MUSIC, BARBRA, CHER, BETTE, DIANA, VALERIE AND FRIENDS

MUSIC, BARBRA, CHER, BETTE, DIANA, VALERIE AND FRIENDS
BARBRA THE CONCERT

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

STEPHANIE MCMILLAN, FILM SET DECORATOR REMEMBERED

Stephenie McMillan, Film Set Decorator, Dies at 71By DANIEL E. SLOTNIK Published: August 28, 2013 Facebook Twitter Google+ Save E-mail Share Print Reprints Stephenie McMillan, a set decorator who created the look of all eight Harry Potter films and won an Oscar for the 1996 romance “The English Patient,” died on Aug. 19 at her home in England. She was 71. Enlarge This Image Stephen Shugerman/Getty Images Stephenie McMillan in 2004. Connect With Us on Twitter Follow @nytimesarts for arts and entertainment news. Arts Twitter List: Critics, Reporters and Editors . A sortable calendar of noteworthy cultural events in the New York region, selected by Times critics. Go to Event Listings » .The cause was cancer, Stuart Craig, who worked with her on the Potter films, wrote in an article in The Guardian. Ms. McMillan created sets that were opulent and cluttered, like Hogwarts Academy, or spare, like the bedroom in the bombed-out monastery where the protagonist of “The English Patient” lives. Both she and Mr. Craig, a production designer, received Oscars for their art direction and set decoration on “The English Patient,” an adaptation of the Michael Ondaatje novel. The film earned nine Academy Awards altogether, including for best picture. Ms. McMillan thought that even the most elaborate sets should not upstage the actors. “The production designer has the vision,” she told the British Academy of Film and Television Arts in an interview in 2012, “and as set decorator, you have to bring this vision to life. Set decorating should never steal thunder from actors, nor should it ever be so showy that you’re looking at the furniture rather than the action.” Ms. McMillan also designed sets for the romances “Notting Hill” (1999) and “Chocolat” (2000), and for the John Cleese comedies “A Fish Called Wanda” (1988) and “Fierce Creatures” (1997). She and Mr. Craig were nominated for three Bafta Awards and four Academy Awards for their work on the Harry Potter films. Stephenie Lesley Gardner was born on July 20, 1942, in Chigwell, a village near London. After she graduated from the Woodford County High School for Girls she was a secretary in the London office of the architects Stillman & Eastwick-Field. She became a stylist with the photographer Michael Boys, arranging props for his shoots for interior design magazines, then designed sets for television commercials. Her first movie was the 1984 musical “Give My Regards to Broad Street,” starring Paul McCartney. Her last was the 2012 remake of “Gambit,” starring Colin Firth and Cameron Diaz and written by Joel and Ethan Coen. (Its United States release is scheduled for October.) Ms. McMillan was married twice, to the writer Russell Miller and the filmmaker Ian McMillan. Both marriages ended in divorce. She is survived by her partner, the writer Phil Hardy; two daughters from her first marriage, Sasha and Tamsin; a brother, Richard; and four grandchildren. A version of this article appears in print on August 29, 2013, on page B19 of the New York edition with the headline: Stephenie McMillan, 71, Film Set Decorator ..

No comments:

Post a Comment