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Elizabeth Montgomery Wilmot

Elizabeth Montgomery
Born Elizabeth Montgomery
(1902-02-18)18 February 1902
Kidlington, Oxfordshire, England
Died 17 May 1993(1993-05-17) (aged 91)
Barnes, London, England
Years active 1932–1966

Elizabeth Montgomery Wilmot (18 February 1902 – 17 May 1993) was an English award winning theatre and opera costume and scenic designer.

Montgomery was born in Kidlington, Oxfordshire, where her father, William Montgomery, was a curate. By the time she was three, the family had moved to Cambridge, where her father lectured in theology at St John's College. She showed an early talent for art, and attended art classes in Cambridge from the age of six. After the family moved to London, she continued her studies at Westminster Art School, and had a painting exhibited in the Royal Academy summer exhibition. At the end of the 1920s she was a student at the Chelsea Illustrators Art School, where she met the sisters Sophie Harris and Margaret Harris. Together the three formed a theatre design partnership known as Motley Theatre Design Group. The first full-scale production on which they worked was Romeo and Juliet for the Oxford University Dramatic Society (OUDS), John Gielgud's début as a director. The great success of this led to an invitation from Gielgud to design Gordon Daviot's Richard of Bordeaux, which opened at the New Theatre in St Martins Lane, London, in February 1933. The production was a huge success, achieving cult status, with playgoers queuing round the block every night. It is widely recognised that the success was partly owing to the Motley sets and costumes, which captured the essence of the period in an artistic rather than a slavishly historical sense, and were much admired for their beauty and lightness. This early recognition led to a busy and highly successful decade during which they became Gielgud's regular collaborators, working with him on such productions as his celebrated Romeo and Juliet (1935), in which he alternated the parts of Romeo and Mercutio with Laurence Olivier,and his Hamlet of 1936. They also formed a partnership with the celebrated French director Michel Saint-Denis, whose production of André Obey's Noah, starring Gielgud in the title role, they designed in 1935. Saint Denis went on to found The London Theatre Studio (1936–1939), a radical new theatre school which incorporated courses in theatre design taught by the Motleys. This was the first time theatre design had been taught within a drama school in the UK. In addition to their teaching and theatre work, the Motleys also opened a couture house in 1936.


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