William Billy Haines Building and Garden Elements
Plenty of prolific designers started off on slightly different tracks than those on which they ended up, but rarely did they begin their careers in a totally separate industry like William “Billy” Haines did. Before he gained a reputation as a furniture designer and decorator to Hollywood’s biggest and brightest, Haines was himself a star of the silver screen.
After leaving his native Virginia as a young man, Haines earned modeling and acting jobs in New York City and then won a Goldwyn Studios talent contest in the early 1920s. The next frontier was California, where he would go on to appear in more than 50 films. His acting career was halted abruptly in 1933, allegedly because he refused to leave his partner, British footballer Jimmy Shields, at the request of his representation at MGM Studios. Whether it was the fact that Haines was one half of Hollywood’s first openly gay marriage or that there were other factors at play, MGM cofounder Louis B. Mayer canceled his contract.
Luckily for Haines, he had nurtured a side career that kept him on Hollywood’s radar: He was a prominent antiques dealer on La Brea Avenue in Los Angeles. Haines dedicated himself full-time to both dealing and designing furniture as soon as his tenure as a leading man came to an end.
Haines collaborated with the era’s biggest names in architecture and created a desert living room for the 1939 Golden Gate International Exposition in San Francisco that featured walls made of California Joshua wood and a painting by Georgia O’ Keeffe. He paid close attention to lighting design, employed hand-painted wallpaper and favored featuring Chinese ceramics alongside Chippendale chairs and ottomans for entertaining. His most famous clients included Joan Crawford, Carole Lombard, Betsy Bloomingdale and more. Crawford played a significant role in kick-starting his career when she commissioned Haines to decorate her entire home in Brentwood.
Haines was such an esteemed tastemaker that he’s among those credited with having cemented Hollywood Regency as a reputable design style. (Its origins are owed to influential interior decorator Dorothy Draper.) While he gravitated toward the look of chinoiserie and English furniture, his signature was low-level seating and giltwood accents. Haines’s interior design style was so in vogue that Nancy Reagan became one of his biggest fans and eventually enlisted Ted Graber, Haines’s successor following his death in 1973, to decorate several private and public rooms in the White House.
Find a collection of vintage William Haines lounge chairs, lighting fixtures and other furniture on 1stDibs.
1950s American Greco Roman Vintage William Billy Haines Building and Garden Elements
Wood
1950s Classical Greek Vintage William Billy Haines Building and Garden Elements
Giltwood, Wood
Early 20th Century William Billy Haines Building and Garden Elements
Walnut
1890s French Classical Roman Antique William Billy Haines Building and Garden Elements
Wood
19th Century Italian Antique William Billy Haines Building and Garden Elements
Marble
1890s English Antique William Billy Haines Building and Garden Elements
Brass
20th Century Italian Greco Roman William Billy Haines Building and Garden Elements
Composition
Mid-19th Century Spanish Neoclassical Antique William Billy Haines Building and Garden Elements
Wood
Early 1900s Indian Antique William Billy Haines Building and Garden Elements
Teak
Early 20th Century American Greco Roman William Billy Haines Building and Garden Elements
Mahogany
1890s Canadian Country Antique William Billy Haines Building and Garden Elements
Wood, Pine
Mid-20th Century American Classical William Billy Haines Building and Garden Elements
Wood
Late 19th Century Unknown Antique William Billy Haines Building and Garden Elements
Wood
1950s American Mid-Century Modern Vintage William Billy Haines Building and Garden Elements
Iron
1950s American Mid-Century Modern Vintage William Billy Haines Building and Garden Elements
Iron
1950s American Mid-Century Modern Vintage William Billy Haines Building and Garden Elements
Metal