Mollie Parnis Explained

Mollie Parnis
Birth Name:Sarah Rosen Parnis
Birth Date:March 18, 1899
Birth Place:New York, New York
Death Date:July 18, 1992
Death Place:New York University Hospital, New York
Nationality:American
Occupation:Fashion designer
Known For:Designing clothing for First Ladies
Spouse:Leon Livingston
Children:Robert Livingston
Mother:Sarah Rosenstock
Father:Abraham Parnis

Mollie Parnis (born Sarah Rosen Parnis; March 18, 1899[1] – July 18, 1992), later Livingston,[2] was an American fashion designer. She belongs to the first generation of American designers to be known to the public by name rather than by affiliation to a department store and is best known for designing clothing worn by many First Ladies,[3] as well as the uniform of the Cadet Nurse Corps in World War II.[4]

She grew up on the Upper West Side of Manhattan and attended the Wadleigh High School and Julia Richman. At the young age of 8, she tutored foreigners in English for under a dollar an hour.

She lived on Park Avenue, and had a weekend home in Katonah, New York.

Career

Parnis was born in New York City[5] to Austrian Jewish parents Abraham Parnis and Sarah Rosenstock.[6] [7] At age 10, she and her younger sister Bessie were temporarily sent to live in an orphanage, likely after her father's death.[8]

Mollie Parnis had relatively informal training as a fashion designer, especially considering the level of commercial success she achieved. During a short stint studying law at Hunter College, Parnis worked in sales for a blouse manufacturer. Because of her keen eye for design and her intuition for amending designs to be more appealing to consumers, she was quickly promoted. In 1933, Parnis and her husband, Leon Livingston, started a company called Parnis Livingston Inc. on Seventh Avenue in the Garment District that sold women's suits and blouses. This business drew from Parnis' design expertise and her husband's experience with fabrics and textiles.[9] In the 1940s she began designing under her name only.[10]

Parnis achieved popularity through her conservative, feminine, flattering designs, which were available in department stores across the United States. In 1966 her business grossed $3 million, demonstrating her commercial success.[11] Her designs were regularly featured in fashion magazines like Vogue, Harpers Bazaar, and Vanity Fair,[12] and several articles in LIFE described her success, proclaiming that "When Mollie Parnis Thinks a Design Will Sell, It Goes."[13] Contributing to the increasing recognition of American fashion designers, Parnis often worked with noted publicist Eleanor Lambert in the Council of Fashion Designers of America and by being included in the International Best-Dressed List in 1967.[14]

Patronage of First Ladies

Parnis is most remembered for her close relationships and frequent patronage from American First Ladies. Mamie Eisenhower frequently wore dresses and suits by Parnis, including a purple gabardine suit for President Eisenhower's 1957 inauguration[15] and a black and white silk dress when she met Queen Elizabeth at the St. Lawrence Seaway in 1959.[16] She also wore a 'silky purple Molly Parnis dress [with] a Peter Pan collar' to her sixtieth birthday party in 1956.[17] The most publicized event in which Eisenhower wore a Parnis dress was in 1955, when a woman in a receiving line wore the same blue-green shirtwaist dress as the First Lady, an event that could have caused much embarrassment. Parnis is quoted saying, "I do not sell directly to any wearer, nor do I usually make one of a kind; that is what makes this country a great democracy. But I do feel that the First Lady should have something special."[18] Eisenhower and Parnis's dress, Model 448, were featured in a multi-page spread in LIFE titled "Blue-Green on the National Scene." The feature included images of women across the country wearing the dress.[19]

Lady Bird Johnson also frequently wore Parnis' designs because she could wear them in her busy life and "still look like a lady."[20] The two developed a close relationship, and Parnis was often invited to the White House for state dinners and the Johnson's ranch in Texas.[21] Parnis' designs were also included in the 1968 White House Fashion Show, which Lady Bird and her staff organized and is the only fashion show to ever be held in the White House.[22]

Parnis had photographs of the First Ladies wearing her designs with their husbands. She even had a photograph signed by Lyndon B. Johnson, wearing a shirt she had designed for him.[23]

Museum Collections

Museum collections that include Mollie Parnis' garments are:

External links

Notes and References

  1. U.S., Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014
  2. Lada, Diana "Mollie Parnis" http://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/parnis-mollie Retrieved July 2, 2015
  3. News: Berger. Marilyn. Mollie Parnis, Designer, Dies in Her 90s. The New York Times. 36. July 19, 1992.
  4. News: Thurber. Jon. Lucile Petry Leone; Led U.S. Cadet Nurse Corps. Los Angeles Times. April 6, 2012. January 3, 2000.
  5. New York State, Passenger and Crew Lists, 1917-1967
  6. U.S. Naturalization Record Indexes, 1791-1992 (Indexed in World Archives Project)
  7. New York, State Census, 1915
  8. New York Hebrew Orphan Asylum Records, 1860-1934
  9. Web site: Mollie Parnis - Fashion Designer Encyclopedia - clothing, century, women, suits, dress, style, new, body. www.fashionencyclopedia.com. 2016-03-26.
  10. Web site: Vintage Fashion Guild : Label Resource : Parnis, Mollie. vintagefashionguild.org. 2016-03-26.
  11. Book: LIFE. 1966-06-17. Time Inc. en.
  12. Web site: Mollie Parnis Jewish Women's Archive. jwa.org. 2016-03-26.
  13. Book: LIFE. 1966-06-17. Time Inc. en.
  14. The International Best-Dressed List Hall of Fame. Grill. Theresa. Vanity Fair. 6 August 2014 . 2016-03-26.
  15. Garment in collection at the Eisenhower Presidential Library, Abilene, Kansas.
  16. Web site: Queen Elizabeth with US President Dwight D. Eisenhower and his wife.... Getty Images. en-US. 2016-03-26.
  17. Peter Pan Collar: Where it came from and why it's back. Slate. January 20, 2012. April 7, 2012. Felsenthal. Julia.
  18. Web site: Mollie Parnis - Fashion Designer Encyclopedia - clothing, century, women, suits, dress, style, new, body. www.fashionencyclopedia.com. 2016-03-26.
  19. Book: LIFE. 1955-04-25. Time Inc. en.
  20. http://transition.lbjlibrary.org/files/original/deab2ab5e2128ee8ada0a1874a4216f9.pdf Bess Abell, Oral History,1969, LBJ Presidential Library, Austin, TX
  21. Web site: Mollie Parnis—Miller Center. millercenter.org. 2016-03-26.
  22. News: Why the First White House Fashion Show Was Also the Last. Chrisman-Campbell. Kimberly. 2014-10-10. Slate. en-US. 1091-2339. 2016-03-26.
  23. News: Berger . Marilyn . 1992-07-19 . Mollie Parnis, Designer, Dies in Her 90's . en-US . The New York Times . 2023-01-17 . 0362-4331.
  24. Web site: Explore Texas Fashion Collection: List View UNT Digital Library. digital.library.unt.edu. 2016-03-26.
  25. Web site: Collection. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, i.e. The Met Museum. 2016-03-26.
  26. Web site: Indianapolis Museum of Art Collection Search. collection.imamuseum.org. 2016-03-26.
  27. Web site: Puttin' On The Ritz . Museum of Texas Tech University.