Background
Miller was born at Burkburnett, Texas in 1933, not 1935 as had been misreported.
Miller was born at Burkburnett, Texas in 1933, not 1935 as had been misreported.
He studied design at the Chouinard Art Institute, now the California Institute of the Arts.
He collaborated on many projects with television producers Aaron Spelling and Douglas South. Cramer, including Charlie"s Angels, The Love Boat, Fantasy Island, Hotel, and Vega$. He was the fourth of five children born to William and Marie Miller. Nolan later stated, "When I was about in the 5th or the 6th grade I made up my mind I fell in love with movies and I thought I want to design gorgeous costumes for gorgeous stars and it was my lifelong ambition.
I never wanted anything else.
I never changed”. He worked in the oil fields of Texas and Louisiana after high school. His family moved at least twice before settling in San Bernardino, California.
Unable to find work in the entertainment industry, he worked in a florist shop in Beverly Hills, where he met Aaron Spelling, who hired Miller to design clothes for the film, thus initiating Miller"s career creating fashion for the stars. Christopher Schemering notes in The Soap Opera Encyclopedia that "he Nolan Miller creations became so popular that Dynasty spawned its own line of women"s apparel", and later a men"s fashion line.
"The Dynasty Collection," was a series of haute couture designs based on costumes worn by Joan Collins, Linda Evans and Diahann Carroll.
Miller maintained a career as a private couturier in Beverly Hills, California, with clients including Sophia Loren, Elizabeth Taylor and Joan Collins. Foreign two decades he designed a line of jewelry for Quality, Value, Convenience. Nolan had battled lung cancer for several years. He announced his retirement on July 4, 2011 on Quality, Value, Convenience.
From 1983 to 1987, Miller was nominated six times for an Emmy Award, and won an Emmy in 1984 for his work on Dynasty, which also set a fashion trend for strong-shouldered dresses and power suits. He was nominated four times for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Costume Design for a Series for his work on Dynasty. He was also nominated in 1985 for the Elizabeth Taylor television movie Malice in Wonderland and in 1987 for The Two Mistress Grenvilles, starring Ann-Margret and Claudette Colbert.