Roles | Competed in Olympic Games |
---|---|
Sex | Female |
Full name | Elisabeth Edith•Addams de Habbelinck (-Lutjens, -Taylor, -Bel Geddes) |
Used name | Edith•Addams |
Born | 1 August 1907 in Blankenberghe, West-Vlaanderen (BEL) |
Died | 16 August 2002 in Hudson, New York (USA) |
NOC | Belgium |
Edith Addams studied design in England, Germany, and at the University of Brussels. She later became known as a ballet, opera, and theatre designer, earning numerous credits, including designing costumes for the 1954 Broadway play, Ondine, for which she won a Tony Award. Her other costume design credits included South Pacific, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Anne of the Thousand Days, and The Crucible, receiving the George Jean Nathan Award for The Crucible costumes. She ran a costume shop in New York and from 1958-60 was the publisher of Theatre Arts magazine.
Addams married three times, the final time to industrial architect Norman Bel Geddes. By that marriage, Addams-Bel Geddes became the stepmother of Barbara Bel Geddes, an American actress best known as “Miss Ellie” on the 1970-80s primetime soap opera, Dallas.
Games | Discipline (Sport) / Event | NOC / Team | Pos | Medal | As | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1928 Summer Olympics | Fencing | BEL | Edith Addams | |||
Foil, Individual, Women (Olympic) | 5 p1 r1/3 |