Costume fittings: I went to two fittings at a tailor shop down town. They not only made the skirt & shirt, but also underwear.
Shoes: I had to go to a second hand store to buy old-looking shoes. Thankfully, they cost almost nothing. I am sure that no one saw my shoes in the film.
Make-up: I arrived hours before filming began to have my make-up done. They had a special make-up tray for us so that they could touch up our faces during filming.
Hair: I was singled out to pass
through the foreground. Either my costume was made in warm colors because they wanted me in the front of the shot or they wanted me in the front of the shot because my costume was in warm colors. I don't know which. Whatever the reason, I had to have an elaborate hair style because I was going to be so close to the camera. The sylist modeled the hair style on a picture of a woman from Fraser's team. This style took at least 45 minutes to do. With my hair as long as it is, they still had to stick wig pieces in my hair to give it body. The style looked beautiful when she was done (the picture shows lots of hairs sticking out here and there, but you couldn't see that in real life). After we were all made up we had to gather on the set for the
director to set up the shot. It seemed a little haphazard, but the crew had clearly spent a lot of time setting things up before we even got there. The scene was supposed to be a graduation party at the Chinese language school. The director wanted to create the impression that hundreds of people were at the party but in fact, we only had about a dozen extras, so we had to help make the shot look busy by walking through the shot. My job was to walk in front of Fraser with another man. Halfway through the shot I had to turn and smile at this guy. Unfortunately, he was much taller than I am (he is standing behind me in the cast shot) so they had built a raised plank for me to walk on. It was quite tricky to walk on the plank in my very high heels, but I managed. So when it was all said and done I spent hours and hours in preparation for maybe 5 seconds on screen. I actually felt pretty lucky because I was in the foreground. Some other people spent just as much time as I did to be way in the background turned away from the camera for five seconds. Anyway, we got a free lunch out of it:) I wanted to post some pics of Eric in costume but the only pictures I have aren't pictures that Eric wants posted, so you'll just have to wait for the film release this summer to see Eric as Carl Gowman, sidekick of J.O. Fraser.
One side note: I noticed that the costumes mess with your mind. When someone is wearing old-fashioned clothing it changes your perception of them. For example, I looked over at these ladies and thought "They're sewing something." Then I thought, "Of course they're not sewing something. I don't know any ladies that sit around and sew in public." They were actually working on conference badges, but their old-fashioned clothes make them look like they're sewing.

3 comments:
Wow, Angela, I like the hair. It's beautiful. When did this all happen? I want to see Eric's picture. Tell him, Please! It sounds so interesting that makeup could make him look so much younger.
Hey, Ang! That hairdo looks very intricate. I just chopped mine off. It looks too stringy long. How are you doing? I will defintely look for your movie when it comes out.
I will never again watch a movie without great appreciation for ALL that goes on behind the scenes--even for a 5-second part. You look very "authentic," Ang. Sure hope we can see the movie when it's finished.
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