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Irene Sharaff

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Name
  
Irene Sharaff


Role
  
Costume designer

Irene Sharaff Designer Irene SHARAFF on Pinterest Barbra Streisand

Died
  
August 10, 1993, New York City, New York, United States

Books
  
Broadway & Hollywood: Costumes Designed by Irene Sharaff

Education
  
Parsons School of Design, Academie de la Grande Chaumiere, Art Students League of New York

Awards
  
Academy Award for Best Costume Design

Nominations
  
Academy Award for Best Production Design, BAFTA Award for Best Costume Design

Similar People
  
Orry‑Kelly, Walter Plunkett, Renie, Saul Chaplin, Irene

Susan Tsu Receives TDF Lifetime Achievement Award For Costume Design


Irene Sharaff (January 23, 1910 – August 10, 1993) was an American costume designer for stage and screen. Her work earned her five Academy Awards and a Tony Award.

Contents

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Background

Irene Sharaff Make It Sew The Costume Blog Legends Irene Sharaff

Sharaff was born in Boston and studied at the New York School of Fine and Applied Arts, the Art Students League of New York, and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière in Paris.

Career

Irene Sharaff Irene Sharaff Works on Sale at Auction amp Biography

After working as a fashion illustrator in her youth, Sharaff turned to set and costume design. Her debut production was the 1931 Broadway production of Alice in Wonderland, starring Eva Le Gallienne. Her use of silks from Thailand for The King and I (1951) created a trend in fashion and interior decoration.

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Sharaff's work was featured in the movies West Side Story (Academy Award, 1961), Cleopatra (Academy Award, 1963), Meet Me in St. Louis, Hello, Dolly!, Mommie Dearest, The Other Side of Midnight, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (Academy Award, 1966), Guys and Dolls, The Best Years of Our Lives, The King and I (Academy Award, 1956), An American in Paris (Academy Award, 1951), Funny Girl and Porgy and Bess.

Irene Sharaff THAT WOMAN IS ME COSTUME DESIGNER IRENE SHARAFF

She also designed sets and costumes for American Ballet Theatre, the New York City Ballet, and the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo, and contributed illustrations to fashion magazine's such as Vogue and Harper's Bazaar. Among her Broadway design credits are Idiot's Delight, Lady in the Dark, As Thousands Cheer, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, Flower Drum Song, and Jerome Robbins' Broadway.

The TDF/Irene Sharaff Lifetime Achievement Award was named for Sharaff. She was its first recipient in 1993. The award is now bestowed annually to a costume designer who, over the course of his or her career, has achieved great distinction and mastery of the art in theatre, film, opera or dance.

Death

Irene Sharaff died in New York City of congestive heart failure, complicated by emphysema, at the age of 83. Sharaff bequeathed her collection of books, along with that of her partner, Mai-Mai Sze, to the New York Society Library.

Awards and nominations

  • 1968 Tony Award for Hallelujah, Baby! (nominee)
  • 1964 Tony Award for The Girl Who Came to Supper (nominee)
  • 1959 Tony Award for Flower Drum Song (nominee)
  • 1958 Tony Award for West Side Story (nominee)
  • 1957 Tony Award for Shangri-La, Candide, Happy Hunting, and Small War on Murray Hill (nominee)
  • 1952 Tony Award for The King and I (winner)
  • References

    Irene Sharaff Wikipedia