Career
Under exclusive contract to 20th Century Fox at the time, she was unable to accept the offer, but after leaving the studio to freelance, she spent a season designing clothing for Ann Sothern on Private Secretary, then contacted Ball to see if the position on I Love Lucy was available. She was hired at $100 per episode, considerably less than her feature film salary, one week before the filming of the 1953-1954 season began, and the following season her salary increased to $150. When she held out for $200 the next year, cost-conscious executives at Desilu replaced her.
Her later television credits included designs for Julie Newmar in My Living Doll and Eleanor Parker in Bracken"s World.
Born Elois West. Jenssen in Palo Alto, California, she attended the Westlake School for Girls before moving to Paris to study fashion at The New School"s Parsons School of Design division. She returned to California after the start of World World War II and enrolled at the Chouinard Art Institute.
She began her film career as an assistant costume designer in Hunt Stromberg"s production company and received her first screen cr designing Hedy Lamarr"s gowns for Dishonored Lady in 1947. She was designer on the film Lured starring Lucille Ball and thus began an association that ultimately lead to designing for I Love Lucy.
In 1948, her design for a white fleece overcoat, electrically heated by batteries carried in two side pockets (with an extension cord that could be plugged in on planes or trains), was featured in a futuristic fashion show sponsored by the Los Angeles Fashion Group.