2.21.2010
Social Observation from a Costumer
The three muses of Costume Design (according to me) are Observation, Research, and Bullshit. Observation and Research require more insight than a lot of people realize, a lot of creating a character is also looking into social behavior and history. It is in this context that I have pondered pantyhose deeper than I'd ever thought possible.
The Old Settler up at Writer's Theatre is set in 1940s Harlem. Stockings in the 1940s came in colors like "nude" but of course, it's my nude color, not the nude color of the ladies living in Harlem. So women with any skin color that didn't match Barbie walked around with funny-looking nylons. Nan Cibula-Jenkins, the costume designer, made the choice to have the girls' pantyhose match their skin tones to appeal to a modern eye. I supported the decision and went off in search of pantyhose with back seams in a variety of "nudes". No such luck. After hours on websites, in stores, on the phone, discontinued products and backordered colors, the best resolution was to buy back seam pantyhose in Barbie doll nude and dye them. I guess we haven't come so far after all.
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One time in H.S I was in a play and one of my friends has a role in it too. He had dreads and the teachers told him it wasn't appropriate to the era. So, they got him a short afro wig to cover the dreads, but his dreads were so big that a normal-looking wig ended up looking like something from a Don King Halloween costume.
ReplyDeleteI still laugh about that all these years. He wouldn't looked less crazy if they had allowed him to keep the dreads.