The Guardian (USA)

'Charles is very stylish': how The Crown's costume designer brought 1980s to life

- Hannah Marriott

With its power bouffants, sweetie-wrapper party d r e s s es and alarming shoulder pads, some call the 1980s the time that fashion forgot. But in the fourth season of The Crown, which starts on TV tomorrow night, the era’s extraordin­ary clothing plays a pivotal role in bringing the decade’s stories back to vivid life. Some looks were faithfully recreated, while others were more loosely inspired by the actual wardrobes of the royal family, as the show’s costume designer, Amy Roberts, explains below.

Diana, Princess of Wales, Wentworth hotel ball, Australian tour

Prince Charles and Diana’s 1983 Australian tour took on existentia­l significan­ce for the royal family, coming at a time of burgeoning republican sentiment. Diana was strategica­lly deployed in the charm offensive, photograph­ed as a doting mother, with baby William on her hip, wearing a seemingly never-ending supply of photogenic outfits.

This Bruce Oldfield gown, in a shade of blue recalling Walt Disney’s 1950 Cinderella, represents the high point of a very successful tour. “It was a deliberate choice to put her in this,” says Roberts. “There is a lot of irritation going on, on that tour, but this dress was the moment you felt maybe they did love each other. There’s sort of romance and youthfulne­ss. The dress is kind of crazy, pure 80s, shimmery, slightly trashy, but it just moves so beautifull­y at the dance, when it’s all breathless and exciting.”

The biggest challenge was sourcing fabrics with the specific weight and drape, and distinctiv­e colour palette, of the era. This particular fabric came from London’s Brick Lane. Afterwards, the Crown’s “genius cutters” recreated the dress from scratch, “working out all of those frills – it looks like a lizard down the side.”

The Queen, played by Olivia Colman, at the Braemar highland games

The Queen was mostly seen in “sugar almond colours” during the 1960s and 1970s of series 3, but now looks a lot more sombre in greens and browns, showing that she has “settled into her life as Queen and matriarch, and has become that steady background figure in everybody’s lives.”

The bow on her blouse “is a pointer to Thatcher, really,” says Roberts, who tried to accentuate developmen­ts in the women’s relationsh­ip through their outfits. The handbag is a recreation of those the Queen famously carries, by Launer, with similar recreation­s created for Thatcher.

Those near-identical bags, as well as Thatcher’s pearls, show that she is “emulating The Queen” at first, something that falls away as the power dynamics change later in the series.

Princess Margaret, played by Helena Bonham Carter

“We just ran with Margaret, because we were dealing with the most extraordin­ary creature that is Helena Bonham Carter,” says Rogers, “so we went with the spirit of Margaret and how Helena was portraying her.”

This heavily boned swimming costume was inspired by corseted Rigby & Peller swimming costumes worn by the real Margaret, but its colour is fiction: all of Margaret’s clothes on the show occupy a “bruised” colour palette, reflecting a tragic stage of her life. “I look at my notebook for her, the samples of all her fabrics, and they are all sombre and strange.”

Prince Charles, played by Josh O’Connor

Roberts found Charles to be quite an eccentric, though elegant, dresser.“He wore beautiful pocket squares and handmade shoes – the lot,” she says. “I think he’s a very stylish dresser, actually.” Pocket squares can still be found in “those swizzy shops in Jermyn Street, though we would often find a fabulous piece of silk and make them” because the modern incarnatio­ns tend to be “less inventive” than “the beautiful paisley, natural dyed” versions that were popular in the 1970s.

O’Connor loved wearing Charles’ double-breasted suits, which he wears to pace around, looking stylishly stressed with his hands in his pockets.

“I often find that actors feel pretty fabulous when they put on a suit they would never wear in their personal lives. It always amuses me that Tobias, who plays Prince Philip, will stagger on set at some horrible early hour in an oatmeal sweater and trousers; an hour later he comes out in a suit and we all swoon.”

Margaret Thatcher, played by Gillian Anderson

Thatcher’s wardrobe required “forensic, meticulous” constructi­on, in order to create a version of the prime minister’s famous power shoulders that did not look like “a 1980s parody” on Gillian Anderson’s small frame. Anderson wore body padding, stepping into a creation which, she said, was “a work of art on its own, like a sculpture”. As for the clothes, “they were made to couture standard, with a lot of meticulous fittings and actors having to be very patient. Gillian would just zone out.”

Apart from one iconic moment – the PM in knife-pleat skirt waving from the doorstep of No 10 – Roberts didn’t make facsimiles of historical looks but “absorbed all the images”. The pussybow blouse, an enduring symbol of female power, had come into fashion as women searched for an alternativ­e to ties to wear in male-dominated workplaces – the US vice presidente­lect, Kamala Harris, even wore one for her historic acceptance speech this week. Thatcher’s blouses were created from silk, mainly found in Paris, though during the course of the series any softness disappears. “At the beginning she was quite grey – she looked ordinary – and as she gets more powerful she drops her voice and looks more streamline­d with padded shoulders.”

A turning point after the Falklands war was represente­d with “what we called ‘the Spock suit’, dark purple with wide shoulders, very militarist­ic, no hint of bows or softness.” She wears it in a meeting with the Queen, in which she is “bombastic – at her worst, in a way”.

 ??  ?? Diana’s dress at the Wentworth hotel ball ‘is kind of crazy, pure 80s, shimmery, slightly trashy, but it just moves so beautifull­y’. Composite: Anwar Hussein/Emics Entertainm­ent; Alex Bailey/Netflix
Diana’s dress at the Wentworth hotel ball ‘is kind of crazy, pure 80s, shimmery, slightly trashy, but it just moves so beautifull­y’. Composite: Anwar Hussein/Emics Entertainm­ent; Alex Bailey/Netflix
 ??  ?? The Queen (played by Olivia Colman, right) is now a ‘steady background figure’. Composite: PA; Des Willie/Netflix
The Queen (played by Olivia Colman, right) is now a ‘steady background figure’. Composite: PA; Des Willie/Netflix

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States