Partner Howard Shoup
Queer Places:
2522 Military Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90064
Hillside Memorial Park Culver City, Los Angeles County, California, USA, Plot Laurel Gardens,Wall B, Crypt 223
Sascha Brastoff (October 23, 1918 - February 4, 1993) was a potter, metal sculptor, and jewelry designer.[1]
Brastoff was the long-term romantic partner of costume designer Howard Shoup.
He was born Samuel Brostofsky in Cleveland, Ohio, on October23, 1918. He attended Glenville High School in Cleveland, and took drama classes under the future Hollywood producerRoss Hunter. At age 17, he began studying dance with Edward Caton, and later danced for several seasons with the Cleveland Ballet. Impressed with his artistic abilities, his art teachers formed a small private scholarship to enable him toattend the Western Reserve University School of Art in Cleveland.
In 1940, Brastoff moved to New York where he designed window displays for Macy's and joined the Clay Club, where in 1941 he held a one-man show of his terra cotta "whimsies".
In 1942, he joined the U.S. Army Air Force, where he designed costumes and scenery for Special Services events to entertain the troops; he also appeared on stage, and became well known for his comic interpretation of Carmen Miranda.
In 1944, Brastoff moved to California, where he signed a seven-year contract with 20th Century Fox as a designer and entertainer. In 1947, he opened his first ceramic plant in Los Angeles, selling hand-painted earthenware. In 1952, with backing from Winthrop Rockefeller, Brastoff opened a new factory in Los Angeles. It was destroyed by fire six months later, and in 1953, Brastoff opened a new 35,000-square foot factory and showroom that eventually employed more than 100 people. In 1960, the business began to decline, and in 1962 Brastoff suffered a nervous collapse and left the company, which continued to sell wares under his name until it finally closed in 1973.
After several years away from business, Brastoff returned in 1966 with a one-man show of metal sculpture at the Dalzell Hatfield Galleries in Los Angeles. He thereafter designed and produced lines for ceramic, jewelry, and decorative arts companies.
As his health declined after 1985, he increasingly curtailed his artistic activities. He died after a long battle with prostate cancer on February 4, 1993.
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