"Bobbie" Nudie R.I.P.
Courtesy: Los Angeles Times, Jon Thurber, April 10, 2006
 
Helen B. Cohn, 92; Helped Put Cowboys in Rhinestones.
 
Helen Barbara Cohn, a.k.a. Bobbie Nudie, whose business
savvy helped her husband create the legendary Nudie suit and
become king of the western costumers, died Friday at a
hospital in Valencia, according to her granddaughter Jamie.
Cohn was 92.
 
"She was the backbone to my grandfather and wrote up all the
orders," Jamie Nudie told The Times on Saturday. "She
greeted everyone as they came through the door and made sure
everyone had a nice cup of coffee."
 
Starting in the late 1940s, Nudie suits became high fashion
for western swing bands and movie cowboys. Created by her
husband, the flamboyant Nudie Cohn, the suits were marked by
their vibrant colors and decorative rhinestones and
embroidery.
 
But Nudie, as he was known, did not confine himself just to
suits. Boots, saddles and belts -- anything with leather
tooling -- became part of the line, as well as pantsuits and
dresses for women.
 
And then there were the cars, mainly convertibles with steer
horns on the front grille and rifles, six-shooters and
derringers as part of the ornamentation. Nudie designed 18
of them. Many were sold off and fell into disrepair. Some
are in museums around the country. One is on loan at the
Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles.
 
Nudie fashions became so popular among country music
stars -- most prominently Hank Snow and Porter Wagoner --
that many of their owners were hard-pressed to give them up.
The legendary Hank Williams Sr. was buried in a Nudie suit.
And more recently, California country pioneer Buck Owens was
buried in one of his Nudies. Roy Rogers was another who wore
his Nudie suit to the grave.
 
Perhaps the most famous Nudie creation of all was worn not
by a country singer but by rock 'n' roll royalty, the King,
Elvis Presley. That suit, created in the 1950s, was made of
gold lame and priced at $10,000. Nudie later said his profit
on the creation was $9,500.
 
The Nudie look crossed over into rock music in a more
substantial way in 1968 when the country-rock band the
Flying Burrito Brothers -- which included the influential
Gram Parsons -- started wearing them. Parsons' suit,
decorated with marijuana leaves, became an iconic image in
rock. Other rockers, including Elton John and Keith
Richards, soon followed.
 
And while his stock in trade was outrageous fashion, Nudie
also created the simple but elegant "man in black" look for
Johnny Cash.
 
Today, Nudie creations continue to be popular with
collectors.
 
"Bobbie Nudie" was the nickname Cohn's husband gave her. She
was born Helen Kruger in Mankato, Minn., on July 29, 1913.
 
Her parents ran a boarding house, and she met her future
husband when he rented a room.
 
They fell in love and traveled to New York City, where he
tried to make a living making costumes and accessories for
burlesque queens and Broadway showgirls. But the business
fared poorly and the couple moved back to Mankato, where
they married and ran a dry cleaning store.
 
But according to their granddaughter Jamie, Nudie became
restless and the couple moved with their daughter to Los
Angeles in 1939, so he could try his tailoring luck with the
Hollywood set. After making sportswear for a few years,
Nudie was eager to produce flashier attire, but for whom?
 
Cohn and Nudie loved western swing music, and Nudie decided
that western bands weren't appropriately attired. So he
approached singer Tex Williams and asked to outfit his band
with Nudie suits. Williams auctioned off a horse to give
Nudie the money he needed to get into business. In return,
he and the members of his band got suits.
 
The family store was originally the garage of their North
Hollywood home, the main cutting table formerly used for
Ping-Pong. From that beginning, the couple became a show
business fashion phenomenon.
 
They opened their store, Nudie's Rodeo Tailors Inc., at
Victory Boulevard and Vineland Avenue in North Hollywood in
1947 and moved to a larger location near Lankershim and
Magnolia boulevards in 1963.
 
Nudie died in 1984 at 81 and was buried in one of his suits.
Cohn continued to run the store, working from her husband's
patterns that they had saved over the years. She worked with
her daughter, Barbara, until her death from cancer in 1990
and with her granddaughter Jamie. The store closed in 1994,
but Jamie still does custom orders.
 
The Palomino, a big plastic horse that stood in front of the
store for years, is now in the Country Music Hall of Fame in
Nashville, along with one of Nudie's original sewing
machines and the sign from the store.
 
In addition to Jamie, Cohn is survived by another
granddaughter, Morelia Cuevas; three great-grandchildren;
and her sister Edith Macho.
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