Los Angeles Times

ONLY LOOKS BLACK AND WHITE

- calendar@latimes.com

Sandy Powell designs in color for “Wonderstru­ck.”

BY VALLI HERMAN >>> To understand the challenges facing “Wonderstru­ck” costume designer Sandy Powell, take a photo of something complex and colorful, say, a crowded city street, and then make it look cinematic in black and white. Is it dull? Hard to distinguis­h textures? ¶ The three-time Oscar winner (“Shakespear­e in Love,” “The Aviator” and “The Young Victoria”) found a solution in the palm of her hand when making costumes for the film, half of which was shot in black and white. Powell applied a black-and-white filter to to her iPhone when snapping images of those costumes. ¶ That kind of creative problem-solving may be partly why she won those three Oscars and earned an additional nine nomination­s, including two in 2016 for “Carol” and “Cinderella,” and earlier ones for “Gangs of New York,” “Velvet Goldmine” and “Hugo.” ¶ Like “Hugo,” “Wonderstru­ck” is based on a complex graphic novel by Brian Selznick telling the story of two deaf runaways, Rose and Ben, in two eras and two aesthetics: a black-andwhite, silent movie feel for Rose in 1927, and a gritty, colorful 1977 with a full soundtrack for Ben. ¶ Powell reunited with several frequent collaborat­ors, including director Todd Haynes, cinematogr­apher Ed Lachman and “Wonderstru­ck” author Selznick. ¶ She takes us inside her process in a recent conversati­on.

You’re an executive producer on “Wonderstru­ck.” How did that come about?

It happened quite naturally. I met Brian while we were shooting “Hugo.” During a visit to L.A., I visited him in San Diego … and grabbed “Wonderstru­ck” off the shelf

and read it in one sitting. I said to Brian that it should be a film and he should write the screenplay. I gave it to Todd and talked to him about doing the film. You had the script that Selznick wrote, but did you also rely on his graphic novel

for reference?

For costumes, not so much, funnily enough. For the older Rose character, I didn’t do anything like the illustrati­on in the book. Brian wasn’t offended because he had already gone through that with me on “Hugo.”

Illustrati­ons don’t necessaril­y work on camera. The other thing to remember is that when Brian writes his books, he’s come up with what they wear based on what he thinks the characters look like. When we cast a film, you may get a kid who doesn’t look like the kid in the drawing, so

Millicent Simmonds, who plays Rose, is deaf. Had you ever worked with deaf actors before?

Never. We did all learn some very basic sign language. You also just learn to look at somebody and gesticulat­e a lot, which I tend to do anyway. You can actually mime or talk, and most of the time there would be an interprete­r there.

I think what made it really great is that there is so much expression going on. Deaf people have such fantastic facial expression­s and ways of communicat­ing that it was infectious; it spread among the crew.

In the absence of dialogue during portions of the film, did you feel you had to provide more richness or texture to the costumes, particular­ly since they were in black and white?

Not so much because there was no dialogue but because it was shot in black and white, which I hadn’t done before. It is a very different process from when you are dealing with color. In addition to color, I had to look at texture and contrast. I find color very, very important and I will often start off with color before I know what people are wearing.

How did you teach yourself to “see” in black and white?

I would put something together that I thought looked great and photograph it in black and white, and, oh, it looks dull, bland. There was trial and error. I also photograph­ed fabric during constructi­on. I spoke to Ed [Lachman, director of photograph­y] about this, and he wanted extreme contrast — deep blacks, clear whites and definite difference­s in tones. Plaid helped.

So if we saw the 1920s set in real life, would it look black and white?

Even though I knew I was working in black and white, I couldn’t help myself from putting things together with colors that I thought worked. I wanted it to look nice to the eye and for behind-the-scenes photos. Maybe I made a little bit more work for myself.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? OSCAR winner Sandy Powell says she had never worked in black and white before “Wonderstru­ck.”
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times OSCAR winner Sandy Powell says she had never worked in black and white before “Wonderstru­ck.”
 ?? Myles Aronowitz Amazon Studios / Roadside Attraction­s ??
Myles Aronowitz Amazon Studios / Roadside Attraction­s
 ?? Mary Cybulski Amazon Studios and Roadside Attraction­s ??
Mary Cybulski Amazon Studios and Roadside Attraction­s
 ?? Sandy Powell ??
Sandy Powell
 ?? Sandy Powell ?? SKETCHES by costume designer Sandy Powell illustrate her process in building the color and black-andwhite worlds of “Wonderstru­ck,” which follows two deaf runaways in different eras: Rose (Millicent Simmonds), right, in 1927, and Ben (Oakes Fegley,...
Sandy Powell SKETCHES by costume designer Sandy Powell illustrate her process in building the color and black-andwhite worlds of “Wonderstru­ck,” which follows two deaf runaways in different eras: Rose (Millicent Simmonds), right, in 1927, and Ben (Oakes Fegley,...

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