EDWARD STEVENSON

May 13, 1906

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Edward Manson Stevenson was an Academy Award-winning costume designer. His film and television credits include Citizen Kane (1941) and It’s a Wonderful Life (1946). He did costumes for 16 films featuring Lucille Ball from 1936 to 1960. He worked for Lucille Ball as costume designer for: 

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Dance, Girl, Dance (1940) designed by Edward Stevenson, just one of the 16 films where Lucille Ball wore Stevenson’s designs. 

Stevenson joined “I Love Lucy” in 1955, after the departure of Elois Jenssen. 

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Stevenson had the enormous task of designing the various Jacques Marcel dresses seen in “Lucy Gets a Paris Gown” (ILL S5;E20) in 1956.

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In 1957, he also designed this form-fitting green fish-tail dress for “The Country Club Dance” (ILL S6;E25).  

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Stevenson was responsible for Lucille Ball’s wardrobe for “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hours”. 

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In 1961 Stevenson shared his only Oscar (Best Costume Design Black and White) with the legendary Edith Head for the Lucille Ball / Bob Hope film The Facts of Life.

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Stevenson again collaborated with Head, Lucy, and Hope for TV’s  “Mr. & Mrs.” in 1964. 

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On “The Lucy Show” Stevenson got to design a wide array of historical periods and styles.

Lucy as Cleopatra was the very first episode of “The Lucy Show” filmed in color.

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“What happens in Vegas…” – including this emerald green sequined outfit… – “should stay in Vegas”  

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But it didn’t – the green feathered hat was also seen when “Lucy Goes To A Hollywood Premiere” (S4;E20) in 1966.

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Taking a cue from Cecil Beaton’s award-winning costumes from My Fair Lady, Stevenson transformed a lowly Liza Lumpwaller (Lucy Carmichael) into a majestic Eliza Doolittle-type head-turner in “My Fair Lucy” (TLS S3;E20) in 1965.

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In “Lucy in London” (1966), Stevenson dressed Lucille Ball in everything from Tudor finery…

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… to mod, Carnaby Street fashions. 

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In 1968, Stevenson (center) designed the multi-function black and white dress that Lucy models to help her working daughter with her new job at a fashion boutique.

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Having worked at RKO in the 1930s and ‘40s, Stevenson was well equipped to design these costumes for the Gone With the Wind sketch in “Lucy and Flip Go Legit” (HL S4;E1). “The Lucy Show” scripts often required a variety of movie-referenced costumes. 

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He also tackled the exotic with “Lucy’s Impossible Mission” (HL S1;E6) in 1968. 

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This elegant gold gown with a shear gold overlay was Stevenson’s last seen work for Lucille Ball. He died of a coronary on December 2, 1968, fittingly while shopping for fabric on La Cienega Boulevard.

The episode (with guest star Cesar Romero) was aired posthumously in February 1969.

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Idaho State University Library maintains a collection of Stevenson’s sketches. 

NOTE: Although Edward Stevenson is credited for wardrobe and costumes for each of the above shows, it does not necessarily mean that he designed every costume on screen. While some specialty and star costumes may indeed be created  from the ground up, many times the job of wardrobe or costume designer is to co-ordinate existing pieces with an eye toward visual cohesion and adherence to period – all while staying within a production’s budget. Wardrobe items are often pulled from stock, shopped, or recycled. The above photos do not necessarily reflect exclusively Stevenson’s designs. 

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