LOS ANGELES, Calif. — Kenneth Bordewick, president of Beverly Hills Luxury Interiors Inc, has been selected to design and style the 67th Annual Golden Globes Awards Presenters Lounge, the quintensential glamorous atmosphere backstage for Hollywood’s A-list glitterrati to relax, celebrate, kibbitz and work during the famed event.
This year, the backstage Presenters Lounge is going upscale, with a sumptuous modern vibe envisioned by interior designer Kenneth Bordewick, who has worked with Hollywood favorites, including Mariah Carey, The Jonas Brothers, Sir Paul McCartney and Robert Altman.
“ I have a vision for bathing this year’s stars in unreserved modern elegance and luxury. They will not want to leave the space we are creating backstage ,” Bordewick mused. The Presenters Lounge, sponsored by Smart Water, will feature Lalique Crystal accents.
Bordewick’s design portfolio includes a library belonging to Prince Charles… a monument in memory of Nat King Cole… discotheques in Barcelona, Hollywood, and London… a palace in Marbella, Spain for the late Saudi Arabian King Fahd… an interior designed for the royal princess of Iran’s Beverly Hills home… and countless other breath-taking designing masterpieces.
Celebrity interior designer Kenneth Bordewick, who’s decorated the homes of Paul McCartney, the Jonas Brothers, and Mariah Carey to name a few, has been pegged to design this year’s Golden Globe Awards Presenters Lounge. The room will be visited by a few dozen of Hollywood’s favorite celebrities Sunday night before they walk onstage to present the award show’s iconic golden globe statuettes. So Bordewick’s theme, “the glamorous luxury of Hollywood’s Golden Age with the glitter of today’s top stars,” is only fitting.
Some of the furnishings include vintage Renea Lalique pieces valued at $800,000, a Moura Starr leather sofa and black crystal coffee table valued at $400,000, a bronze sculpture by famed artist Gilad Ben-Atzi, and hand-embroidered black and white silk drapes valued at $25,000. He’s also borrowed a few pieces of artwork from the Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation and the Yehoshua Kovarsky Family Trust estimated to be worth more than $1 million.





