



He also played the role of Edgar and designed the costumes for Orson Welles’ 1956 New York City Center production of Shakespeare’s King Lear. He designed costumes and sets for Lincoln Kirstein‘s ballet and opera projects, as well as the costumes for the original Broadway production of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying and Walking Happy. Fletcher moved to New York City to work as an actor in Ethel Barrymore´s final show, Embezzled Heaven and kept company with the likes of Gore Vidal, Anais Nin, Tennessee Williams and blues musician, Lead Belly. He also received three Tony Award nominations for his work on Broadway, for Little Me in 1963, High Spirits in 1964, and Hadrian VII in 1969, and then in 1982, he received a Drama Desk Award nomination for his costume design in Othello.įletcher was born in 1922 in Ceder Rapids, Iowa, to actor Leon Ames. Fletcher is credited for helping to establish the look and style for the Klingon and Vulcan characters in those films and beyond. That work earned him three Saturn Awards nominations for the first three films and then a win for the fourth. No cause of death was disclosed, but a spokesman for Fletcher said he died peacefully.įletcher’s husband of 65 years, singer, Broadway dancer and New York City Ballet charter member Jack Kauflin had previously passed away.įletcher was best known for his work as costume designer for four Star Trek features: Star Trek: The Motion Picture, The Wrath of Khan, The Search for Spock, and Star Trek: The Voyage Home. Robert Fletcher (courtesy: Everett Collection)Ĭostume Designer Robert Fletcher, who provided costumes for stage and screen for over six decades, died on April 5 in Kansas City, Missouri, at the age of 98.
