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Ruth Carter
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Morgan: What was your relationship
with Spike in coming up with designs for the film? Did he have very specific ideas for
you?
Carter: Spike was specific with me about certain
things. When he writes he sees certain things, so there are key things that
he will tell me. Like, 'I want the musicians in this film to look like musicians
did in the '50s; I want you to look at COTTON CLUB because I want the film
to have a similar jazzy feel; I want you to look at NEW YORK, NEW YORK, the
way the costume designer worked in that, and compare the differences.'
He'll also tell me some specific things about certain characters.
He'll say [of his own character in the film], 'Giant's clothes should be
big like he really doesn't know how to fit himself in a suit.' He won't
tell me that he thinks Giant should be in pinstripes or in hats all the time;
he will give me that freedom, but there are certain ideas that he has that
he'll communicate to me.
In one of our first meetings he asked me, 'Well, what do you think
about Clarke and Indigo? I don't want one girl to be the good girl
with the nicer clothes and stuff and the other girl as the hooker or something;
I want you to play them as both equally acceptable.' And then I'll think
about that and I'll come back and say 'Clarke may shop here and Indigo may
shop there, and the difference is in how they spend their money. Whereas
Indigo might be a little more practical, Clark might be a bit more trendy.'
We communicate like that.
How do you begin the design process?
I do drawings. On SCHOOL DAZE I did like 70 drawings of different
characters that I showed him, and on DO THE RIGHT THING, I did quite a few
drawings as well. But on this one, because we weren't using the old style
from the jazz musicians of the '50s and '30s and '40s, I decided to compile
pictures and look through magazines and put together a book that paralleled
the period and the contemporary, since it's a contemporary piece with the
'50s styling. Because I'm going to basically buy this show off the rack.
There were only a couple of items that I designed and had made, like Clarke's
dress in the Dizzy Club, when she finally becomes a singer. So I didn't try
to compete with Giorgio Armani and Versace and Valentino; I decided to look
at what they were going to be coming up with for the fall and see if any
of these designers were doing things that were comparable to what we were
trying to do.
So that was one of the differences in the way we approached MO' BETTER
BLUES as opposed to other films.
How much feedback do you get from the actors about their characters'
wardrobe?
In my initial meeting with Denzel we went through the script and we
talked about colors. And most people know [what they don't want], 'Listen,
I look awful in green, the last movie I did they put me in green, I hate
green; please don't buy anything green.' He'll tell me little things before
I start buying, and then in the first fittings we'll try on all kinds of
things; some things don't work, some things work; and he'll say, 'You know,
as I read the script or in the rehearsals, I really want to be comfortable.
I like just to wear some loose pants and a T-shirt, I don't want to be dressed
up.' So I'll take all of that in while I'm out shopping, and I'll see something
that I agree with as well as what he will feel comfortable in. There's a
lot of give and take.
By the final fitting, Denzel was in character the whole time, and
he had his trumpet in his hand, he put on part of the clothes and started
playing the trumpet and looking at himself in the mirror, and I guess he
felt closer to the character at that point and could really feel comfortable
as the character in the clothes.
And then we have people who are very easy. Spike gave me complete
freedom on his character. I said, 'Hey this guy is like Sammy Davis, Jr.' I saw him initially with a
lot of rings and jewelry, and then I said maybe it's not so much jewelry, maybe he'll have a floral
tie and a pinstripe suit and another pattern somewhere, and his socks will be jazzy and crazy, and
maybe he'll love shoes or hats. Because he's an easy size, especially since his things in this film fit
him big, he was easy to coordinate on the hanger first, and look at it and say, 'Oh my goodness.
this is really out there; let's try it on Spike!' And he tried on everything. There were some
things he didn't like, like bowlers; he didn't want any bowler hats
in this movie. 'No bowlers, that reminds me of something, I don't know what,
no bowlers'. You know, so that went back to the store.
Another note he gave me, "I want everything from the socks to be in
character; none of that 'We won't see the feet [in the shot].' When I coordinate,
sometimes you say, 'Well, just go with the same black shoes, because it's
going to be a waist-up shot; this time I was very conscious of always changing
every aspect (aside from the underwear) on the characters because you never
know when Spike will just think 'Let's shoot Rhythm Jones hitting the drum
with his foot,' whatever you call that thing he steps on. And if I let something
slide, that's when I'm caught!
My relationship with him has progressed and I think we have a lot in common in terms of artistic
choices. He basically will let me know when he doesn't like something and also let me know when
he does like things. And on SCHOOL DAZE it was rougher; it was my first film, so he
had a lot more to say, and I appreciated it because I learned from it. And this time I felt a lot more
freedom to really create.
Did you do costume tests on film or video of the actors in their wardrobe to see how they
looked?
I talked to Ernest about the type of gels and lighting that he would
use, but I didn't test anything. I just utilized the actors' skin color and
bought clothes that enhanced their own different shades. From watching dailies
on other films that I've done I can basically tell which textures will work
well, [with] what kind of lighting and backgrounds; sometimes I do camera
tests but this time I didn't.
What was your background before you started on SCHOOL DAZE?
Theatre and opera. I was at Stage West in Massachusetts and then went
to Sante Fe Opera in New Mexico, and then on to the L.A. Theatre Center.
I did basically a lot of period pieces, and a lot of aging things, a lot
of characterization, moreso than contemporary fashion. So this film
has really been a growth for me because it's the most contemporary piece
that I've ever done, aside from SCHOOL DAZE. But SCHOOL DAZE was college
jeans and sneakers and inexpensive things, and DO THE RIGHT THING
was very urban, summer, hot. It was more characterization I felt in those
two pieces, and although this did have some characterization it focused on
fashion fashion of the '50s and how it relates to what they have out
right now.
Were there instances here where costumes dictated the
characters?
I think Bleek's character was very simple; we used Yoji Yamamoto on
Denzel, a Japanese designer the lines are very simple and elegant.
We used Armani on him because some of the Armani suits are cut like the suits
were cut in the '50s broad shoulders coming down very narrow.
& Sabata Russo: He has very old styling and it's a contemporary
look. So in that light I tried to get the designers together that portrayed
the characters.
[For] Giancarlo, a lot of Jean Paul Gaultier, because his character
is very flamboyant: he dates a French woman, and he's very European-acting,
I guess. [And] Gaultier is very busy and avant-garde, so I zeroed in on that
style with him.
The big guys were the challenge because there's not a lot out there
for big men, so I got old suits from the '50s out of rental houses in New
York.
What character was perhaps the most difficult for you to pin
down?
It went pretty well on this one, I think because I had so many little
meetings with Spike and Ernest and everybody. And I have so many clippings
from magazines, and I said, 'Well, Shadow will be a little more colorful
because of his skin color and his character wants to be out in front, so
we'll brighten him up a lot more than everybody else.' So I sort of
knew what I wanted. And I had a great crew who helped me along the way, so
we had enough choices. We had the budget to have choices, so when something
didn't work we'd switch to something else and try it out.
I think Denzel's character at first wasn't defined for the actor for
me. I didn't know where he was going with the character, so that was a little
hairy. I tried a lot of things on him at first, because I didn't know exactly
how he wanted to play Bleek. I knew Bleek was the leader [of the musical
group], but I didn't know what Denzel was going to do with the character.
So through the fitting process he came up with the fact that he would wear
his tie up above his shirt as opposed to tying it underneath his collar,
and that would be the only little thing that he had going on there. He doesn't
have a lot of pins on him, like Lefthand Lacey, Giancarlo's character, [who]
has a whole lot going on.
It all happens in pre-production, and it's so important to communicate
with the actors and have them in for fittings. You can catch them anywhere
during rehearsals and say, Hey, put this jacket on. Hey, try these shoes
on, you like these? Walk around in them for a little while. Let me see how
they look.' So that there are no hold-ups. I like when things just keep rolling.
Don't stop on my account.
Once the cameras do start rolling, does it happen that actors may
not feel comfortable in their costumes?
Sometimes the actors do feel uncomfortable, but sometimes they feel
uncomfortable for a lot of reasons, and wardrobe seems to get the [attention].
They can say, 'Well, you know, my suit doesn't fit right so I don't feel
good today.' You know.
'If I had on different clothes I could act better.'
Right. 'My shoes!!' So we stroke a lot, and say 'But you look
great, you look wonderful.' Sometimes that helps their performance,
too.
It's very important for me and I have had instances where I didn't
have budget and I had to put somebody in something that didn't really fit
right, on some video or whatever, so it's very important for me that the
actor feels good. I have a job to do in terms of relaying a character with
the clothes, but it's important for me that the actor, he's the guy in front
of the camera, it's important that they feel that they are in the right clothes
for the character. If it takes a discussion with the actors saying, 'Well,
why don't you think that he would wear a white shirt, these are my reasons,'
and sometimes when they hear your reasons, they say. 'Well, yeah, you have
a point there. Maybe we can utilize my idea somewhere else,' and then in
styling another suit or ensemble I'll incorporate their ideas.
I don't think that designers are dressing mannequins; they're dressing
people, and the actors interpret the characters in some way that you may
not be thinking in your own interpretation. So it's important to have that
communication there. And I've had instances where it's been very hard when
the actor didn't know the character they were playing; they hadn't decided
themselves, so the clothes were very difficult for me because they were looking
for it within the clothes and they didn't really know, [and] it's a big conflict.
But on this one, the actors were great, they were very cooperative, very
professional. I had literally no big problems at all. No fits.
Did that surprise you going into the film, given that it is less
dictated by period fashions and perhaps more by the actors' personal
tastes?
I was a little nervous. I had never worked with Denzel before, I didn't
know what he was going to be like he turned out to be a charm. A lot
of people I knew, too Giancarlo was back from SCHOOL DAZE, Steve White is back
from DO THE RIGHT THING. I had already developed relationships with these people, so they
could talk openly with me and say, 'Can I have something else, can I have another shirt? Please???'
So it made it easier as opposed to them going to somebody they didn't know, or me responding in
some way like I was a costume diva, which I am not.
Because it involves a jazz ensemble, you're not just dressing
individuals, you're dressing a group that has to appear together on stage;
were there considerations taken for that?
Definitely. I try to make sure there's a color balance. Even though
everyone has an individual look I try to make sure there's a little piece
of purple here, and there's a little piece of purple over there, accessorize
in this way and that way and all that kind of stuff. There are things that
I would have done differently, because a lot of times you don't have every
piece right away and you're constantly shopping in the first few weeks of
production, so you're changing things and you say, hmm, he should have worn
the grey suit and then the black suit, instead of the other way around.
But it's not horrible. I guess you're your own worst critic.
There's always things you would do differently.
I look for that balance, because they are a group, just as if I were
styling a real band, how they look together on stage. But a lot of times,
they all looked very individual, and that's what I think we did in terms
of the '50s styling; everyone is individual and I as a costume designer tried
to optically bring that aesthetic into the film and make everyone balance,
in terms of color.
I was shocked, because [although] Spike went shopping with me on SCHOOL
DAZE and on DO THE RIGHT THING, he didn't go shopping on this. Even though he is not a
costume designer, it's kind of nice, you feel like it's your
master class with Spike Lee. Because there are little things that he wants
to include and I think he enjoys it.
Does he feel perhaps that you no longer need a master class? Is
that why he didn't go out shopping with you on this picture?
Well, for him I think this was bigger, more to think about for him,
so he didn't really have time. I think he would have liked to, because I
think he likes clothes, and likes fashion. Actually he had one of my assistants
take pictures of shoes all over New York, he wanted 100 Polaroids so that
he could look through them and shop for his shoes as the character Giant.
So we did that. He has fun shoes. Like two-tones and animal print shoes and
stripes and all that kind of stuff. And then he started walking with a limp
and I thought, 'Oh, perfect!'
I do a lot of TV pilots and videos and stuff. I'm just starting, [and]
I feel I really have a long way to go, and I feel blessed that Spike has
worked with me on three projects because I've learned so much from working
with him and at times when it seems like he's being hard on me, you know
within the thick of it, I'm really just trying to take care of whatever,
getting the guys out there, you know, 'Why are you sitting down and getting
coffee when nobody's dressed?' I have to run and get my people to get on
top of it, I look back at all that and say, He's doing all this for a reason,
and I'm learning from him as well.
And everything is so different. You start a new project, you're starting
all over again, and it's nice because last year when I did I'M GONNA GIT
YOU SUCKA I left them towards the end of their production period to do DO
THE RIGHT THING, and I felt like 'Oh wow I get to start all over again; all
the mistakes I made on SUCKA I will not make on DO THE RIGHT THING,' because I've
learned. On everything I've learned a little bit more, and I feel I've
grown every time. [Now] I look at some things in DO THE RIGHT THING and I
say, 'Oh my goodness, what was I thinking? I mean they're okay probably
to anyone else, but I'm thinking 'Oh man, that should be blue!'
Carter received an Academy Award nomination for MALCOLM X. Since then
her credits have run the course from comedies and musicals (WHAT'S LOVE GOT TO DO WITH IT, THE GREAT WHITE HYPE) to period dramas (ROSEWOOD, COBB, and the upcoming Steven Spielberg film AMISTAD).
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