Neiman Marcus Fashion Award

The Neiman Marcus Award for Distinguished Service in the Field of Fashion was a yearly award created in 1938 by Carrie Marcus Neiman and Stanley Marcus. Unlike the Coty Award, it was not limited to American-based fashion designers.[1] Recipients of the Neiman Marcus Awards include couturiers, non-American-based designers, journalists, manufacturers, and celebrities and style icons who had had a significant personal influence upon fashion such as Grace Kelly and Grace Mirabella.[1][2] The award was typically presented to multiple recipients each year, rather than to a single individual, although Adrian Adolph Greenburg was the sole winner in 1943, a feat repeated in 1957 by Coco Chanel.[1] From 1969 the awards became increasingly intermittent, with ceremonies held in 1973, 1979, 1980, 1984 and 1995, the last year in which the awards were presented. For the final ceremony, the founder, Stanley Marcus, received one of his own awards.

Award winners

This is a complete list of recipients of the Neiman Marcus Fashion Award from 1938 onwards.[3]

1938-1949

  • 1938
Louise B. Gallagher
John-Frederics
Richard Koret
Dorothy Liebes
George Miller
Flavio Petrozzi
Dan Palter
Nettie Rosenstein
  • 1939
Elizabeth Arden
Hattie Carnegie
John Cavanagh
Janet May
Clare Potter
  • 1940
Edna Woolman Chase
Lilly Daché
Elsa Schiaparelli
Sylvan Stroock
  • 1941
Anthony Blotta
Omar Kiam
Eleanor LeMaire
Max Meyer
Carmel Snow
Madame Tobe
  • 1942
Betsy Blackwell
Norman Norell
Voris
  • 1943
Adrian
  • 1944
Brooke Cadwallader
Jo Copeland
Countess Mara
Ben King
  • 1945
Tina Leser
Vera Marghab
Maurice Rentner
Dr. Francis Taylor
Thea Tewi
Louis A Weinberg
Emily Wilkens
  • 1946
John M. Gates, design director for Steuben Glass Works
William H. and Faie Joyce of Joyce Shoes
Slim Keith (as Mrs. Leland Hayward)
William Phelps
Adele Simpson
  • 1947
Christian Dior
Salvatore Ferragamo
Norman Hartnell
Irene Gibbons
  • 1948
Mme. Henri Bonnet (wife of Henri Bonnet, French Ambassador to the United States 1944-54)
Antonio del Castillo
Claire McCardell
Julius Ochs Adler
  • 1949
Alice Cadolle
David Evins
Jacques Fath
Gladys Geissman (Merry Hull)

1950-1959

  • 1950
Bonnie Cashin
Fleur Meyer
Gloria Swanson
Pauline Trigère
  • 1951
Ernestine Cannon
Jane Derby
Jacques Lesur
Michelle Murphy
Ben Zuckerman
  • 1952
Roger Fare
Anne Fogarty
Vincent Monte-Sano
Dolores del Río
  • 1953
Olga di Grésy
Charles James
Gilbert & Helen Orcel
Ben Sommers
  • 1954
James Galanos
Herbert & Beth Levine
Emilio Pucci
  • 1955
Pierre Balmain
Henry Dreyfuss
Florence Eiseman
Grace Kelly
Sally Kirkland
Vera Maxwell
  • 1956
Cecil Beaton
Marie-Louise Bousquet
Giuliana Camerino
  • 1957
Coco Chanel
  • 1958
Helen Lee
Jens Harald Quistgaard
Yves Saint Laurent
  • 1959
Emme
Piero Fornasetti
Rosalind Russell
Arnold Scaasi

1960-1969

  • 1960
Sylvia Pedlar
Roger Jean-Pierre
Dinah Shore
Edward Burke Smith
Claude Staron
  • 1961
Greer Garson
Harry Rolnick
Ferdinando Sarmi
Roger Vivier
Sydney Wragge
  • 1962
Jules-François Crahay
James Laver
Estée Lauder
Sports Illustrated
  • 1963
Georges Braque
Bud Kilpatrick
Margaret Clarke Miller
Maurice Tumarkin
  • 1964-1965

The awards for 1964 and 1965 were combined into one award for the two years[1]

Geoffrey Beene
Mr & Mrs. Arthur Edelman
Tzaims Luksus
  • 1966
Mary Brosnan
Hélène Gordon-Lazareff
Lucie Ann Onderwyzer
Mila Schön
Jacques Tiffeau
  • 1967
Valentino
Fiamma Ferragamo
The Artisans of Florence
Giancarlo Venturini
Lydia de Roma
  • 1968
Oscar de la Renta
Kenneth Jay Lane
Armi Ratia
Roland Jourdan
  • 1969
Bill Blass
Anne Klein
Bernard Kayman
Emanuel Ungaro
Gloria Vanderbilt

1970-1995

  • 1973
Ralph Lauren
Levi Strauss & Co
Hanae Mori
Missoni
Jean Muir
  • 1979
Giorgio Armani
Richard Avedon
Baccarat
Perry Ellis
Mary McFadden
  • 1980
Karl Lagerfeld
Judith Leiber
  • 1984
Jack Lenor Larsen
Issey Miyake
  • 1995
Jean-Paul Goude
Stanley Marcus
Grace Mirabella
Miuccia Prada

See also

References

  1. McDowell, Colin (1984). McDowell's Directory of Twentieth Century Fashion. Frederick Muller. pp. 302–303. ISBN 0-584-11070-7.
  2. Company history on Neiman Marcus' official website, accessed March 22, 2009
  3. Staff writer (25 October 2002). "The Neiman's Seal of Approval". Women's Wear Daily. via Highbeam (subscription required). Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 2 March 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.