Toronto Star

Reynolds finally getting her due as costume conservato­r

Academy museum plans to showcase the magic in golden age garments

- BROOKS BARNES

LOS ANGELES— For decades, Debbie Reynolds begged Hollywood to help her preserve and exhibit her vast collection of golden age costumes. “These pieces are cultural touchstone­s that still carry the energy of the stars who performed in them,” she once said, referring to legends like Elizabeth Taylor and Judy Garland. “There is magic in every thread, button and bow.”

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences turned her down — five times. Reynolds quoted an uninterest­ed David Geffen in her 2013 memoir as once saying, “Why don’t you just sell that stuff?”

In debt, she finally had no other choice, auctioning Marilyn Monroe’s ivory-pleated halter dress that blew upward in “The Seven Year Itch” for $4.6 million (U.S.) and Audrey Hepburn’s lace Royal Ascot number from “My Fair Lady” for $3.7 million — prices that shocked moviedom’s aristocrac­y and proved Reynolds had been right. Also sold, in some cases to anonymous overseas collectors, were Charlton Heston’s “Ben-Hur” tunic and cape, the acoustic guitar Julie Andrews strummed in “The Sound of Music” and every hat that Vivien Leigh flaunted in “Gone With the Wind.” Hollywood didn’t give a damn. Now, four years after she died at 84, the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, set to open April 30, finds itself caring about her collection — at least the part that is left, which includes iconic costumes she wore in movies like “Singin’ in the Rain.” Also remaining are screen garments created for Mary Pickford, Deborah Kerr and Cyd Charisse, as well as rare memorabili­a from classics like “The Wizard of Oz” and “The Maltese Falcon.”

“There are still amazing pieces,” Bill Kramer, the museum’s director, said by phone. Reynolds passed the items to her son, Todd Fisher, a major collector in his own right, who has long focused on film cameras and lenses. Fisher also inherited “Star Wars” memorabili­a owned by his sister, Carrie Fisher, who died a day before their mother in 2016.

So far, Fisher has agreed to lend the Academy Museum one item from his own collection: A set of seven Bausch and Lomb Baltar lenses used by Gregg Toland, the fabled “Citizen Kane” cinematogr­apher. But Fisher, 62, said more items would come, as long as the Debbie Reynolds Conservati­on Studio exists on the museum’s lower level next to the Shirley Temple Education Studio.

“My mother was one of the most forgiving people ever,” Fisher said. “She would never want me to hold a grudge just because I have knowledge of all the missed opportunit­ies; how the people running the academy in the past were never willing to step up and support her. She would have wanted me to share these important artifacts with future generation­s. So, as long as they are properly recognizin­g my mother for her contributi­on to this discipline, I agreed to provide access to whatever I have access to.”

The academy, founded in 1927, started collecting films and materials related to them in 1929. Its vast holdings include more than 100,000 titles, including obscure documentar­ies and early American movies; roughly 10 million photograph­s; 80,000 screenplay­s; 50,000 posters; and tens of thousands of production and costume design drawings.

But the actual garments never ranked. Deborah Nadoolman Landis, founding director of the David C. Copley Center for Costume Design at the University

of California, Los Angeles, pointed out that an Oscar was not awarded for the art until 1949, and costume designers were not able to secure their own membership branch within the academy until 2013.

“I think it was institutio­nalized sexism,” Landis said. “Our field was considered women’s work and treated with disrespect.” Landis has been a member of the academy since 1988. Her costume design credits include “Raiders of the Lost Ark” (you can thank her for Indy’s fedora and jacket) and “Coming to America,” for which she was nominated for an Oscar.

Kramer noted that the Academy Museum had recently purchased an array of costumes in private transactio­ns, including Marlene Dietrich’s evening robe from “Blonde Venus” (1932), Gene Kelly’s sweater and slacks from “An American in Paris,” and a denim and flannel outfit worn by Kathy Bates in “Misery.” Leonardo DiCaprio, Steven Spielberg and Terry Semel, the former Warner Bros. chief, teamed in 2012 to buy a pair of ruby slippers from

“The Wizard of Oz” for the museum, which was then pointed toward an opening in 2017.

And some things have recently been gifted in full or part to the museum, including Bela Lugosi’s floor-length “Dracula” cape. “It is important to us as a museum to be able to restore and safeguard this artifact, especially knowing that much of the material history of the classic horror cycle has been lost forever,” Jessica Niebel, exhibition­s curator, said in a statement last year.

Props donated to the museum include one of the “Rosebud” sleds made for “Citizen Kane.” A full-scale fibreglass “Jaws” shark, salvaged from a junkyard in 2016 and restored, will be on display.

Designed by Renzo Piano, the Academy Museum hopes to attract more than 800,000 visitors a year. To do so, Kramer must appeal to two discordant audiences, offering scholarshi­p for academy members (and students and film snobs) and sparkle for the masses. Approached in the right way, costumes could serve both needs — as Landis demonstrat­ed in 2012, when she curated “Hollywood Costume,: an exhibition at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London.

The New York Times called “Hollywood Costume” “extraordin­ary” and “intelligen­t.” The exhibition, which finally made its way to Los Angeles in 2014 with Kramer’s help, turned into a blockbuste­r, ranking as one of the biggest draws in the V&A’s 168-year history.

It included at least eight showstoppi­ng pieces from Reynolds’ original collection.

 ?? ROGER KISBY THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Costumes worn by Donald O’Connor, Debbie Reynolds and Gene Kelly in the musical “Singin’ in the Rain” are part of the late actress Reynolds’ extensive collection.
ROGER KISBY THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO Costumes worn by Donald O’Connor, Debbie Reynolds and Gene Kelly in the musical “Singin’ in the Rain” are part of the late actress Reynolds’ extensive collection.

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