Obituary: Bijan Pakzad, Beverly Hills designer of luxury menswear, dies - Los Angeles Times
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Bijan Pakzad dies; Beverly Hills designer of luxury menswear

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Bijan Pakzad, an Iranian American designer of jewelry, fragrances and luxury menswear who ran a Beverly Hills boutique and was renowned as clothier to some of the world’s most powerful men, died Saturday morning at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, his family said.

Pakzad’s family maintained he was 67 despite some public records that listed his age as 71.

Pakzad suffered a stroke while working Thursday and was rushed to the hospital but never recovered, said his 19-year-old son, Nicolas Bijan Pakzad.

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“He’s dressed over 40,000 clients,†his son said, including Presidents Carter, George H.W. Bush, Clinton, George W. Bush and Obama. “We have a picture of all five living presidents wearing his suits.†He said his father once named a fragrance DNA in honor of his three children, Daniela, Nicolas and Alexandra.

Times fashion critic Booth Moore said Sunday that Pakzad was “a larger-than-life personality whose ultra-luxe Beverly Hills boutique helped to make Rodeo Drive a world-class shopping destination. Long before Tom Ford and Karl Lagerfeld, Bijan had a keen understanding of the cult of personality in fashion, starring in his own ads and billboards, name-checking countless celebrities and parking exotic cars outside his store, all to stoke his fame.â€

Pakzad was born April 4, 1944, according to his family, although some public records list the year of his birth as 1940.

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He was born to affluence in Iran, went to a boarding school in Switzerland and moved to the United States in the early 1970s. He opened House of Bijan, his by-appointment-only boutique on Rodeo Drive, in 1976. He was often referred to only by his first name. He offered exclusivity and, rather than apologize for staggering prices, made them a selling point, boasting in one ad that he sold “the costliest menswear in the world.â€

“I am not a mass designer,†Pakzad told The Times in 2003, when sales of his fragrance lines, clothes and custom jewelry reportedly totaled more than $70 million annually. “What was important to me was not to have 2 million clients, like Versace, but to have 20,000 clients.†He said he had invoices reflecting clients who spent $800,000 on a single visit.

Pakzad was not shy about acknowledging an outsize ego. “With my ego, I would have been successful anyplace, but America gave me the opportunity to show my taste,†he told The Times.

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Pakzad’s boutique sold $6,500 suits, $19,000 ostrich vests, and carried the names of clients ranging from Michael Eisner to King Juan Carlos of Spain. He drove a mustard-yellow Rolls-Royce, and beginning in the 1980s also had a store in New York, though it later closed.

In addition to his three children, Pakzad is survived by a sister, Shanaz, of Newport Beach; brothers Fara of Berkeley, Fari of Newport Beach and Cyrus of San Francisco; a grandchild and longtime girlfriend Mahtab Mojab. Pakzad was married and divorced twice.

A private service will be held this week, Nicolas Pakzad said, with the possibility of a public service at a later date.

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