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Travis Banton

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Name
  
Travis Banton


Role
  
Costume designer

Travis Banton Costume Designer Travis Banton Silver Scenes A Blog

Died
  
February 2, 1958, Los Angeles, California, United States

Awards
  
Costume Designers Guild Hall of Fame Award

Similar People
  
Edith Head, Howard Greer, Josef von Sternberg, Hans Dreier, Mitchell Leisen

Edith Head & Company 2016


Travis Banton (August 18, 1894 – February 2, 1958) was an American costume designer. He is perhaps best known for his long collaboration with actress Marlene Dietrich and director Josef von Sternberg. He is generally considered one of the most important Hollywood costume designers of the golden age.

Contents

Travis Banton Claudette Colbert In Travis Banton by Everett

He was born in Waco, Texas. Travis moved to New York City as a child. Banton was educated at Columbia University and at the Art Students League where he studied art and fashion design.

Travis Banton Travis Banton Fashion History The Red List

An early apprenticeship with a high-society costume dressmaker earned him fame. When Mary Pickford selected one of his dresses for her wedding to Douglas Fairbanks, his reputation was established.

Travis Banton wwwfilmreferencecomimagessjff04img1431jpg

He opened his own dressmaking salon in New York City, and soon was asked to create costumes for the Ziegfeld Follies. In 1924, Travis Banton moved to Hollywood when Paramount contracted with him to create costumes for his first film, The Dressmaker from Paris.

Travis Banton MARLENE DIETRICH amp TRAVIS BANTON Silver Screen Modes by

Beginning with Norma Talmadge in Poppy, Banton designed clothing for Pola Negri and Clara Bow in the 1920s. In the 1930s and 1940s Banton designed for such stars as Kay Francis, Lilyan Tashman, Sylvia Sidney, Gail Patrick, Helen Vinson, and Claudette Colbert. Ultimately, Travis Banton may be best remembered for forging the style of such Hollywood icons as Carole Lombard, Marlene Dietrich, and Mae West. Dietrich and Banton had an especially close and successful collaboration. His work for Dietrich is still frequently referenced by designers.

Travis Banton Travis Banton Taste Arbiter Colette Blog

Glamour, subtle elegance, and exquisite fabrics endeared Travis Banton to the most celebrated of Hollywood's beauties and made him one of the most sought-after costume designers of his era. As viewings of such films as The Gilded Lily (1935) and Desire (1936) reveal, his costume designs were marked by form-flattering cuts (often on the bias), rich fabrics (such as satin and lamé), and extravagant textures (beads, fur, and feathers). He collaborated closely with directors and actresses in order to fulfil their vision.

When designer Howard Greer left Paramount, Banton was promoted to Head Designer and was responsible for dressing the studio's most illustrious stars. Because of his worsening alcoholism, and according to some commentators also at the instigation of his assistant Edith Head, Banton was forced to leave Paramount. He returned to designing privately for loyal stars and also occasionally designed for Twentieth Century-Fox from 1939-1941 and Universal from 1945-1948.

The "Fashion Side" of Marlene Dietrich in "The Devil is A Woman". 1935 Costume Tests!


Notable design projects

  • Clara Bow in It and Wings, 1927
  • Kay Francis in Trouble in Paradise, 1932
  • Mae West in I'm No Angel, 1933 and Belle of the Nineties, 1934
  • Claudette Colbert in Cleopatra, 1934
  • Loretta Young in The Crusades, 1935
  • Marlene Dietrich in "Morocco", 1930, Shanghai Express, 1932, The Scarlet Empress, 1934 and The Devil is a Woman, 1935
  • Carole Lombard in My Man Godfrey, 1936 Nothing Sacred, 1937 and "Made for Each Other", 1939
  • Alice Faye in Lillian Russell and Tin Pan Alley, 1940
  • Carmen Miranda in Down Argentine Way, 1940, and That Night in Rio, 1941
  • Linda Darnell and Rita Hayworth in Blood and Sand, 1941
  • Betty Grable in Moon Over Miami, 1941
  • Rita Hayworth in Cover Girl (film), 1944
  • Joan Bennett in Scarlet Street, 1945
  • Merle Oberon in A Song to Remember, 1945
  • Lucille Ball in Lover Come Back, 1946
  • Joan Fontaine in Letter from an Unknown Woman, 1948
  • Linda Darnell in The Mark of Zorro, 1940
  • References

    Travis Banton Wikipedia


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