From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Vittorio Nino Novarese (May 15, 1907 in Rome, Italy – October 17, 1983 in Los Angeles, United States) was an Italian costume designer who found great success in Hollywood after decamping there in 1949. In his first year there he scored an Oscar nomination for his work on the film Prince of Foxes, winning the Academy Award 14 years later for the grandiose epic Cleopatra. He was also nominated twice in 1965 for both The Agony and the Ecstasy and The Greatest Story Ever Told, and won a second Oscar in 1970 for Cromwell. Novarese was trained as a militarist, but contrary to what one might think from the name, this only gave him the classical training to know how soldiers of different ranks were dressed and armed throughout history. His daughter is the actress Letícia Román who starred with John Saxon in The Girl Who Knew Too Much and with Elvis Presley in G.I. Blues.
Birthday: May 15, 1907
Death: October 17, 1983
April 09, 1965
June 12, 1963
November 17, 1965
May 20, 1954
December 01, 1954
November 11, 1949
January 10, 1948
February 07, 1974
November 03, 1945
February 26, 1959
December 21, 1958
February 15, 1950
July 20, 1967
March 08, 1952
June 13, 1946
February 28, 1950
March 13, 1943
April 18, 1951
June 19, 1974
May 05, 1943
April 01, 1940
October 02, 1943
September 22, 1954
December 28, 1938
August 19, 1949
November 11, 1948
March 05, 1959
April 19, 1947
November 03, 1950
September 15, 1947
November 01, 1950
September 16, 1965
June 30, 1940
May 19, 1940
August 30, 1942
October 22, 1947
May 31, 1943
January 01, 1953
August 07, 1954
February 01, 1943
June 26, 1943
November 01, 1948
April 01, 1942
March 08, 1955
September 04, 1954
April 12, 1981
January 01, 1959
June 17, 1960
September 08, 1960
February 25, 1954
September 06, 1955
October 21, 1955
December 11, 1957
May 02, 1947
April 01, 1941
June 16, 1958
July 12, 1961
March 26, 1952
November 06, 1952
September 11, 1950
September 23, 1959
June 07, 1957
January 21, 1948
February 13, 1952
December 15, 1945
January 05, 1945
September 30, 1950
December 18, 1952
July 16, 1970
December 02, 1948
August 23, 1953
December 24, 1954
January 01, 1949
December 04, 1951
November 28, 1947
January 24, 1971
December 22, 1950
January 01, 1953