'Legendary fashion designer Oscar de la Renta d'

'Legendary fashion designer Oscar de la Renta d'
00:24 Nov 24, 2021
'YOUR DESCRIPTION HAS REACHED THE LIMIT OF CHARACTERS ALLOWED AND WAS CUT. NEW YORK (AP) -- Oscar de la Renta, the worldly gentleman designer who shaped the wardrobe of socialites and Hollywood stars for more than four decades, has died. He was 82.   De la Renta died at home Monday evening in Connecticut surrounded by family and friends and \"more than a few dogs,\" according to a handwritten statement signed by his stepdaughter Eliza Reed Bolen and her husband, Alex Bolen.   \"While our hearts are broken by the idea of life without Oscar, he is still very much with us. Oscar\'s hard work, his intelligence and his love of life are at the heart of our company,\" the statement said. \"All that we have done, and all that we will do, is informed by his values and his spirit. Through Oscar\'s example we know the way forward. We will make Oscar very proud of us by continuing in an even stronger way the work that Oscar loved so much.\"   The late `60s and early `70s were a defining moment in U.S. fashion as New York-based designers finally carved a look of their own that was finally taken seriously by Europeans. De la Renta and his peers, including the late Bill Blass, Roy Halston and Geoffrey Beene, defined American style - and their influence is still spotted today.   De la Renta\'s specialty was eveningwear, though he also was known for chic daytime suits favored by the women who would gather at the Four Seasons or Le Cirque at lunchtime. His signature looks were voluminous skirts, exquisite embroideries and rich colors.   Most recently, Amal Alamuddin wore a de la Renta-designed wedding dress when she married George Clooney. First ladies Laura Bush wore an icy blue gown by de la Renta to the 2005 inaugural ball and Hillary Rodham Clinton wore a gold de la Renta in 1997. On the red carpet at the Academy Awards, Penelope Cruz and Sandra Bullock were among the celebrities to don his feminine and opulent gowns. His clothes even were woven into episodes of \"Sex and the City\" with style icon character Carrie Bradshaw dropping his name - and comparing his designs to poetry.   \"We will miss Oscar\'s generous and warm personality, his charm, and his wonderful talents.\" Bush said in a statement. \"My daughters and I have many fond memories of visits with Oscar, who designed our favorite clothes, including Jenna\'s wedding dress. We will always remember him as the man who made women look and feel beautiful.\"   De la Renta\'s path to New York\'s Seventh Avenue took an unlikely route: He left his native Dominican Republic at age 18 to study painting in Spain but soon became sidetracked by fashion. The wife of the U.S. Ambassador to Spain saw some of his sketches and asked him to make a dress for her daughter - a dress that landed on the cover of Life magazine.   That led to an apprenticeship with Cristobal Balenciaga, and then de la Renta moved to France to work for couture house Lanvin. By 1963, he was working for Elizabeth Arden couture in New York and in 1965 had launched his own label.   He told the AP in 2004 that his Hispanic roots worked their way into his designs.   \"I like light, color, luminosity. I like things full of color and vibrant,\" he said.   And while de la Renta made Manhattan his primary home, he often visited the Dominican Republic and kept a home there. Vogue editor in chief Anna Wintour was a frequent visitor and she has said traveling with him was like traveling with the president. \"He\'s a superstar,\" she said.   He also had a country home in northwestern Connecticut. Gardening and dancing were among his favorite diversions from work. \"I\'m a very restless person. I\'m always doing something. The creative proces' 
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