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Tony Walton

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Name
  
Tony Walton

Role
  
Set designer


Children
  
Emma Walton Hamilton

Movies
  
Death of a Salesman

Tony Walton Tony Walton Tony Walton

Full Name
  
Anthony John Walton

Born
  
24 October 1934 (age 90) (
1934-10-24
)
Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, England, United Kingdom

Occupation
  
Art director, set designer, costume designer

Spouse
  
Gen LeRoy (m. 1991), Julie Andrews (m. 1959–1967)

Grandchildren
  
Sam Hamilton, Hope Hamilton

Awards
  
Academy Award for Best Production Design

Similar People
  
Julie Andrews, Emma Walton Hamilton, Blake Edwards, Edward Stewart, Jerry Zaks

Tony Walton


Anthony John "Tony" Walton (born 24 October 1934) is an English set and costume designer.

Contents

Tony Walton Tony Walton Theatre Credits

Walton was born in Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, England. He began his career in 1957 with the stage design for Noël Coward's Broadway production of Conversation Piece. Throughout the late 1950s and early 1960s he designed for the New York and London stage. He entered motion pictures as costume designer and visual consultant for Mary Poppins in 1964, for which he received an Oscar nomination.

Tony Walton Tony Walton Celebrities lists

His awards include an Oscar for All That Jazz in 1980 and an Emmy for the acclaimed 1985 TV version of Death of a Salesman. He has received many Oscar, Emmy and other nominations, including BAFTA nominations for costume and set design for Murder on the Orient Express in 1975 and Oscar nominations for both costume design and set direction/art direction for the motion picture version of The Wiz in 1979. The film's star, Diana Ross chose Walton to design the stage set for her landmark 1983 Central Park concert, "For One & For All". Broadcast worldwide on the Showtime cable network, the concert special, over the course of two days, featured an on-site audience of over 1,200,000 on the park's Great Lawn.

Tony Walton Tony Walton Photos Zimbio

In December 2005, for their annual birthday celebration to 'The Master', The Noël Coward Society invited Walton as the guest celebrity to lay flowers in front of Coward's statue at New York's Gershwin Theatre, thereby commemorating the 106th birthday of Sir Noël.

Broadway productions and others

More recently, Walton has diversified into directing, with productions of:

  • Orson Welles' Moby Dick—Rehearsed, 2005
  • Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest, 1996
  • Noël Coward In Two Keys, 1996
  • George Bernard Shaw's Major Barbara, 1997
  • Missing Footage, 1999
  • Ooops! The Big Apple Circus Stage Show, 1999
  • Where's Charley?, 2004
  • After the Ball, 2004
  • Busker Alley, 2006
  • Inspiration for Disney's Winnie the Pooh

    Walton gave the Sherman Brothers the insight and inspiration for the Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree songs as is explained in the Sherman Brothers' joint autobiography, Walt's Time:

    Personal life

    Walton married his childhood sweetheart Julie Andrews in 1959, and the two had a daughter, Emma Walton Hamilton. Walton has said that he fell in love with Andrews when they were in their early teens and he saw her playing the egg in a theatre production of Humpty Dumpty. They divorced in 1967 but still remain close friends. Walton married Gen LeRoy in 1991. Walton, Andrews and their daughter have worked several times together professionally. He has illustrated several children's books written by Andrews and their daughter.

    References

    Tony Walton Wikipedia


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