Bangkok Post

Red carpets look for coronaviru­s makeover

- JILL SERJEANT

It could be a long while until you hear that Hollywood red carpet staple: “And who are you wearing tonight?”

Red carpets, the lifeblood of movie premieres and award shows, thrive on the buzz of glamorous actors, show-stopping gowns and screaming fans.

But as Hollywood grapples with the coronaviru­s pandemic, the red carpets of the near future will look very different — if they happen at all.

Crowded with photograph­ers, A-list stars, publicists and fans begging for selfies, red carpets are a crucial element in the Hollywood publicity machine. But what makes them so compelling to watch is what makes them so difficult to manage in the era of social distancing.

“Everybody is desperate to get back to a normal version, where we get to be with people in person, shoulder to shoulder,” said one Hollywood publicist who preferred not to be named.

“I don’t see it coming back fully until we’ve got some kind of vaccine. Who knows when people are going to want to engage physically in personal interactio­ns, let alone the travel to get to those places?” the publicist said.

A big test will come in July when Christophe­r Nolan thriller Tenet for AT&T’s Warner Bros and Walt Disney’s live-action Mulan are scheduled as the first big film releases since the new coronaviru­s shuttered cinemas worldwide and studios moved the rollout of dozens of films to the end of 2020 or into 2021.

Warner Bros and Disney have not announced their publicity plans for the two movies, nor have the organisers of television’s Emmy Awards, which are due to take place in Los Angeles in September.

Los Angeles event planners 15|40 Production­s, which has designed more than 200 Hollywood premieres, is consulting with several studios on plans that incorporat­e social distancing.

“We took the red carpet and we had to re-envision how it would work post-quarantine and keeping people apart,” said Craig Waldman, president of 15|40 Production­s.

TV crews and photograph­ers, who usually elbow for room, would be separated into pens divided by plexiglass, while distance barriers would keep media people at least 2m away from actors. Celebritie­s would interact with fans via giant LED screens.

“Having a live fan element is going to be a thing for the future, once a vaccine is found,” said Waldman.

That means a big reduction in media outlets on the carpet, and plenty of masks.

“I don’t know that we will see Emmy-nominated actresses walking the Emmy red carpet wearing masks,” said Hollywood Reporter writer Chris Gardner. “I do think some people — maybe photograph­ers, also journalist­s — may have to ask questions through masks.”

The biggest unknown is whether A-listers will turn up.

Mike Zimet, whose New York security company’s client list includes actors Alec Baldwin and Lin-Manuel Miranda, says tight safeguards will need to be in place.

“I know one [celebrity] I’m protecting right now is staying away from everything,” said Zimet, who doesn’t expect red carpets to return in New York until autumn, or possibly winter.

Zimet said celebritie­s “have to decide if your health, of the family and yourself, is worth it”.

Meanwhile, publicists have been getting creative with virtual premieres and interviews in which actors appear on Zoom or Skype from their homes.

It’s worked well for small-budget films, cutting travel costs and allowing actors to be more relaxed.

“They are not in an uncomforta­ble chair with lights all around them. It’s more like chit-chatting with a sort of new friend they have just met on their computer,” said a veteran industry publicist who has organised several virtual events.

But it’s a far cry from the excitement of a bustling red carpet.

“This virtual premiere is quite, quite strange,” British actress Kristin Scott Thomas said on Zoom from a sofa at home, promoting her film Military Wives.

“It’s just as frightenin­g but just a hell of a lot more comfortabl­e because you’re wearing your own dress,” she giggled.

 ??  ?? A conceptual rendering of press interview pens separated by plexiglass for red carpet arrival events.
A conceptual rendering of press interview pens separated by plexiglass for red carpet arrival events.

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