Oscar de la Renta, fashion guru, dies at 82

This June 3, 2013 file photo shows, former United States Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, left, and Oscar de la Renta speaking on stage at the 2013 CFDA Fashion Awards at Alice Tully Hall in New York. The designer, who died Monday, Oct. 20, 2014, at 82, shaped American couture half a century ago when it emerged as a serious rival to European fashion designers.
This June 3, 2013 file photo shows, former United States Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, left, and Oscar de la Renta speaking on stage at the 2013 CFDA Fashion Awards at Alice Tully Hall in New York. The designer, who died Monday, Oct. 20, 2014, at 82, shaped American couture half a century ago when it emerged as a serious rival to European fashion designers.

Oscar de la Renta, the Dominican-born fashion designer who spent more than 50 years dressing royalty, Hollywood celebrities and U.S. first ladies from Jacqueline Kennedy to Hillary Clinton, died Monday, The New York Times reported. He was 82 years old.

His death was confirmed by his wife, Annette de la Renta, according to the Times.

The "Guru of Glamor," who acquired U.S. citizenship in 1969, was the first American to become the top designer of a French fashion house. As head of Paris-based Balmain for 10 years and for his own label, de la Renta produced evening gowns and dresses that seemed ubiquitous on the cover of Vogue magazine and on the red carpet at the Academy Awards, competing with the likes of Valentino for high-society clientele.

"He makes a woman look like a woman, feel like a woman," designer Diane von Furstenberg said in a video tribute to de la Renta for an exhibit at the Clinton Presidential Center in Little Rock. "He has that old-fashioned elegance, and yet he's able to interpret it in such a modern way."

His blend of European luxury clothing with American casual wear was worn by models Kate Moss and Cindy Crawford in the 1990s, by actresses Penelope Cruz, Sarah Jessica Parker and Anne Hathaway, and by royalty. Archduchess Maria of Austria wore a de la Renta gown for her 1996 wedding, and Queen Noor of Jordan was photographed in his designs for Vogue in 2003.

De la Renta's designs, which former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg once said "have been to more award shows than Meryl Streep," were best known for being worn by America's first ladies, including Kennedy and Nancy Reagan. In 2001, he dressed Laura Bush in a silver long-sleeved gown for George W. Bush's inauguration and Hillary Clinton in a gold cape over a gold long-sleeve gown for the 1997 presidential inauguration ball.

"I still remember when Hillary walked out in that gown," former President Bill Clinton said in the video tribute. "I thought, 'Oh my God, that's beautiful.' I still think it's probably the best gift Oscar ever gave us, beyond his friendship."

The next year, Hillary Clinton became the first wife of a U.S. president to appear on the cover of Vogue. Photographed by Annie Leibovitz, the future secretary of state donned a de la Renta dress in black velvet for the occasion.

Oscar Aristides Ortiz de la Renta Fiallo was born July 22, 1932, in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. His father, Oscar Avelino de la Renta, was a Puerto Rican insurance agent and his mother, Maria Antonia Fiallo, was from a well-to-do Dominican family. De la Renta was his mother's only son, and he had six stepsisters on his father's side, according to Vogue.

At the urging of his mother, who was terminally ill with multiple sclerosis, de la Renta moved to Madrid at age 17 to study painting at the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando. In the mid-1950s, he secured a job with fashion designer Cristobal Balenciaga as an illustrator before working for Lanvin in Paris under designer Antonio del Castillo.

"Castillo says, 'I like your sketches. I'd like you to work for me,'" de la Renta said in a 2013 interview with Alexander Wang for Style.com. "And I said, 'Well, in fact, I've already accepted another job.' So he said, 'How much are they paying you?' So I made a huge big lie, and I gave them a higher amount."

De la Renta returned to New York in 1963 with the belief that fashion's future lay in ready-to-wear clothing rather than haute couture. He worked for Elizabeth Arden and Jane Derby Inc., which he took over after Derby's death in 1965. De la Renta bought the business and replaced her name with his on the label. Later, he designed for Balmain from 1993 until 2002.

De la Renta was the recipient of the American fashion industry's Coty Award in 1967 and 1968, a lifetime achievement award from the Council of Fashion Designers of America in 1990, and the Gold Medal of Bellas Artes from the king of Spain in 2000. He served two terms as president of the council, was chairman of the Queen Sofia Spanish Institute in New York, and was on the boards of Carnegie Hall and the Metropolitan Opera.

The designer was also a philanthropist, founding the Casa del Nino orphanage in La Romana, Dominican Republic.

He was married twice, the first time to Francoise de Langlade, an editor-in-chief of French Vogue, who died in 1983. Six years later, he tied the knot with Annette Engelhard. De la Renta had an adopted son, Moises.

"Style begins by looking good naked," he said in a 2013 interview with the U.K.'s Telegraph newspaper. "It's a discipline. And if you don't dress well every day, you lose the habit. It's not about what you wear, but how you live your life."

A Section on 10/22/2014

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