Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
International

Canadian-Born Arnold Scassi, Designer To Stars And Presidential Wives, Dead At 85

The Canadian Press, 04 Aug, 2015 01:22 PM
    NEW YORK — Canadian designer Arnold Scaasi, whose flamboyant creations adorned the likes of Laura Bush, Elizabeth Taylor and Barbra Streisand, has died. The Montreal-born designer was 85.
     
    Scaasi died early Tuesday at New York-Presbyterian Hospital of cardiac arrest, said his longtime friend, Michael Selleck, executive vice-president of sales and marketing at Simon & Schuster.
     
    Until he closed his dress business in 2010, Scaasi — which was his given surname, Isaacs, spelled backward — specialized in made-to-order clothes, favouring ornate, brilliantly colored fabrics and trimmings like beads and feathers.
     
    "Fashion, it's really about feeling good," he told The Associated Press in 2002, when the Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology showed an exhibit of his works. "It should be fun to get dressed. I like exciting and pretty clothes that help women feel exciting and pretty."
     
    While "less is more" was usually not his credo, perhaps Scaasi's most famous outfit was a flimsy lace pantsuit designed for Streisand's Oscar appearance in 1969, when she won the best-actress award for "Funny Girl" in a tie with Katharine Hepburn. It featured bell-bottom pants and matching top in spangly black lace, with white collar and cuffs.
     
    Strategically placed patch pockets covered her breasts, but the effect of the thin fabric in bright light created the impression of nudity from some angles.
     
    But Scaasi denied the intent was to shock, saying only that he told Streisand: "We have to do something very modern — really of today," since to that point, moviegoers had seen her only in costumes from another era.
     
    Scaasi's most important legacy will be that of "his profound individuality," Parker Ladd, the designer's husband since 2011 and his partner of 54 years, said in a telephone interview Tuesday.
     
    "Everyone who committed to his clothes will feel that way, and museums and history will remember him that way."
     
    Scaasi was born in 1930 in Montreal. His father was a furrier, and he became interested in art and fashion at an early age.
     
    He trained both in Montreal and Paris and worked for designer Charles James — famed for his glamorous, sculptural gowns — in New York before opening his first ready-to-wear business in 1956.
     
    Over the years he won numerous awards, including the 1996 lifetime achievement award from the Council of Fashion Designers of America.
     
    Because he did relatively little for the mass ready-to-wear market, he wasn't as well known to the average customer as contemporaries like Oscar de la Renta or Liz Claiborne.
     
    But he did design some high-end ready-to-wear clothes for specialty stores, telling Women's Wear Daily in 2007 that he was creating a new ready-to-wear line because "women were stopping me in airports and asking me at dinner parties."
     
    Meanwhile, for a spectacular price, his socialite and celebrity clients got one-of-a-kind clothes — carefully constructed, tailored to their precise size, highlighting their best points and camouflaging their worst. He was known for taking dozens and dozens of measurements of clients' bodies.
     
    In his 2004 book, "Women I Have Dressed (and Undressed)," Scaasi described some of the things he made for Elizabeth Taylor: "A spectacular white satin ball gown with a rhinestone design of arches over the entire dress. ... A long black velvet cape to go over it — it was fab. ... A coral and turquoise petunia printed silk short dress with a cape coat in turquoise cashmere. ... A beautiful short black chiffon number that was totally covered in tiny leaves and flowers with diamante clusters."
     
    Scaasi was a young man when he had his first White House client: Mamie Eisenhower. The first lady favoured strapless evening gowns, Scaasi wrote: "I was very pleased that Mrs. Eisenhower wanted to look so stylish."
     
    For Barbara Bush, he designed a number of outfits including her two-toned, deep blue "Barbara blue" 1989 inaugural gown.
     
    Laura Bush, he said, had to be persuaded to shorten her skirts slightly, to mid-knee. He praised her "long neck, which, of course, any woman would give her eyeteeth to possess."
     
    Scaasi said loyalty to the Bushes prevented him from actively seeking made-to-order business from Hillary Rodham Clinton. But to his surprise, he said, he met her in 1994 and learned that she had purchased a dress of his, a ruffly black number that she called "one of the prettiest gowns I own."
     
    As for another famous first lady — Jacqueline Kennedy — Scaasi wrote in his book that she had bought Scaasi clothes before she became first lady, but that he could not afford to provide clothing to her as first lady for free.
     
    Scaasi also recalled in his book how he persuaded opera star Joan Sutherland to feel comfortable in clothes that showed off her figure, rather than hiding it.
     
    He made a gown with apricot roses on a black background, topping it with a tangerine silk cloak. He wrote that she told him: "I have never felt pretty in my life. Tonight I feel really pretty."
     
    Scaasi is survived by husband Ladd, with whom he shared homes on Manhattan's Beekman Place, on Long Island and in Palm Beach, Florida.
     
    "Our relationship was very profound," Ladd said Tuesday.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    13-Year-Old Indian-American Boy Raghav Ganesh Wins $5,000 Award For Device To Help Blind

    13-Year-Old Indian-American Boy Raghav Ganesh Wins $5,000 Award For Device To Help Blind
    The device built by Ganesh of San Jose, California uses sensors to detect objects beyond the reach of the white canes used by many blind people.

    13-Year-Old Indian-American Boy Raghav Ganesh Wins $5,000 Award For Device To Help Blind

    Former B.C. Liberal, Independent, MLA John Slater dies

    Former B.C. Liberal, Independent, MLA John Slater dies
    John Slater, who was 63, was elected in 2009 as a Liberal in the riding of Boundary-Similkameen, but ended his career in provincial politics as an Independent after the Liberal party did not endorse his candidacy for the 2013 election.

    Former B.C. Liberal, Independent, MLA John Slater dies

    India Denounces Arms Suppliers To Terrorists; Pakistan Blames Demand From 'Unresolved Conflicts'

    India Denounces Arms Suppliers To Terrorists; Pakistan Blames Demand From 'Unresolved Conflicts'
    India has hit out against countries that as a "deliberate policy" arm terrorists and called for stricter international action against suppliers to curb the illicit trade in small weapons.

    India Denounces Arms Suppliers To Terrorists; Pakistan Blames Demand From 'Unresolved Conflicts'

    Hindu Population Up In USA, Becomes Fourth-Largest Faith

    Hindu Population Up In USA, Becomes Fourth-Largest Faith
    Fueled by immigration, America's Hindu population has reached 2.23 million, an increase of about one million or 85.8 percent since 2007, making Hinduism the fourth-largest faith

    Hindu Population Up In USA, Becomes Fourth-Largest Faith

    Canada becomes Modi-fied

    Canada becomes Modi-fied
    Asserting a spirit of trust and transformation in India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi concluded his highly productive tri-nation visit to Canada with a landmark deal of over seven million pounds of uranium to an energy-hungry India.

    Canada becomes Modi-fied

    Indian-Origin councillor Harbhajan Kaur Dheer Becomes First Woman Asian Mayor in Britain

    Indian-Origin councillor Harbhajan Kaur Dheer Becomes First Woman Asian Mayor in Britain
    Councillor Harbhajan Kaur Dheer, 62, who succeeded councillor Tej Ram Bagha on Tuesday at the Annual Council Meeting, belongs to Britain's Labour party.

    Indian-Origin councillor Harbhajan Kaur Dheer Becomes First Woman Asian Mayor in Britain