Birthday:
Birthday:

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dolly Tree (17 March 1899–17 May 1962) was an English illustrator, actress and costume designer who during the 1930s and 1940s designed dresses for Myrna Loy, Jean Harlow, Rosalind Russell, Maureen O'Sullivan and Judy Garland among others in addition to costuming historical dramas such as David Copperfield (1935) and A Tale of Two Cities (1935). Born in Westbury-on-Trym in Bristol in 1899 as Dorothy Marian Isbell, the daughter of Charles Edwin Isbell (1863-1942) , a solicitor, and Bertha Marian (née Keith-Williams) at an early age she discovered an aptitude for drawing before being drawn towards a career on the stage. In 1912 her family relocated to London and she began her career as an artist after seeing the play Vanity Fair at the Palace Theatre in 1916. Of the play she later wrote, ‘I was fascinated by the wonderful dancing and art of Regine Flory and admired her so much that I started to design a special poster of her, really to amuse myself, based on my recollections of this vivid artist seen across the footlights.’ A friend took her drawing to Sir Alfred Butt who bought it and gave her a two-year contract (c1917-1918) to design posters and programme covers for of all his shows including The Boy (1917), The Beauty Spot (1918), Going Up (1918), Telling the Tale (1918), The Latest Craze (1919), The Kiss Call (1919), Very Good Eddie (1919) and Hello America (1919). Her comic illustrations also appeared in various British newspapers and magazines. Between 1915 and 1918 Dolly Tree appeared in five British silent films as an actress. In the United Kingdom her career as a costume designer began in the 1920s on various cabaret shows in London in particular; in 1923 she collaborated on her first film, Woman to Woman, directed by Graham Cutts and with Alfred Hitchcock as the co-screenwriter, artistic director and assistant director. Her work became popular in Paris where she became the first English person and the first woman to design for the Folies Bergère. In 1926 she moved to the United States, first working in New York where she created the costumes for the 1928 Broadway play Diamond Lil starring Mae West. She then went to Hollywood where she was involved in designing for 175 American films, firstly for Fox Studios (1929-1931) and then for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (1931-1942), mainly as a designer of dresses, among others alongside Adrian. In 1931 while working at Fox Studios she met and married the American Naval officer Thomas Kimes. Although the marriage was a happy one but his career in the Navy kept them apart and they divorced in 1940. After her divorce Tree began to drink heavily which lead to her leaving MGM in 1942 and returning to Fox Studios where she married her second husband Don E. Whiteford. However, this marriage also did not work and they quickly divorced, which drove Tree further into alcoholism. Her second divorce, her heavy drinking and the death of her father in 1942 lead to her becoming increasing unreliable and losing her job.
Birthday: March 17, 1899
Death: May 17, 1962

August 24, 1934

May 25, 1934

January 03, 1936

December 25, 1935

July 10, 1936

September 15, 1939

July 05, 1938

December 18, 1936

September 11, 1936

July 05, 1940

June 12, 1939

October 29, 1937

January 10, 1936

November 13, 1936

September 16, 1938

June 04, 1938

December 23, 1938

February 26, 1937

November 25, 1937

October 28, 1942

September 17, 1937

September 13, 1935

August 16, 1940

August 02, 1935

June 14, 1931

July 20, 1936

February 25, 1938

August 05, 1942

August 09, 1940

December 24, 1937

May 04, 1934

February 21, 1932

November 15, 1935

March 06, 1936

August 21, 1942

July 05, 1935

August 13, 1931

November 23, 1930

December 18, 1935

March 28, 1941

May 03, 1940

April 23, 1937

July 12, 1935

June 05, 1936

January 11, 1935

August 19, 1931

July 11, 1940

August 08, 1931

April 14, 1939

January 17, 1936

October 09, 1936

January 18, 1935

August 10, 1934

October 10, 1935

March 15, 1935

September 06, 1940

November 24, 1939

January 19, 1940

November 22, 1940

February 14, 1941

May 30, 1941

October 20, 1939

December 06, 1940

January 06, 1939

December 07, 1934

June 09, 1939

May 29, 1936

June 30, 1939

March 12, 1938

June 26, 1942

December 14, 1934

November 19, 1937

February 11, 1938

April 10, 1936

August 04, 1939

March 08, 1935

January 26, 1934

May 19, 1938

August 28, 1942

July 19, 1940

July 07, 1939

December 25, 1936

December 06, 1935

October 01, 1927

April 30, 1937

September 03, 1937

June 17, 1938

October 01, 1937

July 29, 1938

June 02, 1937

May 31, 1935

March 10, 1939

November 18, 1938

April 24, 1936

October 08, 1931

February 21, 1936

June 11, 1937

May 10, 1935

October 25, 1935

November 17, 1939

July 26, 1940

January 10, 1941

April 16, 1938

June 22, 1939

November 11, 1938

February 17, 1939

January 24, 1941

February 28, 1936

January 10, 1915