Dean Tavoularis, Production Designer on the ‘Godfather’
Films and ‘Apocalypse Now,’ Dies at 93
The Oscar winner and five-time nominee teamed with
Francis Ford Coppola on 13 features after getting his start as the art director
on 'Bonnie and Clyde.'
The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
April 23, 2026
Dean Tavoularis, the revered Oscar-winning production
designer who collaborated with Francis Ford Coppola on 13 films, including all
three Godfather movies, Apocalypse Now and One From the Heart, has died. He was
93.
He died Wednesday night in a Paris hospital of natural
causes, THR writer and film critic Jordan Mintzer reported. The two teamed on
the 2022 book Conversations With Dean Tavoularis.
Tavoularis received his Academy Award in the best art
direction-set decoration category for The Godfather Part II (1974) and also was
nominated for his work on three other Coppola-directed films — Apocalypse Now
(1979), Tucker: The Man and His Dream (1988) and The Godfather Part III (1990)
— plus William Friedkin‘s The Brink’s Job (1978).
In his first movie as art director, Tavoularis came up
with the bleak Dust Bowl look for Arthur Penn’s fabled Bonnie and Clyde (1967),
the first of six best picture nominees on which he worked. Two of those — the
first two Godfather films — took home the ultimate prize.
Tavoularis also teamed with director Coppola on The
Conversation (1974), The Outsiders (1983), Rumble Fish (1983), Peggy Sue Got
Married (1986), Gardens of Stone (1987), New York Stories (1989) and Jack
(1996).
Talking about Coppola, “There are many partnerships in
all different kinds of businesses that can always turn out badly, but sometimes
it can turn out to be a collaboration. You see eye to eye; you feel
supportive,” Tavoularis said in a 2018 interview. “When you’re doing a film, no
matter how tough you are, no matter how strong you are, you need a feeling of
support. And I always had that with Francis.”
“Like all great collaborations,” Coppola said in 1997, “I
began to depend on Dean. This grew into a natural and wordless collaboration,
which provided so much comfort to me and added to the style of the films we
worked on together.”
He received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Art
Directors Guild in 2007.
For The Godfather Part II, Tavoularis transformed East
Sixth Street between Avenues A and B in Lower Manhattan into Little Italy in
1918, complete with a dirt road and quaint, old-fashioned storefronts.
There was nothing quaint about the making of Apocalypse
Now, for which Tavoularis created a nightmarish jungle kingdom with a decaying
temple — inspired by the ancient Angkor Wat in Cambodia — as its centerpiece.
His scheduled 14-week stay in the Philippines wound up lasting two years. (In
all, the movie took four years to finish.)
“You never had the feeling at the end of the day that it
is one day less and you were one day closer to completion,” he told the Los
Angeles Times in 2012.
And for the nostalgic (and pricey) love story One From
the Heart (1981), who needed to trek to Las Vegas when you could have
Tavoularis construct a multimillion-dollar, high-tech version of Sin City at
Coppola’s American Zoetrope in San Francisco?
Covering nine soundstages, his set included replicas of
casinos and Fremont Street with loads of neon lights and a paved intersection,
a residential neighborhood, a desert motel and a faux runway at McCarran
International Airport.
“I’ve bought a movie studio, which is like getting a
theater. What the hell am I going to Las Vegas for?” Coppola told Rolling Stone
in 1982. “Let’s build it inside the studio and totally control it and have the
sets be on one stage, as on Saturday Night Live, and have the actors literally
perform it like a play — ‘Ready, begin!’ — and do the whole movie as a
performance and then go back and put the cameras in different places with the
transitions, music, everything. There’d be nothin’ like it!”
He continued, “Dean, in his mind, couldn’t get with the
idea of creating the illusions of the movie with matte shots and trickery on
that level. He wanted to build the fantasy — that’s what cost the extra 10 or
so million dollars.”
On Thursday, Coppola called Tavoularis “a dear friend”
and said his death is “a profound loss. I would be unable to list the many ways
he benefited my work and my personal life. He was a great artist, a great
friend, a great production designer and a great man.”
Constantine Tavoularis was born on May 18, 1932, in
Lowell, Massachusetts. When he was a kid, the family moved to Los Angeles,
where his dad was in the coffee business.
“We are Greek Americans, and one of [his father’s]
clients was Fox studio, which was owned by [Greece native] Spyros Skouras,”
Tavoularis said. “In the summer sometimes I would go with my dad and spend a
day going around on his deliveries. We would drive back to the commissary, and
you saw stage pieces and ladies dressed in their period gowns. It was a
mysterious, magical paradise.”
He studied architecture and painting at Otis College of
Art and Design and joined Disney as an in-betweener in its animation
department, where one of the first films he worked on was Lady and the Tramp
(1955).
He served under art director Robert Clatworthy on the
live action Disney films Pollyanna (1960) and The Parent Trap (1961), then was
Clatworthy’s assistant at Warner Bros. on Robert Mulligan’s Inside Daisy Clover
(1965), set in Santa Monica in 1936.
Despite Tavoularis’ lack of experience, Penn gave him a
great opportunity on Bonnie and Clyde, and he delivered.
“We made Bonnie and Clyde on a minuscule budget. It was
barely more than a couple of million dollars,” Penn said. “But Dean Tavoularis
and Theadora Van Runkle, who designed the costumes, created a whole era.”
After working on Michelangelo Antonioni’s Death
Valley-set Zabriskie Point (1970), he reteamed with Penn on Little Big Man
(1970), a Western filmed in Montana and Calgary.
Tavoularis first met Coppola while he was an assistant
art director on the Marlon Brando-starring Candy (1968).
He said that Paramount execs pushed for the director to
make The Godfather (1972) in St. Louis. “Why St. Louis? I went over there and
looked around; it was ridiculous. It wouldn’t have made the picture better;
they only wanted to escape the New York unions,” he said. “Everything that
Paramount wanted would have made this movie a flop. Everything that Francis
fought against and fought for made The Godfather a screen classic.”
For Apocalypse Now, Tavoularis went in search for
helicopters and a river.
“We went to the Pentagon, this huge mythical Pentagon
building, but the Department of Army read the script and they said, ‘No.’ No
helicopters from the United States,” he recalled. “So we started looking for
helicopters elsewhere — and we needed a river. … I went to Thailand, Borneo,
Jakarta, Malaysia — it was educational, and I still remember the weirdness of
these trips. I ended up in the Philippines, and like a lot of war films finally
did, the government co-operated and gave us helicopters, and they had the
rivers. So we shot the film in the Philippines.”
He once described the shoot as “living in the house of
death that I was making.”
Tavoularis’ other credits included Farewell, My Lovely
(1975), Caleb Deschanel’s The Escape Artist (1982), Wim Wenders’ Hammett
(1982), Shelf Life (1993), Philip Kaufman’s Rising Sun (1993), Warren Beatty’s
Bulworth (1998), Nancy Meyers’ The Parent Trap (1998), Roman Polanski’s The
Ninth Gate (1999) and Roman Coppola’s CQ (2001).
After a decade away to paint, he returned to work for
Polanski again on Carnage (2011), his final feature.
In The Offer, Paramount+’s 2022 limited series about the
making of The Godfather, Tavoularis was portrayed by Eric Balfour.
Survivors include his second wife, French actress Aurore
Clément, whom he met on the set of Apocalypse Now and then married in 1986 at
Coppola’s home, and his daughters, Alison and Gina.
(His wife’s scenes in the mesmerizing French plantation
sequence of Apocalypse Now were cut from the original release but restored for
the expanded redux version.)
In an introduction to a 2007 exhibit that showcased
Tavoularis’ career as a film designer and painter, writer Jean-Paul Scarpitta
said the designer “attained a higher reality, that of poetry.”
“In his art, he doesn’t dwell on magic, visual deception,
optical illusion or unreality … His penetrating eyes allow him to watch and
feel things deeply, which leads him to capture what others are not privy to
see: the gimmicks, the artifices, the tricks, the element of life upon which
the veil of illusion is cast,” Scarpitta wrote. “In his mind, there is a clear
parallel between painting and cinema, in that he considers one and the other as
different yet compatible means to create an illusory world that only exists in
a dimension of its own.”
TAVOULARIS, Dean (Constantine Tavoularis)
Born: 5/18/1932, Lowell, Massachusetts, U.S.A
Died: 4/22/2026, Paris, Île-de-France, France
Dean Tavoularis’ western – production designer:
Little Big Man -