Aline Frankau Bernstein (born Dec. 22, 1882, New York, N.Y., U.S.—died Sept. 7, 1955, New York City) was a theatrical designer and writer, the first major woman designer for the American stage.
Aline Frankau attended Hunter College and the New York School for Applied Design before her marriage to Theodore Bernstein in 1902. She developed her artistic talent studying under the urban-realist painter Robert Henri and abandoned her earlier ambition to be an actress in favour of stage design. It required a two-year fight to win admittance to the United Scenic Art Union, of which she at last became the first woman member. She became involved in experiments in amateur theatrical production at the Henry Street Settlement House, and when Alice and Irene Lewisohn established the Neighborhood Playhouse there in 1915, she became its principal set and costume designer. She remained with the playhouse through its transition from amateur to professional repertory group in 1920 until its dissolution in 1927.
Among the productions in which Bernstein’s designs won particular praise were The Little Clay Cart and The Miracle in 1924, The Dybbuk in 1925, and several editions of the annual (from 1923) Grand Street Follies. During the 1920s and ’30s she worked mainly with the Theatre Guild and the Civic Repertory Theatre. Among her greatest successes in this period were Eva Le Gallienne’s production of Alison’s House in 1931, Philip Barry’s Animal Kingdom in 1932, the Alfred Lunt–Lynn Fontanne presentation of The Seagull in 1937, and especially her collaborations with Lillian Hellman in the productions of The Children’s Hour (1934), Days to Come (1936), and The Little Foxes (1939).
From 1925 to 1930 Bernstein carried on a stormy affair with the young novelist Thomas Wolfe, who dedicated Look Homeward, Angel to her in 1929. That relationship was the subject of one of the stories in her collection Three Blue Suits (1933) and of her novel The Journey Down (1938). In 1937 she helped Irene Lewisohn establish the Museum of Costume Art; she served as director of the museum until 1946, when it became the Costume Institute of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, after which she was its president.
Outstanding among her later theatrical designs were those for James Thurber and Elliott Nugent’s The Male Animal (1940), George Balanchine’s ballet The Spellbound Child (1946), and Regina, Marc Blitzstein’s operatic adaptation of The Little Foxes, for which she won a Tony Award in 1949. Her other published works include the autobiographical An Actor’s Daughter (1941), the novel Miss Condon (1947), and the posthumous Masterpieces of Women’s Costume of the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries (1959).