Carmen Dillon (25 October 1908 – 12 April 2000) was an English film art director and production designer who won an
Oscar for the
Olivier version of Hamlet (1948).[1]
Life
Dillon was born in Hendon to Irish-born Joseph Thomas Dillon and his wife Teresa. She was one of six children, for whom their Catholic parents paid to be well educated. Carmen went to the
New Hall Convent School in Chelmsford. The elder brother died during World War one, one sister became a nun and another brother emigrated. Carmen and her sisters Teresa and
Agnes Dillon (known as Una) were left to fulfil their parent's ambitions for them.[2]
Dillon initially worked as an architect and designer, and was invited to design the cover for the newly formed
Electrical Association for Women.[3]
However in 1934 she was invited to join the film industry.[4] This built on her enthusiasm for acting and drawing. She became an art director and production designer, and won an
Oscar for
Laurence Olivier's 1948 film of Hamlet.[1] It was said that for twenty-five years she was the only woman art director in the British film industry.[5]
None of the three Dillon sisters married, and they spent 42 years together in a large flat in Kensington. Tess Dillon had led the physics department at
Queen Elizabeth College.[5] In 1985 Carmen retired to Hove with her sister Una, who had founded
Dillons Booksellers.[2] Carmen outlived her sister and died in 2000 with no survivors.[6]
^
abJean H. Cook, ‘Dillon, Agnes Joseph Madeline [Una] (1903–1993)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2009
accessed 11 April 2017
^Pursell, Carroll (1999). "Domesticating Modernity: The Electrical Association for Women, 1924-86". The British Journal for the History of Science. 32 (1): 47–67.
doi:
10.1017/S0007087498003483.
ISSN0007-0874.
JSTOR4027969.
^Laurie N. Ede, ‘Dillon, Carmen Joseph (1908–2000)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2011
accessed 11 April 2017