Dolly Tree(1899-1962)
- Costume and Wardrobe Department
- Costume Designer
- Actress
Dolly Tree (1899-1962) had an international reputation as a designer
for stage and screen costumes during the 1920's and 1930's in London,
Paris, New York and Hollywood. She was England's leading stage designer
during the 1920's and her ingenious costumes proliferated in major
revues, musicals, pantomimes and cabaret in London and the regions.
Dolly Tree was also involved in designing costumes for the British film
industry and was allied to the couture house of Jean Peron. Her work
also had a great vogue in Paris where she became the first English
person and the first woman to design for the Folies Bergere. In New
York in the late 1920's she became famous for creating the
quintessensial 1890's look for Mae West and it is believed that she was
one of the first designers to propogate the use of the strapless
evening gown. Finally Dolly Tree became one of Hollywood's major screen
designers, working for MGM during the 1930's. Here she maintained the
style and glamour of costume for which MGM was famous, designing
elegant creations for Myrna Loy, Jean Harlow, Rosalind Russell,
Virginia Bruce and Judy Garland, besides the historical costumes for
the classic David Selznick movies such as Viva Villa, David Copperfield
and A Tale of Two Cities. Despite the excellence of her work and the
broad scope of her achievements, misinformation in many forms surrounds
Dolly Tree. She has been consistantly overshadowed by the
accomplishments of others and as a result her work and achievements
have been wrongly overlooked and ignored. For example, her work at the
Folies Bergere in Paris has been eclipsed by the towering edifice of
Erte's shrewd self publicity and in Hollywood the excellence of MGM's
publicity machine has relegated her to a position of relative
unimportance at the expense of glittering praise for Adrian.