Costume Design
1954 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Costume design by James Bailey (ca.1925-1980) for Olivia in William Shakespeare's play Twelfth Night, Old Vic, 6 January 1954.
In 1953 the Directors of the Old Vic announced that the theatre would present all 36 of the plays published in Shakespeare's First Folio in the following five years. Twelfth Night, directed by Denis Carey, was the fourth play to be staged. Olivia was played by Gwen Cherrell, with Claire Bloom as Viola, John Neville as Orsino, Richard Burton as Sir Toby Belch and Michael Hordern as Malvolio. James Bailey designed the costumes and also the Palladian-inspired architectural setting which was used for all six plays presented in the first season of the Five Year Plan, between September 1953 and May 1954. For Twelfth Night he adapted his permanent set to suggest an Italian garden. The Elizabethan costumes were based on the miniatures of Isaac Oliver and Nicholas Hilliard. Gerard Fay, writing in the Manchester Guardian (8 January 1954) said that Gwen Cherrell's Olivia 'lives up to the descriptions of her beauty and is dressed superbly'.
James Bailey's romantic and atmospheric style, influenced by the work of Oliver Messel, made him a much sort-after designer for opera and ballet. His first commission after graduating from the Slade School of Fine Art was to design Giselle at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, in 1946. He created settings and costumes for Shakespeare productions, notably a 'Victorian' Hamlet at Stratford-upon-Avon in 1948 and As You Like It for Katharine Hepburn in New York in 1950. Ill health caused him to give up his theatre work and from 1960 he concentrated on painting.
In 1953 the Directors of the Old Vic announced that the theatre would present all 36 of the plays published in Shakespeare's First Folio in the following five years. Twelfth Night, directed by Denis Carey, was the fourth play to be staged. Olivia was played by Gwen Cherrell, with Claire Bloom as Viola, John Neville as Orsino, Richard Burton as Sir Toby Belch and Michael Hordern as Malvolio. James Bailey designed the costumes and also the Palladian-inspired architectural setting which was used for all six plays presented in the first season of the Five Year Plan, between September 1953 and May 1954. For Twelfth Night he adapted his permanent set to suggest an Italian garden. The Elizabethan costumes were based on the miniatures of Isaac Oliver and Nicholas Hilliard. Gerard Fay, writing in the Manchester Guardian (8 January 1954) said that Gwen Cherrell's Olivia 'lives up to the descriptions of her beauty and is dressed superbly'.
James Bailey's romantic and atmospheric style, influenced by the work of Oliver Messel, made him a much sort-after designer for opera and ballet. His first commission after graduating from the Slade School of Fine Art was to design Giselle at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, in 1946. He created settings and costumes for Shakespeare productions, notably a 'Victorian' Hamlet at Stratford-upon-Avon in 1948 and As You Like It for Katharine Hepburn in New York in 1950. Ill health caused him to give up his theatre work and from 1960 he concentrated on painting.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Watercolour, pencil and gouache on paper |
Brief description | Costume design by James Bailey for Olivia in William Shakespeare's play Twelfth Night, Old Vic, 6 January 1954. |
Physical description | Costume design for Olivia in Twelfth Night, showing a full-length female figure in a black Elizabethan gown and ruff, the bodice and underskirt decorated with white 'pearls', the overskirt of black net. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions |
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Literary reference | Twelfth Night |
Summary | Costume design by James Bailey (ca.1925-1980) for Olivia in William Shakespeare's play Twelfth Night, Old Vic, 6 January 1954. In 1953 the Directors of the Old Vic announced that the theatre would present all 36 of the plays published in Shakespeare's First Folio in the following five years. Twelfth Night, directed by Denis Carey, was the fourth play to be staged. Olivia was played by Gwen Cherrell, with Claire Bloom as Viola, John Neville as Orsino, Richard Burton as Sir Toby Belch and Michael Hordern as Malvolio. James Bailey designed the costumes and also the Palladian-inspired architectural setting which was used for all six plays presented in the first season of the Five Year Plan, between September 1953 and May 1954. For Twelfth Night he adapted his permanent set to suggest an Italian garden. The Elizabethan costumes were based on the miniatures of Isaac Oliver and Nicholas Hilliard. Gerard Fay, writing in the Manchester Guardian (8 January 1954) said that Gwen Cherrell's Olivia 'lives up to the descriptions of her beauty and is dressed superbly'. James Bailey's romantic and atmospheric style, influenced by the work of Oliver Messel, made him a much sort-after designer for opera and ballet. His first commission after graduating from the Slade School of Fine Art was to design Giselle at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, in 1946. He created settings and costumes for Shakespeare productions, notably a 'Victorian' Hamlet at Stratford-upon-Avon in 1948 and As You Like It for Katharine Hepburn in New York in 1950. Ill health caused him to give up his theatre work and from 1960 he concentrated on painting. |
Other number | SH.8 - Previous loan number |
Collection | |
Accession number | S.1127-2011 |
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Record created | October 20, 2011 |
Record URL |
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