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{{For|the English footballer|Doug Hayward (footballer)}}
{{For|the English footballer|Doug Hayward (footballer)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2012}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2020}}
{{Infobox person

| name = Doug Hayward
'''Douglas Frederick Cornelius Hayward''' (5 October 1934 &ndash; 26 April 2008),<ref name=TimesObit/> was an English tailor, who dressed many famous people during the 1960s. The inspiration for customer [[Michael Caine]]'s characterisation of his role in the 1966 film ''[[Alfie (1966 film)|Alfie]],''<ref name=Indp818054/><ref name=GuardObit/> he was also the model for client [[John Le Carre]]'s Harry Pendel, aka ''[[The Tailor of Panama]].''<ref name=Indp818054/><ref name=DMail1017333/>
| birth_name = Douglas Frederick Cornelius Hayward
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1934|10|5|df=y}}
| death_date = {{Death date and age|2008|4|26|1934|10|5|df=y}}
| occupation = {{Hlist|Fashion designer|bespoke tailor}}
}}
'''Douglas Frederick Cornelius Hayward''' (5 October 1934{{Snd}}26 April 2008),<ref name="TimesObit">{{cite news |date=30 April 2008 |title=Obituary – Doug Hayward |work=The Times |location=London |url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/obituaries/article3848649.ece |accessdate=2011-03-09}}</ref> was an English fashion designer and bespoke tailor, who dressed many famous people during the 1960s. The inspiration for customer [[Michael Caine]]'s characterisation of his role in the 1966 film ''[[Alfie (1966 film)|Alfie]],''<ref name="Indp818054">{{cite news |author=Jonathan Brown and Henry Deedes |date=30 April 2008 |title=Dougie Hayward, tailor who dressed stars of the 1960s, dies aged 73 |work=The Independent |location=London |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/fashion/news/dougie-hayward-tailor-who-dressed-stars-of-the-1960s-dies-aged-73-818054.html |url-status=dead |accessdate=2011-03-09 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080518065533/http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/fashion/news/dougie-hayward-tailor-who-dressed-stars-of-the-1960s-dies-aged-73-818054.html |archive-date=18 May 2008}}</ref><ref name="GuardObit">{{cite news |author=Veronica Horwell |date=30 April 2008 |title=Obituary – Doug Hayward |work=The Guardian |location=London |url=https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2008/may/03/fashion.mainsection |accessdate=2011-03-09}}</ref> he was also the model for client [[John le Carré]]'s Harry Pendel, aka ''[[The Tailor of Panama]].''<ref name="Indp818054" />


==Early life==
==Early life==
Born in [[Kensington]], West [[London]],<ref name=TimesObit/> Hayward and his brother grew up in [[Hayes, Hillingdon|Hayes]].<ref name=TimesObit/> His father cleaned [[Boiler (steam generator)|heating boilers]] for the [[BBC]] and worked a second job cleaning buses in [[Uxbridge]]; while his mother worked from World War II onwards in a [[munitions]] factory.<ref name=TimesObit/><ref name=Indp818054/> Hayward won a scholarship to [[Southall Grammar School]].<ref name=GuardObit/> He had had a trial at inside-left for the Middlesex county football team, but lost out to future England captain [[Johnny Haynes]].<ref name=TimesObit/>
Born to working-class parents in [[Kensington]], West London,<ref name="Indp818054" /><ref name="TimesObit" /> Hayward and his brother grew up in [[Hayes, Hillingdon|Hayes]].<ref name="TimesObit" /> His father cleaned [[Boiler (steam generator)|heating boilers]] for the [[BBC]] and worked a second job cleaning buses in [[Uxbridge]]; while his mother worked during World War II in a [[munitions]] factory.<ref name="TimesObit" /><ref name="Indp818054" /> Hayward won a scholarship to [[Southall Grammar School]].<ref name="GuardObit" /> He had a trial at inside-left for the Middlesex county football team, but lost out to [[Johnny Haynes]], who was also a left footer.<ref name="TimesObit" />


==Career==
==Career==
An unfocused rebel, Hayward left school at 15, looking for a white-collar job:<ref name=TelgObit/>
Hayward left school at 15, looking for a white-collar job:<ref name="TelgObit">{{cite news |date=30 April 2008 |title=Obituary – Doug Hayward |work=The Telegraph |location=London |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1912015/Doug-Hayward.html |accessdate=2011-03-09}}</ref>
{{cquote|We didn't have a careers master, but I found a booklet which listed possible occupations. I went down the list and when I got to T for tailor, I thought: "I don't know any tailors. I can't ever be judged as being a bad or a good one, so I'll be a tailor."}}


{{Quote|text=We didn't have a careers master, but I found a booklet which listed possible occupations. I went down the list and when I got to T for tailor, I thought: "I don't know any tailors. I can't ever be judged as being a bad or a good one, so I'll be a tailor."}}
Apprenticed to a [[Shepherd's Bush Green]] tailor who visited the flats in [[Cadogan Square]], where his uncle was a caretaker.<ref name=Indp818054/> During this period he worked a summer in [[Clacton-on-Sea]] as a [[Butlins Redcoat]],<ref name=TimesObit/> and after finishing his apprenticeship served his [[National Service]] in the [[Royal Navy]], an experience he later admitted got him focused.<ref name=GuardObit/>


He was apprenticed to a [[Shepherd's Bush Green]] tailor who visited the flats in [[Cadogan Square]], where his uncle was a caretaker.<ref name="Indp818054" /> During this period he worked a summer in [[Clacton-on-Sea]] as a [[Butlins Redcoat]],<ref name="TimesObit" /> and after finishing his apprenticeship served his [[National Service]] in the [[Royal Navy]], an experience he later admitted got him focused.<ref name="GuardObit" />
Returning to civilian life, he continued working for his original employer, but also started after hours work on his own creations. Early clients like [[Peter Sellers]], [[Terence Stamp]] and lyricist [[Herbert Kretzmer]],<ref name=DMail1017333/> came through his excellent theatrical links at the local theatre, the BBC's [[Lime Grove Studios]], or through his first wife, Diana, sister-in-law of film director [[Basil Dearden]].<ref name=GuardObit/>


Returning to civilian life, he continued working for his original employer, but also started after hours work on his own creations. Early clients like [[Peter Sellers]], [[Terence Stamp]] and lyricist [[Herbert Kretzmer]],{{citation needed|date=April 2020}} came through his excellent theatrical links at the local theatre, the BBC's [[Lime Grove Studios]], or through his first wife, Diana, sister-in-law of film director [[Basil Dearden]].<ref name="GuardObit" />
Unable to gain a cutters job on either [[Savile Row]] or even [[Oxford Street]] due to his accent,<ref name=Indp818054/> Hayward then joined fellow showbiz specialist tailor Dimitrio Major, based in [[Fulham]]. It was here that he developed a service mentality, driving his [[Mini#Morris_Mini_Traveller_and_Austin_Mini_Countryman_.281961.E2.80.931969.29|Mini Countryman]] estate car to allow him to attend customers wherever required, including [[Richard Burton]] at the [[Dorchester Hotel]].<ref name=GuardObit/><ref name=TelgObit/>


Unable to gain a cutters job on either [[Savile Row]] or even [[Oxford Street]] due to his [[Cockney#Dialect|Cockney]] accent,<ref name="Indp818054" /> Hayward then joined fellow showbiz specialist tailor Dimitrio Major, based in [[Fulham]]. It was here that he developed a service mentality, driving his [[Mini#Morris Mini Traveller and Austin Mini Countryman (1961–1969)|Mini Countryman]] estate car to allow him to attend customers wherever required, including [[Richard Burton]] at the [[Dorchester Hotel]].<ref name="GuardObit" /><ref name="TelgObit" />
Hayward opened his own first shop on [[Pall Mall, London|Pall Mall]], before moving to 95 Mount Street in 1967, just off Savile Row, in [[Mayfair]].<ref name=Indp818054/> The four storey building served his entire business: basement for storage; front ground floor as a club for clients, rear as a cutting room which overlooked the garden; first floor as his personal flat during the week (his weekend home was on the [[Oxfordshire]] estate of client and friend [[Lord Hambleden]],<ref name=TelgObit/> near [[Henley on Thames]]);<ref name=TimesObit/> and upper floor as a rented out flat of for use by assistants.<ref name=GuardObit/> Described by many as like a [[gentlemen's club]], its acted as a hub for all of Hayward's clients when in London. Hayward's [[Jack Russell terrier]] would be seen molesting his collection of [[teddy bear]]s, a gift from his client [[Ralph Lauren]], who's later Purple Label line was inspired and advised by Hayward.<ref name=GuardObit/> Client [[Michael Parkinson]] said of the shop:<ref name=Indp818054/>
{{cquote|Hayward ran the best salon in London. Anybody who's anybody was there. It soon became apparent in the 1970s that everyone that was in town to do the show would visit there. I met [[Alec Guinness]] there and Tony Bennett. He had this great ability to treat everybody the same.}}


Hayward first set up on his own operating out of a small room in London's Pall Mall, before moving to 95 Mount Street in Mayfair in 1966 where he lived above the shop which soon became a club for his famous clients. In the rear was the cutting room overlooking the Mount Street Gardens.
Hayward's client list included: actors [[Clint Eastwood]], [[John Gielgud|Sir John Gielgud]], [[Michael Caine]], [[Terence Stamp]], [[Rex Harrison]], [[Steve McQueen]] and [[John Osborne]]; actor [[Tommy Steele]]; singer [[Tony Bennett]]; newsreader [[Tom Brokaw]]; footballer and 1966 World Cup England captain [[Bobby Moore]];<ref name=GuardObit/> [[Formula 1]] world champion [[Jackie Stewart|Sir Jackie Stewart]]; and businessmen [[Lord Hanson]] and [[Mark Birley]].<ref name=TimesObit/> Female clients included [[Faye Dunaway]], [[Mia Farrow]], [[Jean Shrimpton]] and [[Sharon Tate]]. His design of suits for singer [[Mick Jagger]] lead him to designing the wedding dress for [[Bianca Jagger]], and later many of her iconic white [[jumpsuit]]s. His film credits included Caine's suits in ''[[The Italian Job]],'' and [[Roger Moore]] in [[James Bond]]. Actor [[James Coburn]] called Hayward "the [[Auguste Rodin|Rodin]] of tweed".<ref name=GuardObit/>


His weekend home was on the [[Oxfordshire]] estate of client and friend [[Lord Hambleden]],<ref name="TelgObit" /> near [[Henley on Thames]];<ref name="TimesObit" /> Described by many as like a [[gentlemen's club]], the shop acted as a hub for all of Hayward's clients when in London. Tea or something stronger was often served and the coffee table was littered with autographed copies of books written by writer clients including Joseph Heller who wrote Catch 22 Doug's favourite book. There was also a collection of [[teddy bear]]s, a gift from his client [[Ralph Lauren]], whose later Purple Label line was inspired and advised by Hayward.<ref name="GuardObit" /> but Hayward's best pal was his Jack Russell terrier Burt who had his own made to measure suits. Client [[Michael Parkinson]] said of the shop:<ref name="Indp818054" />
Hayward also sold hand-made shoes, and his own line of watches and leather luggage.<ref name=TelgObit/> He lectured at the [[Royal College of Art]] on tailoring, placing emphasis on cutting: "You can't do anything unless you can cut."<ref name=TelgObit/> Pragmatic and undemanding of his clients body, Hayward believed that any one could be made to look sleeker:<ref name=GuardObit/>
{{cquote|People always wanted to know who had been the tailor to [[Cary Grant]] or [[Fred Astaire]]. But what I'd want to know is who was [[Sydney Greenstreet]]'s tailor? He was a large man in ''[[The Maltese Falcon (1941 film)|The Maltese Falcon]]'' and ''[[Casablanca]],'' who always looked good.}}


{{Quote|text=Hayward ran the best salon in London. Anybody who's anybody was there. It soon became apparent in the 1970s that everyone that was in town to do the show would visit there. I met [[Alec Guinness]] there and Tony Bennett. He had this great ability to treat everybody the same.}}
Every week until her death in 1984, he visited his mother, Winifred. Each time he would present her with a £1 note, to pay for her [[Meals on Wheels]]. He also gave her regular sums of money, always in cash. Convinced that her son was running either a brothel or a game of [[Baccarat|chemmy]], she kept it all. After her death, the family found it beneath her bed in 15 empty ice cream boxes, with a note: "This money is to get Doug out of prison when they finally get him."<ref name=GuardObit/><ref name=DMail1017333/><ref name=TelgObit/>


Hayward's client list included: actors [[Clint Eastwood]], [[John Gielgud|Sir John Gielgud]], [[Michael Caine]], [[Terence Stamp]], [[Ray Austin (director)|Ray Austin]]; film director [[Rex Harrison]], [[Steve McQueen]] and [[John Osborne]]; actor [[Tommy Steele]]; singer [[Tony Bennett]]; newsreader [[Tom Brokaw]]; footballer and 1966 World Cup England captain [[Bobby Moore]];<ref name="GuardObit" /> [[Formula 1]] world champion [[Jackie Stewart|Sir Jackie Stewart]]; and businessmen [[James Hanson, Baron Hanson|Lord Hanson]] and [[Mark Birley]].<ref name="TimesObit" /> Female clients included [[Faye Dunaway]], [[Mia Farrow]], [[Jean Shrimpton]] and [[Sharon Tate]]. His design of suits for singer [[Mick Jagger]] lead him to designing the wedding suit for [[Bianca Jagger]], and later many of her iconic white [[jumpsuit]]s. His film credits included Caine's suits in ''[[The Italian Job]]'', and [[Roger Moore]] in [[James Bond]]. Actor [[James Coburn]] called Hayward "the [[Auguste Rodin|Rodin]] of tweed".<ref name="GuardObit" /> Many of his clients became close friends. An early friend was Ralph Lauren, who met Dougie in the early 80's on one of his first visits to London. Ralph realized that Hayward's approach to his clients, and their corresponding support of his style and tailoring, was very similar to his own and exactly what he envisioned for his eventual entry into the London market. Dougie recognized Ralph's ideas and talent and became a great friend and supporter. In his approach to his clientele as a complete source of style, Hayward sold hand-made shoes, and his own line of watches and leather luggage.<ref name="TelgObit" /> He lectured at the [[Royal College of Art]] on tailoring, placing emphasis on cutting: "You can't do anything unless you can cut."<ref name="TelgObit" /> Pragmatic and undemanding of his clients body, Hayward believed that any one could be made to look sleeker:<ref name="GuardObit" />
==Influence on the media==

A lifelong womaniser and [[bon vivant]], it was claimed by many that Hayward provided the real-life inspiration for his friend Michael Caine's most iconic screen role, serial philanderer [[Alfie (1966 film)|Alfie Elkins]].<ref name=Indp818054/> He was also the model for client [[John Le Carre]]'s Harry Pendel, aka ''[[The Tailor of Panama]].''<ref name=Indp818054/><ref name=DMail1017333/>
{{Quote|People always wanted to know who had been the tailor to [[Cary Grant]] or [[Fred Astaire]]. But what I'd want to know is who was [[Sydney Greenstreet]]'s tailor? He was a large man in ''[[The Maltese Falcon (1941 film)|The Maltese Falcon]]'' and ''[[Casablanca (film)|Casablanca]]'', who always looked good.}}

Every week until her death in 1984, he visited his mother, Winifred. Each time he would present her with a £1 note, to pay for her [[Meals on Wheels]]. He also gave her regular sums of money, always in cash. Convinced that her son was running either a brothel or a game of [[Baccarat|chemmy]], she kept it all. After her death, the family found it beneath her bed in 15 empty ice cream boxes, with a note: "This money is to get Doug out of prison when they finally get him."<ref name="GuardObit" /><ref name="TelgObit" />

==Media influence==
Hayward provided the real-life inspiration for his friend Michael Caine's most iconic screen role, serial philanderer [[Alfie (1966 film)|Alfie Elkins]].<ref name="Indp818054" /> He was also the model for client [[John le Carré]]'s Harry Pendel, aka ''[[The Tailor of Panama]].''<ref name="Indp818054" />


==Personal life==
==Personal life==
Married twice, his first wife was Diana, sister-in-law of film director Basil Dearden. His second was journalist [[Glenys Roberts]], with whom he had a daughter Polly, who later became his business partner.<ref name=TelgObit>{{cite news|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1912015/Doug-Hayward.html|title=Obituary - Doug Hayward|publisher=Telegraph|date=30 April 2008|accessdate=2011-03-09|location=London}}</ref> Roberts divorced Hayward in 1978. His lovers included [[Janet Street-Porter]], for whom he made a full length double [[cashmere wool|cashmere]] coat in 1973.<ref name=GuardObit>{{cite news|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2008/may/03/fashion.mainsection|title=Obituary - Doug Hayward|author=Veronica Horwell|publisher=Guardian|date=30 April 2008|accessdate=2011-03-09|location=London}}</ref>
Married twice, his first wife was Diana, sister-in-law of film director Basil Dearden. His second was journalist [[Glenys Roberts]], with whom he had a daughter Polly, who later became his business partner.<ref name="TelgObit" /> Roberts divorced Hayward in 1978. Hayward was so charming many women claimed to be his lovers. In 1973 he made a full-length double [[cashmere wool|cashmere]] coat for Janet Street Porter.<ref name="GuardObit" />


Hayward had a lifelong love for football and beer.<ref name=Indp818054/> A boyhood fan of both of [[Fulham F.C.|Fulham]] and [[Arsenal F.C.|Arsenal]],<ref name=Indp818054/> although on Saturdays after lunch on the [[King's Road]] he would head to [[Stamford Bridge (stadium)|Stamford Bridge]] to watch [[Chelsea F.C.|Chelsea]].<ref name=TimesObit/> Hayward had his own team, the Mount Street Marchers and Social Club.<ref name=GuardObit/> The amateur team played in arranged matches on [[Hyde Park, London|Hyde Park]] on Sunday mornings, whom he talked clients and actors [[Richard Harris]] and [[Tom Courtenay]], and occasionally Bobby Moore, into appearing for.<ref name=GuardObit/> In 1970 he persuaded the [[Rank Organisation]] to pay for his team to fly to Mexico for the [[1970 FIFA World Cup|1970 World Cup]]. Believing that they were going to get an exclusive documentary about the England team, Rank were presented with footage of Hayward enjoying himself against local park sides.<ref name=TimesObit/>
Hayward had a lifelong love for football.<ref name="Indp818054" /> A boyhood fan of both of [[Fulham F.C.|Fulham]] and [[Arsenal F.C.|Arsenal]],<ref name="Indp818054" /> although on Saturdays after lunch on the [[King's Road]] he would head to [[Stamford Bridge (stadium)|Stamford Bridge]] to watch [[Chelsea F.C.|Chelsea]].<ref name="TimesObit" /> Hayward had his own team, the Mount Street Marchers and Social Club.<ref name="GuardObit" /> The amateur team played in arranged matches on [[Hyde Park, London|Hyde Park]] on Sunday mornings, whom he talked clients and actors [[Richard Harris]] and [[Tom Courtenay]], and occasionally Bobby Moore, into appearing for.<ref name="GuardObit" /> In 1970 he persuaded the [[Rank Organisation]] to pay for his team to fly to Mexico for the [[1970 FIFA World Cup|1970 World Cup]]. Believing that they were going to get an exclusive documentary about the England team, Rank were presented with footage of Hayward enjoying himself against local park sides.<ref name="TimesObit" />


Every Thursday, he would lunch at [[Langhams Brasserie]] with friends: photographer Terry O'Neill, hair expert [[Philip Kingsley]], the owner of Tramp nightclub Johnny Gold, Michael Cane. The four of them made up the Mayfair Orphans Club.<ref name=Indp818054/> His friendship with [[Queen Elizabeth 2]]'s cousin [[Patrick Anson, 5th Earl of Lichfield]], led to them founding dining club Burkes. Resultantly invited to Lichfield's home on the Caribbean island of [[Mustique]], he struck up a friendship with [[Princess Margaret]], where the pair performed [[Cole Porter]] songs.<ref name=Indp818054/><ref name=DMail1017333>{{cite news|url=http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1017333/The-real-Alfie-Tailor-Doug-Hayward-man-dressed-Sixties.html|title=Obituary - Doug Hayward|publisher=Daily Mail|date=30 April 2008|accessdate=2011-03-09|location=London|first=Peter|last=Evans}}</ref>
Every Thursday, he would lunch at Harrys Bar with friends: photographer Terry O'Neill, hair expert Philip Kingsley, the owner of Tramp nightclub Johnny Gold and [[Michael Caine]]. The four of them made up the Mayfair Orphans' Club.<ref name="Indp818054" /> His friendship with the Queen's cousin [[Patrick Anson, 5th Earl of Lichfield]], led to them founding dining club Burkes. Invited to Lichfield's home on the Caribbean island of [[Mustique]], he struck up a friendship with [[Princess Margaret]], where the pair performed [[Cole Porter]] songs.<ref name="Indp818054" />


Hayward suffered a mini-stroke in 1996, and then several in the years before his death had brought on [[vascular dementia]].<ref name=TimesObit>{{cite news|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/obituaries/article3848649.ece|title=Obituary - Doug Hayward|publisher=The Times|date=30 April 2008|accessdate=2011-03-09|location=London}}</ref> Hayward died at a [[hospice]] close to his flat in Mayfair, of issues relating to a lifelong [[neurological]] disorder.<ref name=Indp818054/> A lifelong agnostic, Hayward received the [[last rites]] from a [[Roman Catholic]] priest before his death, on which his daughter and business partner commented:<ref name=Indp818054>{{cite news|url=http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/fashion/news/dougie-hayward-tailor-who-dressed-stars-of-the-1960s-dies-aged-73-818054.html|title=Dougie Hayward, tailor who dressed stars of the 1960s, dies aged 73|author=Jonathan Brown and Henry Deedes|date=30 April 2008|accessdate=2011-03-09|location=London|work=The Independent}}</ref>
Hayward suffered a fall in 1996, and there followed a long period of ill health before his death brought on by vascular dementia.<ref name="TimesObit" /> Hayward died in a London hospice.<ref name="Indp818054" /> A lifelong agnostic, Hayward received the [[last rites]] from a [[Roman Catholic]] priest before his death, on which his daughter and business partner, Polly, commented: "Typical jammy bastard—gets forgiven all his sins right at the end."<ref name="Indp818054" />
{{cquote|Typical jammy bastard – gets forgiven all his sins right at the end}}


==Filmography==
==Filmography==
{| class="wikitable"
*1966: ''The Spy with a Cold Nose'' - costumes for L. Harvey
!Year
*1966: ''Modesty Blaise'' - costumes for Terence Stamp
!Title
*1968: ''Salt and Pepper'' - wardrobe for Mr. Lawford
!Role
*1968: ''Boom'' - suit for Noël Coward
!Notes
*1968: ''Assignment K'' - suits and overcoat for Stephen Boyd
|-
*1969: ''The Italian Job'' - suits for Michael Caine
| rowspan="2" |1966
*1971: ''The Reckoning'' - costume designer
|[[Modesty Blaise (1966 film)|''Modesty Blaise'']]
*1971: ''One More Time'' - wardrobe for Mr. Lawford
| rowspan="6" |Costumes/wardrobe
*1980: ''Dominique'' - costumes for all men
|Costumes for [[Terence Stamp]]
|-
|''[[The Spy with a Cold Nose]]''
|Costumes for [[Laurence Harvey]]
|-
| rowspan="3" |1968
|''[[Assignment K]]''
|Costumes for [[Stephen Boyd]]
|-
|[[Boom! (1968 film)|''Boom!'']]
|Costume for [[Noël Coward]]
|-
|[[Salt and Pepper (film)|''Salt and Pepper'']]
|Costumes for [[Peter Lawford]]
|-
|1969
|''[[The Italian Job]]''
|Costumes for [[Michael Caine]]; No on-screen credit
|-
|1970
|[[The Reckoning (1970 film)|''The Reckoning'']]
|Costume designer
|{{Ubl|Credited as 'Costume designer' in some versions of the film|Costumes for [[Nicol Williamson]]}}
|-
|1970
|[[One More Time (1970 film)|''One More Time'']]
| rowspan="3" |Costumes/wardrobe
|Costumes for [[Peter Lawford]]
|-
| rowspan="2" |1978
|[[Dominique (1978 film)|''Dominique'']]
|Men's costumes
|-
|''[[The Stud (film)|The Stud]]''
|Costumes for [[Oliver Tobias]]
|-
|1997
|''The Aristocracy''
| rowspan="2" |Self
|Episode: "Survival of the Fittest: 1970–1997"; BBC documentary series
|-
|1998
|''The Man Who Would Be Caine''
|TV documentary
|}


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


==External links==
==External links==
*{{IMDb name|id=0371737|name=Doug Hayward}}
* {{IMDb name|id=0371737|name=Doug Hayward}}

{{authority control}}


{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]] -->
| NAME = Hayward, Doug
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = British tailor
| DATE OF BIRTH = 1934-10-05
| PLACE OF BIRTH = [[London]], England
| DATE OF DEATH = 2008-04-26
| PLACE OF DEATH = London, England
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hayward, Doug}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hayward, Doug}}
[[Category:People from Kensington]]
[[Category:People from Kensington]]
[[Category:Butlins Redcoats]]
[[Category:Butlins Redcoats]]
[[Category:Royal Navy personnel]]
[[Category:Royal Navy sailors]]
[[Category:English fashion designers]]
[[Category:English fashion designers]]
[[Category:English costume designers]]
[[Category:English costume designers]]
Line 76: Line 122:
[[Category:2008 deaths]]
[[Category:2008 deaths]]
[[Category:Shops in London]]
[[Category:Shops in London]]
[[Category:20th-century English businesspeople]]

Revision as of 12:19, 10 August 2024

Doug Hayward
Born
Douglas Frederick Cornelius Hayward

(1934-10-05)5 October 1934
Died26 April 2008(2008-04-26) (aged 73)
Occupations
  • Fashion designer
  • bespoke tailor

Douglas Frederick Cornelius Hayward (5 October 1934 – 26 April 2008),[1] was an English fashion designer and bespoke tailor, who dressed many famous people during the 1960s. The inspiration for customer Michael Caine's characterisation of his role in the 1966 film Alfie,[2][3] he was also the model for client John le Carré's Harry Pendel, aka The Tailor of Panama.[2]

Early life

Born to working-class parents in Kensington, West London,[2][1] Hayward and his brother grew up in Hayes.[1] His father cleaned heating boilers for the BBC and worked a second job cleaning buses in Uxbridge; while his mother worked during World War II in a munitions factory.[1][2] Hayward won a scholarship to Southall Grammar School.[3] He had a trial at inside-left for the Middlesex county football team, but lost out to Johnny Haynes, who was also a left footer.[1]

Career

Hayward left school at 15, looking for a white-collar job:[4]

We didn't have a careers master, but I found a booklet which listed possible occupations. I went down the list and when I got to T for tailor, I thought: "I don't know any tailors. I can't ever be judged as being a bad or a good one, so I'll be a tailor."

He was apprenticed to a Shepherd's Bush Green tailor who visited the flats in Cadogan Square, where his uncle was a caretaker.[2] During this period he worked a summer in Clacton-on-Sea as a Butlins Redcoat,[1] and after finishing his apprenticeship served his National Service in the Royal Navy, an experience he later admitted got him focused.[3]

Returning to civilian life, he continued working for his original employer, but also started after hours work on his own creations. Early clients like Peter Sellers, Terence Stamp and lyricist Herbert Kretzmer,[citation needed] came through his excellent theatrical links at the local theatre, the BBC's Lime Grove Studios, or through his first wife, Diana, sister-in-law of film director Basil Dearden.[3]

Unable to gain a cutters job on either Savile Row or even Oxford Street due to his Cockney accent,[2] Hayward then joined fellow showbiz specialist tailor Dimitrio Major, based in Fulham. It was here that he developed a service mentality, driving his Mini Countryman estate car to allow him to attend customers wherever required, including Richard Burton at the Dorchester Hotel.[3][4]

Hayward first set up on his own operating out of a small room in London's Pall Mall, before moving to 95 Mount Street in Mayfair in 1966 where he lived above the shop which soon became a club for his famous clients. In the rear was the cutting room overlooking the Mount Street Gardens.

His weekend home was on the Oxfordshire estate of client and friend Lord Hambleden,[4] near Henley on Thames;[1] Described by many as like a gentlemen's club, the shop acted as a hub for all of Hayward's clients when in London. Tea or something stronger was often served and the coffee table was littered with autographed copies of books written by writer clients including Joseph Heller who wrote Catch 22 Doug's favourite book. There was also a collection of teddy bears, a gift from his client Ralph Lauren, whose later Purple Label line was inspired and advised by Hayward.[3] but Hayward's best pal was his Jack Russell terrier Burt who had his own made to measure suits. Client Michael Parkinson said of the shop:[2]

Hayward ran the best salon in London. Anybody who's anybody was there. It soon became apparent in the 1970s that everyone that was in town to do the show would visit there. I met Alec Guinness there and Tony Bennett. He had this great ability to treat everybody the same.

Hayward's client list included: actors Clint Eastwood, Sir John Gielgud, Michael Caine, Terence Stamp, Ray Austin; film director Rex Harrison, Steve McQueen and John Osborne; actor Tommy Steele; singer Tony Bennett; newsreader Tom Brokaw; footballer and 1966 World Cup England captain Bobby Moore;[3] Formula 1 world champion Sir Jackie Stewart; and businessmen Lord Hanson and Mark Birley.[1] Female clients included Faye Dunaway, Mia Farrow, Jean Shrimpton and Sharon Tate. His design of suits for singer Mick Jagger lead him to designing the wedding suit for Bianca Jagger, and later many of her iconic white jumpsuits. His film credits included Caine's suits in The Italian Job, and Roger Moore in James Bond. Actor James Coburn called Hayward "the Rodin of tweed".[3] Many of his clients became close friends. An early friend was Ralph Lauren, who met Dougie in the early 80's on one of his first visits to London. Ralph realized that Hayward's approach to his clients, and their corresponding support of his style and tailoring, was very similar to his own and exactly what he envisioned for his eventual entry into the London market. Dougie recognized Ralph's ideas and talent and became a great friend and supporter. In his approach to his clientele as a complete source of style, Hayward sold hand-made shoes, and his own line of watches and leather luggage.[4] He lectured at the Royal College of Art on tailoring, placing emphasis on cutting: "You can't do anything unless you can cut."[4] Pragmatic and undemanding of his clients body, Hayward believed that any one could be made to look sleeker:[3]

People always wanted to know who had been the tailor to Cary Grant or Fred Astaire. But what I'd want to know is who was Sydney Greenstreet's tailor? He was a large man in The Maltese Falcon and Casablanca, who always looked good.

Every week until her death in 1984, he visited his mother, Winifred. Each time he would present her with a £1 note, to pay for her Meals on Wheels. He also gave her regular sums of money, always in cash. Convinced that her son was running either a brothel or a game of chemmy, she kept it all. After her death, the family found it beneath her bed in 15 empty ice cream boxes, with a note: "This money is to get Doug out of prison when they finally get him."[3][4]

Media influence

Hayward provided the real-life inspiration for his friend Michael Caine's most iconic screen role, serial philanderer Alfie Elkins.[2] He was also the model for client John le Carré's Harry Pendel, aka The Tailor of Panama.[2]

Personal life

Married twice, his first wife was Diana, sister-in-law of film director Basil Dearden. His second was journalist Glenys Roberts, with whom he had a daughter Polly, who later became his business partner.[4] Roberts divorced Hayward in 1978. Hayward was so charming many women claimed to be his lovers. In 1973 he made a full-length double cashmere coat for Janet Street Porter.[3]

Hayward had a lifelong love for football.[2] A boyhood fan of both of Fulham and Arsenal,[2] although on Saturdays after lunch on the King's Road he would head to Stamford Bridge to watch Chelsea.[1] Hayward had his own team, the Mount Street Marchers and Social Club.[3] The amateur team played in arranged matches on Hyde Park on Sunday mornings, whom he talked clients and actors Richard Harris and Tom Courtenay, and occasionally Bobby Moore, into appearing for.[3] In 1970 he persuaded the Rank Organisation to pay for his team to fly to Mexico for the 1970 World Cup. Believing that they were going to get an exclusive documentary about the England team, Rank were presented with footage of Hayward enjoying himself against local park sides.[1]

Every Thursday, he would lunch at Harrys Bar with friends: photographer Terry O'Neill, hair expert Philip Kingsley, the owner of Tramp nightclub Johnny Gold and Michael Caine. The four of them made up the Mayfair Orphans' Club.[2] His friendship with the Queen's cousin Patrick Anson, 5th Earl of Lichfield, led to them founding dining club Burkes. Invited to Lichfield's home on the Caribbean island of Mustique, he struck up a friendship with Princess Margaret, where the pair performed Cole Porter songs.[2]

Hayward suffered a fall in 1996, and there followed a long period of ill health before his death brought on by vascular dementia.[1] Hayward died in a London hospice.[2] A lifelong agnostic, Hayward received the last rites from a Roman Catholic priest before his death, on which his daughter and business partner, Polly, commented: "Typical jammy bastard—gets forgiven all his sins right at the end."[2]

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1966 Modesty Blaise Costumes/wardrobe Costumes for Terence Stamp
The Spy with a Cold Nose Costumes for Laurence Harvey
1968 Assignment K Costumes for Stephen Boyd
Boom! Costume for Noël Coward
Salt and Pepper Costumes for Peter Lawford
1969 The Italian Job Costumes for Michael Caine; No on-screen credit
1970 The Reckoning Costume designer
  • Credited as 'Costume designer' in some versions of the film
  • Costumes for Nicol Williamson
1970 One More Time Costumes/wardrobe Costumes for Peter Lawford
1978 Dominique Men's costumes
The Stud Costumes for Oliver Tobias
1997 The Aristocracy Self Episode: "Survival of the Fittest: 1970–1997"; BBC documentary series
1998 The Man Who Would Be Caine TV documentary

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Obituary – Doug Hayward". The Times. London. 30 April 2008. Retrieved 9 March 2011.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Jonathan Brown and Henry Deedes (30 April 2008). "Dougie Hayward, tailor who dressed stars of the 1960s, dies aged 73". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 18 May 2008. Retrieved 9 March 2011.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Veronica Horwell (30 April 2008). "Obituary – Doug Hayward". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 9 March 2011.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g "Obituary – Doug Hayward". The Telegraph. London. 30 April 2008. Retrieved 9 March 2011.