JH
Photo of Jacques Heim

Jacques Heim

Additional Credits
Born May 8, 1899Died January 8, 1967 (67 years)
Jacques Heim (8 May 1899 – 8 January 1967) was a French fashion designer and costume designer for theater and film, and was a manufacturer of women's furs. From 1930 to his death in 1967, he ran the fashion house (maison de couture) Jacques Heim, which closed in 1969. He was president of the Paris Chambre Syndicale de la haute couture from 1958 to 1962, a period of transition from haute couture to ready-to-wear clothing.

Jacques Heim was born in Paris. His parents were Isidore and Jeanne Heim, Jews of Polish origin.

In the early 1920s, Heim started working in his parents' fur business, which they had founded in 1898. He took over the business in 1923, and within a year had added a couture department, designing dresses and coats, made with original fabrics, working in collaboration with Sonia Delaunay. In 1930, the workshop became the fashion house Jacques Heim. He also made ready-to-wear and in 1936 started a line for younger women, Heim Jeunes Filles. In 1932, Heim created a two-piece swimsuit consisting of a bra with ruffles and pretty bloomers, which he called the Atome. However, women were not yet ready to reveal their midriff, with only a few daring to wear his swimsuit.

He was harassed during the Nazi occupation of France, but managed to stay in business by putting a non-Jewish "front man" in charge of his fashion house. He was an active member of the French resistance.

In 1946 Heim started a chain of sportswear boutiques. In June 1946, he relaunched his two-piece swimsuit, the Atome, which he advertised as "the world's smallest bathing suit." However, on 5 July 1946, Louis Réard, a French engineer, had a Paris stripper pose before reporters in an even briefer two-piece swimsuit, which Réard called the Bikini, and which he promoted as "smaller than the smallest bathing suit". Réard's design, unlike Heim's, for the first time presented a female swimsuit with the navel exposed. Though financially successful, the bikini was very controversial. Réard's name for the swimsuit caught on, and became the common name for the style of swimwear.

In 1950, Heim launched another ready-to-wear line, Heim Actualité.

Under the presidency of Charles de Gaulle, he was appointed designer of the president's wife, Yvonne de Gaulle. His most prominent clients were Sophia Loren, Queen Fabiola of Belgium, Mamie Eisenhower and actress Gloria Swanson. In 1956, Heim made the bikini an international sensation when Brigitte Bardot wore one of his designs.

Heim served as President of Chambre Syndicale de la Couture Parisienne (Paris Fashion Trade Association) from 1958 to 1962.

Heim had a son, Philippe, and a daughter, Arianne. Jacques died in Neuilly-sur-Seine, a suburb of Paris, at age 67. In August 1968, Philippe Heim took over Jacques Heim and all associated companies and stores, but the business was sold in 1969 to French bridalwear concern Henri Michmacher, who owned several boutiques under the name of Pronuptia.

Heim's grandson, also named Jacques Heim, is a choreographer, director of the DIAVOLO | Architecture in Motion, a Los Angeles-based dance company.

Source: Article "Jacques Heim" from Wikepedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Jacques Heim Filmography

1964
Code Name: Tiger · as Costume Design
1963
Un drôle de paroissien · as Wardrobe Assistant
1962
Sundays and Cybèle · as Costume Designer
1960
Meurtre en 45 tours · as Wardrobe Designer
1959
The House of the Seven Hawks · as Costume Designer
1959
Marie-Octobre · as Costume Design
1958
Blonde in a White Car · as Costume Design
1958
Un drôle de dimanche · as Costume Designer
1958
Why Women Sin · as Costume Designer
1958
Montparnasse 19 · as Costume Design
1958
Seventh Heaven · as Costume Design
1956
Mannequins of Paris · as Costume Designer
1956
Typhoon Over Nagasaki · as Costume Designer
1955
Le crâneur · as Costume Design
1954
La soupe à la grimace · as Costume Designer
1954
Service Entrance · as Costume Design
1953
We Go to Monte Carlo · as Costume Designer
1952
Adorable Creatures · as Costume Design
1951
The Beautiful Image · as Costume Designer
1950
Méfiez-vous des blondes · as Costume Design
1950
Cairo Road · as Costume Designer
1950
Not Any Weekend for Our Love · as Costume Design
1949
Mission in Tangier · as Costume Designer
1948
Impasse des deux anges · as Costume Design
1946
Back Streets of Paris · as Costume Designer
1946
Star Without Light · as Costume Designer

Take Plex everywhere

Watch free anytime, anywhere, on almost any device.
See the full list of supported devices