Lucien Lelong

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Lucien Lelong in 1925.
Signature

Lucien Lelong (pronounced [ly.sjɛ̃ lə.lɔ̃]; 11 October 1889 – 11 May 1958) was a French couturier who was prominent from the 1920s to the 1940s.

Career[edit]

Born in Paris as the son of Arthur Lelong, the owner of a fashion store, he trained at the Hautes Etudes de Commerciales in Paris and opened his fashion house in the early 1910s. The first Lelong designs were featured in Vogue magazine in 1913.[1] Poor health caused the end of his career; Lelong retired from couture in August 1948 and only continued his perfume business.[2]

Lelong did not actually create the garments that bore his label. "He did not design himself, but worked through his designers," wrote Christian Dior, who was a member of the Lelong team from 1941 until 1946, during which time he created the collections in collaboration with Pierre Balmain.[3] "Nevertheless," Dior continued, "in the course of his career as couturier his collections retained a style which was really his own and greatly resembled him." Other designers who worked for Lelong included Nadine Robinson and Hubert de Givenchy.

He remarried for the third time in 1954, with Sanda Dancovici, after having ceased his activity in 1952. They lived together near Biarritz in the commune of Anglet, at the Domaine de Courbois, which they restored at great expense. They played golf with the Duke of Windsor and held receptions at the estate. They had a daughter, Christine. In 1949, after the closure of Maison Lucien Lelong, the head of the tailoring workshop, Germaine Devaucou, joined Jean Dessès.[4]

Clientele[edit]

Among Lelong's clients were Marie Duhamel, Nora Barnacle (wife of James Joyce), Jeanne Ternisien (wife of the banker Georges Nelze), the Duchess de la Rochefoucauld, Greta Garbo, Gloria Swanson, Colette, and Rose Kennedy.

Marriages[edit]

Lelong was married three times. His wives were:

  • Anne-Marie Audoy (1899-1935), whom he married in 1919 and divorced in 1927. They had one daughter, Nicole (born 1920), who became the directrice of her father's fashion house in 1947; she was also the namesake of his 1938 lipstick introduction, Nicole Pink. Anne-Marie Lelong, who returned to her maiden name after the Lelongs' divorce, married, in 1930, Baron Bertrand Clauzel.
  • Sanda Annette Dancovici (1919-2001), an actress, whom he married in 1954; she was the daughter of Mircea Danovici. After Lelong's death she married, in 1959, French journalist Maurice Goudeket, the widower of Colette.[5]

Death[edit]

Lelong died of a stroke in Anglet, France.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Vogue, 15 January 1913, p. 56.
  2. ^ "Lelong Denies Reports of New Enterprise". Women's Wear Daily. 10 January 1950.
  3. ^ Christian Dior, "Je suis couturier", ELLE, 13 August 1951
  4. ^ Lemonde, Yvan (2001). "Dunbinsky, Ira, Institut Canadien Archives, http://collections.ic.gc.ca/icma/fr/index.html, site des Collections numérisées du Canada, dernière mise à jour de la page d'accueil : 16 septembre 1998 (site consulté le 1er mai 2001)". Revue d'histoire de l'Amérique française. 54 (4): 606. doi:10.7202/005503ar. ISSN 0035-2357. {{cite journal}}: External link in |title= (help)
  5. ^ "Sorcerer's Apprentice". www.nytimes.com.