Montreal Gazette

THINK PINK

Fabulous fashion of Mrs. Maisel more than attire

- BROOKE LEFFERTS

Fans of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel know the show’s clothes deliver eye-popping colour and to-die-for style, but they might not know the costumes represent more than 1950s couture. They also reflect each character’s mood and developmen­t. Costume designer Donna Zakowska said she thought about how each character changed from season 1 of the hit show to season 2, which premièred on Amazon Prime Video in December. Zakowska started out studying painting at École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, which instilled a “very strong response to colour,” she said in a recent interview, and that influenced her approach in costume design. One of her first decisions was putting lead character Midge Maisel, played by Rachel Brosnahan, in a baby pink coat in the first season when she is married and seemingly happy. “I do feel that colour signals things to people, and you know I don’t take it for granted,” Zakowska said. “I love doing it, and I put a lot of effort into really working with the palette and working with the colours. It started with that pink coat, but that became sort of a characteri­stic of who Midge was when I first started. But when Midge’s husband leaves her, her character puts on different, darker colours. “I basically did this with most of the characters, and it’s a little bit natural in a way because I do think that there is this emotional response that is inherent in colour,” Zakowska said. Brosnahan said while the second season is full of “exceptiona­l clothes,” the outfits aren’t just eye candy. Zakowska helps shape the narrative with her designs. “She’s a storytelle­r. And she dives just as deeply, if not more deeply in some ways, than we do into these characters, into their arcs, into the stories, into the settings, into everything that came before and is yet to come.” “She is a mad scientist,” Maisel creator Amy Sherman-Palladino said in a recent interview. “She doesn’t believe a hat is a hat. You know, a hat is character. It’s a person. That hat needs to reflect where the person is internally. She started it last year with (the pink coat) and when Joel (Mr. Maisel) left, the pink coat left, because the pink coat represente­d who she was with Joel. And then pink went away for a while, and when pink started to come back, it was a different kind of pink because she was a different kind of woman. (Zakowska’s) just a very fascinatin­g, brilliant person.” Zakowska said she leads a crew of at least 25 people on set to dress the principal players and the extras in hundreds of costume changes. She pays strict attention to detail, even for day players, who often wear 1950s outfits found in vintage stores or on the internet. But most of the clothes worn by the principal characters are designed by Zakowska. Not all the clothes are fun to wear. Zakowska said one of the most important accessorie­s on the show is the underwear — which had to be tight and supportive, even for the extras. “It’s like really the end of the era of the corset … that’s something you really can’t avoid. We can’t all have period bras, but we worked with Playtex and they had a certain bra they created for us that we used. And so you do to a degree have to sort of pull women in, you know, bring the bust up … there’s no way around it, otherwise we couldn’t get people into those dresses.” The second season provides much deeper insight into the characters, like Midge’s mother, Rose, who leaves her uptight life in Manhattan and takes off to Paris, which Zakowska relays in colour and style.

 ?? NICOLE RIVELLI/AMAZON ?? Costume designer Donna Zakowska, left, dresses actress Rachel Brosnahan for The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, using colour to show changes in her character. The comedy-drama, set in the 1950s, follows a housewife who discovers she has what it takes to be a standup comedian.
NICOLE RIVELLI/AMAZON Costume designer Donna Zakowska, left, dresses actress Rachel Brosnahan for The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, using colour to show changes in her character. The comedy-drama, set in the 1950s, follows a housewife who discovers she has what it takes to be a standup comedian.

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