1935–1946 during the post-war years. Duquette designed costumes and settings for the movies, interiors for
Mary Pickford and
Buddy Rogers, jewelry and special furnishings for Lady Mendl, as well as numerous night clubs and public places.
1947–1960 Upon his return from Europe in 1947, Duquette continued his works for private clients and for the theatre and motion pictures. He presented his first exhibition at the Mitch Liesen Gallery in Los Angeles in 1949 and shortly thereafter was asked to present his works at the
Pavilion de Marsan of the
Louvre Museum, Paris. Returning from a year in France, where he received design commissions from the
Duke and
Duchess of Windsor 1960–1970s During the 1960s and '70s, the Duquettes continued to travel extensively, working in Austria, Ireland and France as well as New York,
Dallas,
San Francisco, South America and Asia. Duquette created interiors for
Doris Duke,
Norton Simon, and
J. Paul Getty, a castle in Ireland for
Elizabeth Arden and a penthouse in the
Hawaiian Islands. He also designed interiors for commercial and public spaces like the Hilton Hawaiian Village, Sheraton Universal Hotel, and sculptures and tapestries for the
Ritz Carlton Hotel in Chicago as well as the
Los Angeles Music Center and the
University of California at Los Angeles. Designs for film and theatre include
Yolanda and the Thief,
Lovely to Look At,
Kismet, and
Ziegfeld Follies for
MGM, as well as
Jest of Cards,
Beauty and the Beast, and
Danses Concertantes for the
San Francisco Ballet. Operas for which Duquette designed both costumes and settings include
Der Rosenkavelier,
The Magic Flute, and
Salome. His designs for the original Broadway production of
Camelot won Duquette the
Tony Award for Best Costume Design. and in celebration of the bicentennial. This hugely successful multi-sensorial exhibit was seen by hundreds of thousands of visitors over a three-year period at the California State Museum of Science and Industry at
Exposition Park. As part of the unique experience of "ethnic angels," Duquette included a poetic narration by Ray Bradbury, spoken by Charlton Heston. Duquette embellished the celebratory experience with original music by Garth Hudson (reissued in 2005). The immense size of the building added to the effect, where from the 80 foot ceiling hung an 18-foot Madonna, dressed in an ornate and symbolic gown. She was surrounded by angels and alters and jeweled tapestries. All of this was enhanced by special lighting effects which changed the Madonna's facial color "to represent the four races." "Duquette writes that his 'Angels' exhibit stresses over and over again 'the brotherhood of man, which is an implied theme of this 'celebration." He stated, "It is my hope that this celebrational environment, into which I have poured the aspirations of a lifetime, will transport the viewer to another dimension." Duquette designed furniture and chandeliers for
Long Beach-based
Buffums including at branches in
La Habra Fashion Square and
Pomona Mall.
Cultural impact In 1979, the Duquettes formed the Anthony and Elizabeth Duquette Foundation for the Living Arts, a non-profit public foundation whose purpose is to present museum-quality exhibitions of artistic, scientific, and educational value to the public and to purchase, promote and preserve Duquette's own works. Exhibitions have been presented by the foundation at California's
Mission San Fernando and through the
Los Angeles Unified School District including "Designs for the Theatre", "The Art of the Found Object" and "The Fabric Mosaic Tapestry". The foundation has sponsored exhibitions and lectures on the decorative arts in Los Angeles, San Francisco, New York, and Texas in conjunction with museums and other foundations and on the university level through the
UCLA extension series. An exhibition was presented in San Francisco honoring
Saint Francis of Assisi, the
patron saint of that city. To house the exhibition, Duquette purchased an abandoned
synagogue which he restored and renamed The Duquette Pavilion of Saint Francis.
1980s–Death destroyed much of Duquette's work at his residence. Final projects, which he completed with the assistance of his business partner and design collaborator of 30 years, Hutton Wilkinson, included interiors for an 18th-century Parisian apartment located on the
Place de Palais Bourbon in Paris and interiors for the 12th century
Palazzo Brandolini on the
Grand Canal in
Venice. ==Loss by Fire==