Elizabeth Handley-Seymour Explained

Elizabeth Handley-Seymour
Birth Name:Elizabeth Fielding
Birth Date:1867
Birth Place:Blackpool, England
Death Date:1948
Nationality:British
Occupation:fashion designer and court-dressmaker
Known For:created Queen Elizabeth's coronation gown in 1937

Elizabeth Handley-Seymour (1867–1948) was a London-based fashion designer and court-dressmaker operating as Madame Handley-Seymour between 1910 and 1940. She is best known for creating the wedding dress worn by Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, the future Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, for her marriage to the Duke of York, the future King George VI, in 1923; and later, Queen Elizabeth's coronation gown in 1937.[1]

Early life

Born Elizabeth Fielding in Blackpool in 1867, she moved to London in the 1890s and set herself up as a court-dressmaker.[1] [2] In 1901 she married Major James Burke Handley-Seymour.[1] The Major was described as having been a lifelong art critic in 1938.

Business

According to a 1938 newspaper article, Handley-Seymour launched her business in 1908–09 with a staff of four.[3] By 1912 Handley-Seymour was based on Bond Street, and had received her first Court commissions.[4] She was still located at Bond Street in 1938, with a staff of 200 making up her designs, while her husband handled the administrative side of the business.[3]

From the beginning Handley-Seymour offered copies of Paris dresses for her clients, a practice that was very common among high end dressmakers in London at the time.[1] A 1914 advertisement published in The Times listed a number of couturiers with whom Handley-Seymour had agreements to allow her to reproduce their models for her clientele, including Paul Poiret and the Callot Soeurs.[5] Poiret was at that time considered one of the most avant-garde and daring couturiers, meaning that Handley-Seymour was catering to a clientele who expected to be offered the smartest, most fashionable Paris modes.[1]

Many of the gowns provided by Madame Handley-Seymour were co-designed and created by Avis Ford, who started out as an apprentice in the 1910s and eventually became chief designer and fitter. Following the retirement of Handley-Seymour and at the request of Queen Mary, Ford opened her own couture establishment in the early 1940s on Albemarle Street, and continued to provide clothing to the Royal Family.[6] While it was reported that Handley-Seymour retired before the end of World War II which broke out in September 1939,[6] she was still offering designs to the Duchess of Devonshire and Queen Mary in early 1940.[7] [8] However Handley-Seymour Ltd. was not formally wound up until 1950,[9] following the deaths of Madame Handley-Seymour in 1948 and her husband's death in Buckinghamshire on 12 August 1949.[1] [10]

Theatre design

One of Handley-Seymour's first high-profile clients was the actress Mrs. Patrick Campbell, who commissioned Handley-Seymour to create gowns for her role as Eliza Doolittle in the 1914 premiere of George Bernard Shaw's play Pygmalion.[4] Campbell exploited the dramatic potential of her clothing to draw attention, depending on Handley-Seymour to produce garments that would "transcend mere modishness."[4] To reflect Eliza's development from poor flower-seller to refined society lady, a dress worn midway through, in Act III, combined a fashionable cut with a gaudy yellow taffeta fabric with a brash "Futurist" print of scarlet roses.[4] The final costume worn in the play, a pale grey dress and jacket with a boldly patterned black lining, presented Eliza as having achieved both fashionable refinement and freedom of thought, and was acclaimed by both the fashion press and the theatre critics.[4] This final costume was adapted from a Paul Poiret ensemble.[1]

Shaw later criticised Handley-Seymour's costumes, declaring the print dress "horrible" and the Poiret-inspired ensemble "dramatically nonsensical," although Kaplan and Stowell suggest that Campbell was taking inspiration from the Edwardian feminist who used refined and elegant attire to counteract accusations of being a "hammer-wielding suffragette."[4] Through rewrites and revisions, Shaw would later attempt to diminish Campbell's contributions to his play and downplay the success of her Eliza dressed by Handley-Seymour.[4] Alongside Campbell, other actresses costumed by Handley-Seymour between 1913 and 1938 included Irene Vanbrugh and Diana Wynyard.[11]

Royal designs

In 1923 Handley-Seymour, at that time dressmaker to Queen Mary,[12] was commissioned to make the bridal gown of Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon for her 26 April wedding to the Duke of York. The ivory chiffon moire dress was embroidered with pearls and silver thread, with a train of Flanders lace, and a girdle of silver leaves and green tulle fastened with silver roses and thistles.[13] [14] Handley-Seymour also made a number of outfits for the Duchess's trousseau, which were exhibited to the press on 20 April and were noted for their modestly neutral colours, such as a grey-beige going-away costume.[15]

For the next 12 years Handley-Seymour remained the Duchess of York's favourite dressmaker, although by 1937 the Duchess  - now queen consort following the abdication of Edward VIII  - was transferring her patronage to Norman Hartnell.[16] Despite this, Elizabeth commissioned Handley-Seymour to create her gown for the coronation (although Hartnell dressed the maids of honour).[16] William Shawcross notes that, according to Elizabeth Longford, the Queen was aware that if Handley-Seymour had not been given the opportunity to make the coronation gown it would have upset her greatly.[17] The transfer to Hartnell was not total, as he and Handley-Seymour both supplied clothes for Queen Elizabeth's wardrobe for the 1939 royal tour of Canada.[18]

Legacy

In 1958 the Handley-Seymours' daughter Joyce donated a number of Handley-Seymour design books ranging from 1910 to early 1940 to the Victoria and Albert Museum.[1] The breadth and scope of the collection of 51 volumes of designs is seen as an "unrivalled" record of a court-dressmaker's work.[19]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Milford-Cottam. Daniel. Costume design for Mrs Patrick Campbell in Pygmalion.. Search the Collections. Victoria & Albert Museum. 8 April 2015.
  2. Web site: Staff writer. 2012–2013 Ladies to Dine Evening. Rotary Club of St. Anne on the Sea. 5 March 2013 . 9 April 2015. John's Great Aunt Lizzie was properly known as Madame Elizabeth Handley-Seymour, born in Blackpool.
  3. News: Ashley. Elvire. The Dictators of Dress. 8 April 2015 . The Winnipeg Tribune . Newspapers.com. 26 November 1938.
  4. Book: Kaplan. Joel H. . Stowell . Sheila . Theatre and fashion : Oscar Wilde to the suffragettes . 1995 . Cambridge University Press . Cambridge . 9780521499507 . 77–80 . 1st pbk. .
  5. News: Advertisement for Handley-Seymour. 9 April 2015. The Times. 4 September 1914 . Newspapers.com.
  6. News: Foster . Elene . The Mysterious Miss Ford . 9 April 2015 . The Sunday Herald (Sydney, NSW) . 13 February 1949.
  7. Web site: Staff writer . Maroon coat and dress ensemble designed for Evelyn Cavendish, the Dowager Duchess of Devonshire. First quarter 1940 . Search the Collections . Victoria and Albert Museum . 10 April 2015.
  8. Web site: Staff writer . Design for a day outfit for HM Queen Mary. First quarter 1940 . Search the Collections . Victoria and Albert Museum . 10 April 2015.
  9. News: Staff writer. Handley Seymour Limited (Members' Voluntary Winding-up) . 10 April 2015. The London Gazette. 39090 . 12 December 1950 . 6233.
  10. News: Staff writer . Notices Under the Trustee Act, 1925 & 1927 . 10 April 2015 . The London Gazette . 39552 . 27 May 1952 . 2924.
  11. Book: Staff writer. Victoria and Albert Museum Department of Prints and Drawings and Department of Paintings: Accessions 1957–1958. 1964. Her Majesty's Stationery Office. London.
  12. Web site: The Duchess of York's Wedding Dress. Fashion Era. 20 April 2011.
  13. Book: Bousfield . Arthur . Toffoli . Garry . Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, 1900–2002: The Queen Mother and Her Century . 26 September 2002 . Dundurn Press Ltd. . 978-1-55002-391-6. 40.
  14. News: Bronner . Milton . Medieval gown for Lady Betty . 30 April 2011. The Toledo News-Bee. 24 April 1923.
  15. Book: William Shawcross

    . Shawcross . William . William Shawcross . Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother : the official biography . 2009 . Macmillan . London . 9781405048590 . 170. 1. publ. .

  16. Book: Vickers . Hugo. Elizabeth, The Queen Mother . 2013 . Random House . 9781448150724. 63, 178.
  17. Book: Shawcross . William . Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother : the official biography . 2009 . Macmillan . London . 9781405048590 . 398. 1. publ. .
  18. News: Staff writer. Queen Bringing 50 Dresses for Canadian Tour. 9 April 2015. The Ottawa Journal. 25 February 1939 . Newspapers.com.
  19. Book: Ehrman . Edwina . de la Haye . Amy . London Couture 1923-1975: British Luxury. 2015. V & A Publishing. London . 9781851778508 . 17.