Birthday:
Birthday:

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Helen Rose (February 2, 1904 – November 9, 1985) was an American costume designer and clothing designer who spent the bulk of her career with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Helen Rose was born on February 2, 1904, to William Bromberg and Ray Bobbs in Chicago, Illinois of German and Russian descent. She attended the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts and then designed nightclub and stage costumes for various acts. She moved to Los Angeles in 1929, where she designed outfits for Fanchon and Marco and later the Ice Follies. In the early 1940s she spent two years working for 20th Century Fox, where she designed wardrobes for musical selections. In 1943 MGM hired her in the wake of Adrian's departure and by the late 1940s Rose was promoted to chief designer at the studio. Rose won two Academy Awards for Best Costume Design, for The Bad and the Beautiful in 1952 and for I'll Cry Tomorrow in 1955. She was nominated a further eight times and was also very well known for designing famous wedding dresses of the era. She designed the famous wedding dress of Grace Kelly when she married Prince Rainier of Monaco in 1956. She also designed clothing for Elizabeth Taylor in the movies Father of the Bride and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof as well as Elizabeth Taylor's wedding dress when she married Conrad "Nicky" Hilton. In the late 1960s, Rose left the studio to open her own design business and continued to provide fancy attire for the famed and the wealthy. She also wrote a fashion column. She wrote two books - her autobiography Just Make Them Beautiful in 1976 and "The Glamorous World of Helen Rose". In the 1970s Rose also staged a traveling fashion show featuring some of her MGM-designed costumes that was called "The Helen Rose Show". Helen was married to Harry V. Rose, whose birth name was Harry Rosenstein (1902–1993), and they had a daughter. She died in Palm Springs, California in 1985.
Birthday: February 02, 1904
Death: November 09, 1985

August 29, 1958

March 02, 1956

May 12, 1949

May 24, 1961

May 26, 1955

December 04, 1947

April 29, 1959

November 15, 1956

January 18, 1946

July 14, 1950

December 25, 1955

February 18, 1955

November 26, 1953

May 16, 1958

November 14, 1957

September 19, 1947

August 11, 1954

May 28, 1952

November 16, 1951

August 21, 1968

November 01, 1961

December 04, 1953

March 25, 1948

March 10, 1950

August 14, 1958

December 31, 1948

March 26, 1943

September 05, 1952

August 12, 1953

September 01, 1950

June 18, 1953

August 31, 1951

July 25, 1952

March 27, 1963

August 24, 1950

November 04, 1960

November 15, 1951

October 12, 1951

February 24, 1955

May 17, 1950

February 19, 1954

August 26, 1945

May 15, 1953

November 18, 1954

June 06, 1952

March 03, 1954

April 29, 1948

April 23, 1959

November 10, 1950

July 12, 1950

October 05, 1951

December 26, 1950

December 29, 1954

May 26, 1950

January 12, 1951

March 26, 1953

August 16, 1961

January 29, 1952

October 06, 1950

March 30, 1953

April 05, 1951

October 13, 1950

March 10, 1961

December 09, 1954

May 05, 1950

December 22, 1949

August 31, 1950

May 18, 1950

June 28, 1957

November 18, 1964

September 23, 1953

May 09, 1956

March 09, 1949

December 08, 1949

October 28, 1958

April 30, 1954

December 25, 1952

September 26, 1956

November 22, 1951

May 16, 1957

November 13, 1953

July 21, 1943

June 06, 1946

June 18, 1943

August 30, 1955

August 21, 1959

November 04, 1954

February 22, 1952

April 26, 1956

March 20, 1953

March 24, 1955

December 04, 1952

July 29, 1948

February 23, 1952

March 27, 1953

September 27, 1956

March 09, 1956

December 06, 1951

March 08, 1951

April 22, 1953

May 05, 1955

October 31, 1952

April 03, 1957

June 07, 1955

August 25, 1961

July 17, 1956

September 15, 1960

November 04, 1955

November 21, 1958

December 05, 1946

January 22, 1949

August 19, 1959

October 01, 1953

June 15, 1951

January 15, 1960

February 27, 1975