Houston Chronicle

Design world mourns the loss of Mr. Color

- By Diane Cowen STAFF WRITER diane.cowen@chron.com

The interior design world lost a legend this month with the death of Carleton Varney, whose nickname “Mr. Color” told the story of his decorating philosophy.

Varney, 85, died at a hospital in West Palm Beach, Fla., after an extended illness.

The president and owner of Dorothy Draper & Co. for nearly 60 years, his personal story intersects with the very history of design in America.

A native of Massachuse­tts, he graduated from Oberlin College in 1958, and after a teaching job and brief gig as a fashion model in New York, he went to work as a draftsman at Dorothy Draper. There, he learned everything he could from Draper, who refused to use beige in a home and popularize­d the use of a bold mix of colors and patterns.

Varney became president of Draper’s company in 1966 and bought it before her death in 1969.

In a 2018 interview before an appearance at the Decorative Center of Houston, Varney remembered his early days at Dorothy Draper, when the walls and ceiling were black, floors were green and well-placed lights made client presentati­ons feel like high theater.

“She would say, ‘Show me nothing that looks like gravy.’ I like cream velvet, but you had to hide it because Mrs. Draper didn’t like anything that looked like it could be poured over a turkey,” Varney said of his mentor. “Her neutrals were not gray and white and beige; her neutral was that beautiful aqua that Tiffany uses on their boxes.”

In his more than 60year career Varney decorated everything from homes to hotels, embassies, airplanes, cruise ships and yachts.

He and his late wife, Suzanne, founded the Carleton V Ltd. textile house in 1973, and throughout his career, he designed a wide array of home goods.

He published 37 decorating books and wrote the official biography of Dorothy Draper, which was recently updated and re-released.

Their history

Draper was the doyenne of interior design from the 1920s into the 1960s, and Varney’s love of theatrics was a perfect fit for her maximalist spirit.

In public and at work, he was always well dressed and wore a neck scarf — usually of silk and made with one of his designs — and red socks. He once told a story about going out to dinner at a nice restaurant and being told by the maitre d’ that his scarf wasn’t an acceptable substitute for a necktie. “I’ve worn this scarf to Buckingham Palace, and it was good enough for the queen,” he replied.

Perhaps one of Draper and Varney’s best known hotel projects is The Greenbrier resort in White Sulphur Springs, W.Va., which Draper reinvented after World War II and where Varney worked so extensivel­y that he maintained an office inside

the hotel. He also was the designer for iconic hotels in Palm Beach, where he lived: The Breakers, The Brazilian Court and The Colony.

In the mid-1970s, Varney redecorate­d the Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island, Mich., where he filled rooms with floralprin­t carpets, upholstere­d chairs in pretty prints and decorated several guest suites in honor of American

first ladies he admired.

His fans

Houstonian Susu Ross’s family owned a number of hotels, including the Arlington Hotel in Hot Springs, Ark., and her mother hired Draper — and later Varney — to work on their hotels through the years. Varney became Ross’ personal decorator,

bringing color to her Houston home as well as her weekend place in Austin County.

“My master bedroom has pink and white stripe wallpaper, and a wonderful fabric that’s shocking pink, white and green plaid. My living room is bright yellow, one guest room has a royal blue floor and coral walls, and another has a red floor with dark emerald green walls. And all of he ceilings are robin’s egg blue,” said Ross, with whom Varney shared a decadeslon­g friendship.

“We talked every two or three days. Rudy (Saunders) told me, ‘Susu, you kept him going the last couple of months. He’d call me and say that we’ve got to get those lamps for Susu’s living room,’ ” she said. “We were just crazy about him.”

Houston interior designer Courtnay Elias of Creative Tonic Design remembers family trips to The Greenbrier with her parents, Barbara and Blake Tartt Jr., and her brother, Blake Tartt III.

“Growing up, I was surrounded by color. We had a Chinese red study, an avocado green living room and a cobalt blue dining room. So when we would go to the Greenbrier or to Mackinac Island, it felt like home. It didn’t feel like other hotels,” said Elias.

The Greenbrier, she said, “would rock your soul and leave an impression like, wow.”

Throughout his career, Varney decorated for celebritie­s such as golfer Sam Snead, NFL quarterbac­k Joe Namath, and actresses Judy Garland, Ethel Merman and Joan Crawford. He also decorated the official residence of Vice President Dan Quayle and his wife, Marilyn. Perhaps nearest to his heart, though, were his projects for President and first lady Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter. He styled White House state luncheons and dinners, was the color consultant for the Carter Presidenti­al Library in Atlanta and decorated their vacation home in Ellijay, Ga.

Varney also reached out to ordinary homeowners, too, selling his home goods on HSN and QVC.

Houston interior designer Sophia Vassiliou was influenced by Varney’s love of color, and when she learned he would be speaking in Houston in 2018, she went to the event and got an autograph. He was so charming that when she and her husband planned a trip to Palm Beach, she called to see if she could stop by his boutique and design studio. They were welcomed in the store; Varney even let Vassiliou’s husband use his office to get work done while she visited.

“To me, he was one of the legends of our business. He was a trailblaze­r, so his death is a big blow,” she said.

Varney was preceded in death by his former wife, Suzanne. He is survived by a sister, Vivian Varney; sons Nicholas Varney, Seamus Varney and Sebastian Varney; daughterin-law Victoria Bratberg; grandson, Bowie Varney; and several nieces and nephews.

 ?? The Grand Hotel ?? Interior designer Carleton Varney redecorate­d The Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island, Mich., in the mid-1970s. He decorated for celebritie­s but made his home goods accessible to ordinary homeowners.
The Grand Hotel Interior designer Carleton Varney redecorate­d The Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island, Mich., in the mid-1970s. He decorated for celebritie­s but made his home goods accessible to ordinary homeowners.
 ?? Joe D'Alessandro ?? This residence on Maui, Hawaii, reflects Varney’s philosophy on color.
Joe D'Alessandro This residence on Maui, Hawaii, reflects Varney’s philosophy on color.

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