashion designer


Name
  
Bill Belew

Bill Belew Elvis Presley Suit 1968 designed by Bill Belew Collection of the

Full Name
  
William Lewis Belew

Born
  
May 20, 1931 (
1931-05-20
)

Died
  
January 7, 2008(2008-01-07) (aged 76)Desert Regional Medical Center, Palm Springs, California, U.S.

Cause of death
  
Diabetes/Cardiac arrest

Education
  
Known for
  
Elvis Presley's costumes and personal wardrobe from 1968 until Presley's death in 1977

Bill belew talks about elvis s 68 comeback


William Lewis Belew (May 20, 1931 – January 7, 2008) was an American costume designer who created stage outfits worn, among others, by Elvis Presley, Ella Fitzgerald, The Band, Gladys Knight, Gloria Estefan, Josephine Baker, Brooke Shields, Joan Rivers, Dionne Warwick, the Osmonds, and the Jacksons. It was Josephine Baker who encouraged Belew to work as a costume designer.

Contents

Bill Belew Costume design for Elvis Presleys 68 Special by Bill Belew on artnet

While he made costumes for plays, musicals, operas, ballets, TV specials and TV series, Belew is particularly famous for the stage outfits he made for Elvis. He created the tight-fitting black leather outfit that Elvis wore in the 1968 NBC Comeback Special, and the bell-bottomed jumpsuit outfits with high Napoleonic collars, pointed sleeve cuffs, wide belts and capes, decorated with gems, metal and rhinestone studding, sequins and embroidery. Belew also designed the suit Elvis is wearing on the famous photo of President Nixon and him in the Oval Office, a velveteen outfit originally designed for Elvis to use in his Las Vegas shows. Of the collars, Belew has explained that they were inspired by Napoleon's wardrobe and that he chose them because they would frame and draw attention to Presley's face.

Bill Belew Elvis 100 Interview with Bill Belew 27052005

In an interview Belew explained why most of the jumpsuits were white:

Bill Belew Bill Belews Early days YouTube

The lighting [in Las Vegas] was still in its early stages. And we found that the color that worked the best was white. It allowed them to change the colors on him, where as black would absorb all the color. And it was hard to highlight him. And we experimented with blue which was one of his favorite colors. Red. But it just ended up that white was the best thing and, of course, you know, you want the star to be the person, you know, and not the wardrobe.

During the 1970s Belew designed Elvis' offstage wardrobe, as well.

Among the most famous of Belew's Elvis jumpsuits are the American Eagle (created for the 1973 Elvis: Aloha from Hawaii via Satellite) and the Peacock (first worn at the Forum in Los Angeles in 1974, and later seen on the cover to the 1975 album Promised Land). In 2008 the Peacock suit was sold at an online auction for $300,000. This made it the most expensive piece of Elvis memorabilia sold at auction.

The elaborate embroidery, which was getting a more prominent role on the jumpsuits in 1974–1977, was the work of Gene Doucette.

In the 1970's, Bill Belew was in big demand. He was busy doing television shows and movies, so he would give Gene the blank suits and Gene would design them himself. Gene designed most of the suits from 1972 until Elvis' death. He designed the more elaborate suits such as the Aloha, Peacock, Sundial, Tiger, and American Eagle.

Belew died at the age of 76 from diabetes-related complications in Palm Springs, California

Bill belew how to deliver a great presentation to a multicultural audience talks at google


References

Bill Belew Wikipedia


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