Friday, February 3, 2012

Theater Tips for Achieving the Pre-WWI Look


                After World War One, America was introduced to modern inventions such as radio transmission, traffic lights, lie detectors, band aids and hair dryers.  This meant that if you didn’t have enough time to blow dry your hair because you cut yourself shaving, you could blast the latest hit while speeding through a red light and discuss the consequences with the police force and their new technology (theoretically, though not recommended).  World War One didn’t just change technology, despite the fact that it is the area most text books focus on.  It was the doorway into the modern world, changing how society thought, acted, looked and dressed.  As a make-up designer and a costume quick change assistant, it was my duty in Ah, Wilderness! to transform the actors back into a time before war changed our society, even if I myself was standing backstage in jeans and a t-shirt.

                Watching the BBC and using Google Image Search can only get one so far in trying to attain the look of 1906 America (that is correct- I did turn to the British for ideas of how America looked back then).  Here are a few behind-the-scenes snapshots at trying to live, dress and look as they did back then.

Artist Charles Dana Gibson's parody of
his original Gibson Girl drawing.
The Gibson (not Mel or the Les Paul Custom): The Gibson Girl hairstyle was displayed by many of the female cast in the show.  What started out as a man’s satirical comic book drawing of the ideal Victorian woman was embraced and brought to life and is now as much connected with the time period as corsets and handkerchiefs.  In our dressing rooms downstairs, it required plenty of hairspray, teased hair and loads of bobby pins to pull off the look.  The goal was volume, particularly on the stage where everything is larger than life, which can make it tricky when getting the ladies into their costumes.



Beautiful Victorian Black Glass Buttons
Buttons: Buttons used to be not only necessary but also beautiful; jewelry with a purpose.  Before the wonderfully time-saving inventions of zippers and Velcro, they were in abundant use.  Think about how many buttons you have on you while you are reading this.  Double (or perhaps even triple) the number of buttons and the amount of fabric (in petticoats, waistcoats and jackets), and you can begin to understand why nobody saw anybody back in the 1900s until the afternoon.  It could take half the morning to get dressed.  Sadly, we didn’t have half a morning to get all of the actors costumed.  In fact, we had less than thirty seconds in the case of one costume change.  To tell you the secrets behind that modern costume change would most likely cause several ladies’ maids to turn in their graves.





An example of a gentleman's collar
Collar Pin (or Collar Clip) (or Collar Bar): Most collar pins are only expected to do the duty of holding the two ends of a gentleman’s dress shirt collar together.  Our collar pins worked double hard as they were expected to hold four pieces of cloth together; two pieces of the shirt collar and two pieces of the stiff white collar that has been added to add a classic touch of the time period to the costumes (which makes one sympathize with the actors whose necks don many layers of fabric under the hot stage lights each night).  We had many options for making a collar pin that was designed for the thickness of two pieces of fabric work for four pieces: safety pins, forcing the collar pin through three of the four button holes, teasing the button holes to allow it to go through all four layers, forgetting it and hoping a tie will hold it all in place or duct tape.  I shall leave it up to you to guess what methods we employed.