In appreciation: Merrill Sindler

MILLERTON — Merrill Sindler, who died last week at age 82, was a well-known set designer for television shows and commercials, but his talent for planning and design was most evident in the gracious life he created in Millerton with his home, furnishings, gardens and paintings.Merrill was a graduate of the Yale Drama School, where he studied theater design with Donald Oenslager and painting under Josef Albers, Will Barnet and Ad Reinhardt. His first job in New York City was with NBC, where he designed sets for quiz shows, soap operas and children’s programming such as The Shari Lewis Show and Exploring, a sophisticated show that introduced children to classical music, dance and theater.Merrill earned an Emmy nomination for the television drama, “Ride with Terror,” for which he had to recreate a subway car interior and exterior as well as a station platform. It required two sets of stagehands to pull the car in one direction and the platform in another direction to simulate movement. The cast included Gene Hackman in one of his early performances.Another notable design was the set for The Tonight Show when it hosted the wedding of the singer Tiny Tim, who had an improbable hit with the song “Tiptoe Through the Tulips” sung in a soprano voice and accompanied on ukulele. The set featured some 10,000 live tulips, which were flown in from Holland for the occasion. To keep them fresh the studio temperature had to be lowered to 50 degrees for two days leading up to the wedding.After a long career at NBC, Merrill turned to set design for television commercials, working independently as well as for Silvercup Studios in Queens.Merrill designed the sets for off-Broadway plays including “To Be Young, Gifted and Black” by Lorraine Hansberry, with Cicely Tyson; “Tonight in Living Color” by A.R. Gurney, with Rue McClanahan; and “Two By Saroyan,” by William Saroyan, with the dancer/choreographer Alvin Ailey in his first acting role. This production led Merrill to create costume sketches for Ailey’s fledgling dance company. He also took dance lessons with the company, where, at 6-foot 4-inches, he felt like a giant among the members of the troupe.Merrill was born in 1931 in Bishopville, S.C., the youngest of four sons of Frank and Pauline Sindler, who owned the men’s clothing store in this small town. After graduating high school in Bishopville, Merrill earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the Ringling College of Art in Sarasota, Fla. He began graduate work at the Yale Drama School in set and costume design before being drafted during the Korean War. He worked in psychological warfare at Fort Bragg, N.C., and was later stationed in Stuttgart with the Seventh Army Special Services.In 1975, Merrill met his life partner, Alfredo “Chip” Lopez, vice president and art director at the N.W. Ayer Advertising Agency. They were together for 20 years, with homes in New York, Millerton and Fire Island, where Sindler’s lifelong interest in physical fitness led to the opening of Merrill’s Gym, the first on the island. Merrill’s strongman physique was featured in two books by Patrick Dennis (the author of “Auntie Mame”) and the photographer Cris Alexander, “Little Me” and “Women, Women, Women” with the actress Dody Goodman.Merrill continued painting in oils and acrylics until the end of his life, with many one-man and group shows in the Millerton area. He was also an active fundraiser for the Northeast Historical Society and the Millerton Library. A memorial service will be announced for a later date. Stephen FrostRed Hook

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