Willa Kim


Wullah Mei Ok Kim, known as Willa Kim, was an American costume designer for stage, dance, and film.

Life and career

Kim was born near Santa Ana, California in 1917 and was a 1935 graduate of Belmont High School where she excelled in art and was an art editor for the 1935 Campanile. The end sheets of the yearbook were the start of her career, as they are free hand drawings of her impressions of high school life atop Crown Hill.
For her post-secondary education, she attended Chouinard Art Institute on scholarship. Upon graduation, she worked for designer Raoul Pene du Bois in the film industry but soon started designing for the theatre.
Kim designed costumes for Broadway shows, winning Tony Awards for her costume designs for The Will Rogers Follies and Sophisticated Ladies. She received an additional four Tony Award nominations and won the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Costume Design twice.
Kim designed costumes for the American Ballet Theatre as well as other dance companies, including more than 50 works for Eliot Feld. Furthermore, in 2007 Kim was inducted into the American Theater Hall of Fame, making her one of only a handful of costume designers so honored. Her other Broadway credits include Bosoms and Neglect.
In 2003 Kim received the 'Patricia Zipprodt Award for Innovative Costume Design' from the Fashion Institute of Technology. In 2005 she received the Distinguished Achievement Award for Costume Design from the United States Institute for Theatre Technology.
Kim died on December 23, 2016 at the age of 99.

Family

In 1955, Kim married children's book illustrator and Paris Review co-founder William Pene du Bois, who was also the cousin of her mentor Raoul Pene Du Bois.
Kim's brother, Colonel Young Oak Kim, was a highly decorated U.S. Army combat veteran of World War II and the Korean War, He was honored on October 6, 2009 in a special ceremony at the academy named in his honor.