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Julie Weiss
Julie Weiss
from Wikipedia

Julie Weiss is an American costume designer. She has received various accolades, including two Emmy Awards and two Costume Designers Guild Awards, in addition to nominations for two Academy Awards, a BAFTA Award, and a Tony Award. Weiss was awarded the CDG Career Achievement Award in 2011.

Key Information

On stage, Weiss created costumes for many Broadway productions. She received the Tony Award for Best Costume Design nomination for original Broadway production of the Bernard Pomerance play The Elephant Man (1979).

Awards and nominations

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Major associations

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Academy Awards

Year Category Nominated work Result Ref.
1995 Best Costume Design 12 Monkeys Nominated [1]
2002 Frida Nominated [2]

BAFTA Awards

Year Category Nominated work Result Ref.
British Academy Film Awards
2002 Best Costume Design Frida Nominated [3]

Emmy Awards

Year Category Nominated work Result Ref.
Primetime Emmy Awards
1982 Outstanding Costumes for a Miniseries, Movie, or Special The Elephant Man Nominated [4]
1983 Little Gloria... Happy at Last Nominated
1984 The Dollmaker Won
1985 Evergreen (Episode: "Part 1") Nominated
1993 Outstanding Costumes for a Variety Program or Special Liza Minnelli: Live from Radio City Music Hall Nominated
1995 Outstanding Costumes for a Miniseries, Movie, or Special A Woman of Independent Means (Episode: "Part 1") Won
2006 Mrs. Harris Nominated

Tony Awards

Year Category Nominated work Result Ref.
1979 Best Costume Design The Elephant Man Nominated [5]

Miscellaneous awards

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List of Julie Weiss other awards and nominations
Award Year Category Title Result Ref.
Costume Designers Guild Awards 1999 Excellence in Contemporary Film American Beauty Won [6]
2002 Excellence in Period/Fantasy Film Frida Nominated [7]
2006 Outstanding Made for Television Movie or Miniseries Mrs. Harris Nominated [8]
2007 Excellence in Contemporary Film Blades of Glory Won [9]
2011 Career Achievement Award Honored [10]
Drama Desk Awards 1979 Outstanding Costume Design The Elephant Man Nominated
Satellite Awards 2002 Best Costume Design Frida Won [11]
Saturn Awards 1987 Best Costume Design Masters of the Universe Nominated [12]
1995 12 Monkeys Won

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Julie Weiss is an American costume designer known for her acclaimed work across film and television, including standout contributions to 12 Monkeys, Frida, and American Beauty. Born in Los Angeles, California, she has built a versatile career since the 1970s, blending period accuracy, contemporary flair, and imaginative fantasy in her designs. Her film work has garnered two Academy Award nominations for Best Costume Design, for Terry Gilliam's 12 Monkeys (1995) and Julie Taymor's Frida (2002), along with a BAFTA nomination for the latter. Weiss has also won two Primetime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Costume Design in miniseries or specials, recognizing her designs for The Dollmaker (1984) and A Woman of Independent Means (1995). In theater, she earned a Tony Award nomination for Best Costume Design for the 1979 Broadway production of The Elephant Man. Weiss has received multiple honors from the Costume Designers Guild, including Excellence in Contemporary Film awards for American Beauty (1999) and Blades of Glory (2007), as well as the organization's Career Achievement Award in 2011. Her designs have supported a wide range of directors and genres, enhancing the visual narrative and character development in both large-scale studio productions and prestige projects.

Early life

Background and education

Julie Weiss was born on January 10, 1947, in Los Angeles, California. She is the daughter of Ben Weiss, a physician, and Betty Weiss, a community volunteer. Weiss earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the University of California, Berkeley in 1969. She continued her studies at Brandeis University, where she received a Master of Fine Arts degree in 1971. These graduate and undergraduate degrees in the fine arts provided her with foundational training prior to entering the field of costume design.

Career

Entry into the industry

Julie Weiss began her professional career in costume design in theater, making her Broadway debut in 1979 as the costume designer for The Elephant Man. This production earned her nominations for the Tony Award for Best Costume Design and the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Costume Design, helping to establish her reputation in the field. She continued designing for Broadway throughout the early 1980s, creating costumes for Piaf in 1981, Macbeth in 1982, and Total Abandon in 1983. During this period, she also contributed costumes for a segment featuring Piaf on The 35th Annual Tony Awards in 1981. In 1984, she served as costume designer for the stage production of The Guardsman at Paper Mill Playhouse. Weiss expanded into television in the mid-1980s, working as costume consultant on 12 episodes of Murder, She Wrote from 1984 to 1985 and on the TV movie The Midnight Hour in 1985. Her first feature film role as costume designer came in 1987 with Masters of the Universe.

Breakthrough and major film work

Julie Weiss achieved her breakthrough in the mid-1990s through high-profile collaborations that showcased her versatility across genres and earned industry recognition. Her work on Terry Gilliam's 12 Monkeys (1995) brought her first Academy Award nomination for Best Costume Design and a Saturn Award win for Best Costumes, highlighting her skill in creating dystopian and period-inflected looks that supported the film's complex narrative. This partnership with Gilliam extended to Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1998), where her costumes captured the chaotic, hallucinatory tone of Hunter S. Thompson's world. Weiss solidified her reputation with her contribution to Sam Mendes's American Beauty (1999), for which she received the Costume Designers Guild Award for Excellence in Contemporary Film. Her designs emphasized subtle character details, such as everyday suburban attire that revealed underlying tensions, aligning with her philosophy that costumes should serve the story and actor above all, acting as "visual tools" to connect with the audience's memories and experiences. She has described the design process as finding "the moment that the costume becomes clothing," after which the designer must step back, ensuring the work supports character development without drawing attention to itself. In the 2000s, Weiss continued to work on major projects, earning a second Academy Award nomination for Best Costume Design for Frida (2002), directed by Julie Taymor, where her vibrant, historically inspired creations drew directly from Frida Kahlo's palette and personal iconography. Her approach consistently prioritized character-driven choices and period authenticity when required, while incorporating imaginative elements to enhance storytelling across both contemporary and fantastical films.

Later career and collaborations

In the mid-2000s, Julie Weiss continued her prolific career in costume design with credits on a variety of studio films, including the comedy Fun with Dick and Jane (2005) and the ensemble drama Bobby (2006). She earned recognition for her work on the figure-skating comedy Blades of Glory (2007), winning a Costume Designers Guild Award in 2008. In 2011, the Costume Designers Guild honored her with its Career Achievement Award, acknowledging her sustained contributions to the field. Weiss's later projects have spanned genres and formats, including the road-trip comedy Father Figures (2017) and the war drama Greyhound (2020), where she created historically accurate U.S. Navy uniforms for the World War II setting starring Tom Hanks. In Greyhound, she emphasized research and authenticity to reflect the era's military attire. She collaborated with director Phyllis Nagy on the period drama Call Jane (2022), following their prior joint work on another production. More recently, Weiss has expanded into television and limited series, serving as a costumer on multiple episodes of Daisy Jones & the Six (2023). Her ongoing work includes the upcoming film Off the Record (2025). These projects reflect her continued versatility across film and streaming platforms in the later stages of her career.

Notable costume design projects

Oscar-nominated films

Julie Weiss received Academy Award nominations for Best Costume Design for 12 Monkeys (1995) and Frida (2002). The nominations were at the 68th Academy Awards (for 1995 films) and 75th Academy Awards (for 2002 films), respectively.

Other significant credits

Julie Weiss has created costumes for a range of notable films that showcase her versatility and attention to detail across different genres. Her work on American Beauty (1999) earned the Costume Designers Guild Award for Excellence in Contemporary Film, recognizing her contributions to the film's visual storytelling through carefully crafted everyday attire. Weiss's designs for Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1998) are frequently highlighted as iconic, capturing the film's chaotic, psychedelic 1970s aesthetic with bold patterns, vibrant colors, and period-specific details drawn from the story's counterculture roots. The costumes help elevate the performances and reinforce the narrative's themes of excess and disillusionment. She also designed costumes for Blades of Glory (2007), where her elaborate, sequin-heavy figure-skating outfits supported the comedy's over-the-top style while remaining functional for the actors' movements. Her work on Steel Magnolias (1989) and Hitchcock (2012) further illustrates her range, from Southern period elegance to mid-century Hollywood recreations. These projects reflect Weiss's collaborative approach to costume design, emphasizing how garments serve the story, actors, and audience connection.

Awards and recognition

Personal life

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