As part of the 10th Teatro Festival
Italia in Naples, 'Costumes of Stars' will be inaugurated on
Tuesday at 5 PM in the Villa Pignatelli museum.
The exhibition will pay homage to the most important costume
artists in cinema and theater, the Tirelli dressmaking company
and its 52 years of activity.
Highlights will be the ballroom gown of Claudia Cardinale -
Angelica, designed by Piero Tosi for Visconti's "Il Gattopardo",
Mariano Tufano's suit worn by Sofia Loren in "La Voce Umana",
and Michelle Pfeiffer and Winona Ryder's costumes for Martin
Scorsese's "The Age of Innocence", which won Gabriella Pescucci
an Oscar.
Other to be included are Marcello Mastroianni's outfit for
Elio Petri's "La Decima Vittima" by Giulio Coltellacci; the
costumes worn by Monica Bellucci for Paolo Virzi's film "N (Io e
Napoleone)", designed by Maurizio Millenotti; those worn by
Kirsten Dunst in Sofia Coppola's "Maria Antoinette", which won
an Oscar in 2007.
Carlo Poggioli's costumes worn by Jude Law in "The Young
Pope", a Sky production by Paolo Sorrentino, will be on display,
as will those he designed for "Falstaff" and "Gustavo III", both
directed by Ruggero Cappuccio.
"This exhibition was created for the Napoli Teatro Festival
Italia and was strongly supported by artistic director Ruggero
Cappuccio, with whom Sartoria Tirelli has been working for many
years in making the costumes for shows he directs, designed by
Carlo Poggioli, who grew up professionally in our workshop,"
said Dino Trappetti, who curated the exhibition alongside
Gabriella Pescucci, Flora Brancatella and Poggioli in
collaboration with the Polo Museale della Campania.
Massimo Cantini Parrini's costums for Salma Hayek and Vincent
Cassel for "Il Racconto dei Racconti" by Matteo Garrone will
also be exhibited.
A total of 55 originals designed by Tirelli will be on show
until July 10.
Some of the first to commission costumes from Sartoria
Tirelli, created in 1964 with Umberto Tirelli, were Luchino
Visconti, Mauro Bolognini, Franco Zeffirelli, Giorgio de Lullo
and Giorgio Strehler, and it has ever since been a benchmark for
some of the most important costume designers in the world.
Over 200,000 costumes from a vast number of ages are held in
its warehouse - 10,000 from the eighteenth century onwards - as
well as a haute couture collection from the 1950s on.
Since its founder died in 1990, the company has been under
his business partner, Dino Trappetti.
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