146k views
4 votes
Like the sets, the costume choices for the characters are also very minimal and basic.

Considering that these characters are high-level ranking soldiers and royalty, is this what
you might expect these characters to wear? Why do you think the producers chose to clothe
the characters this way? Would you have made this choice? Why or why not?
BASED ON THE MOVIE THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH

User Tanveer
by
7.4k points

2 Answers

4 votes

Final answer:

Costume choices for characters in a play are made carefully to support the story being told. The producers of 'The Tragedy of Macbeth' may have chosen minimal and basic costumes for high-level ranking soldiers and royalty to highlight important themes or convey a specific artistic vision.

Step-by-step explanation:

Costume choices for characters in a play, such as in the film 'The Tragedy of Macbeth', are made carefully to support the story being told. The producers may have chosen minimal and basic costumes for high-level ranking soldiers and royalty to highlight important themes, create a certain atmosphere, or convey a specific artistic vision. For example, in the play, the costume choices may have been intended to emphasize the characters' power and authority rather than their physical appearance. As a costume designer, I would consider the context, themes, and vision of the production to determine the appropriate costume choices for the characters.

User Dacy
by
8.0k points
4 votes

Answer:

Costume Designer's Goals

Costume design is the most personal aspect of design. The costume designer must create clothes for characters that, on the one hand, reflect the ideas and goals of the play, but, on the other hand should look like the character chose the clothing in the same way you choose yours every day. Similarly, because we all wear clothes but probably do not design houses, audiences and actors will make strong, personal associations with what a character is wearing on stage.

Costumes give information on the tone and style of a play. They may look just like what we wear today, or they may look like what people really wore at the time in which the play is set. Both of these would be illusionistic costuming. On the other hand, costumes might be representative of an idea in the play; for example, actors costumed in robes or unitards of various colors will establish a theatrical style. A different, stylized approach to costuming might also use some period elements mixed with contemporary dress; this would give the audience a flavor of a historical period without trying to create a full, theatrical illusion of another time and place.

Costumes tell us a great deal about the time and place in which a play is set. Dresses with an empire waist made of light fabrics in light colors place us in the early 18th century, such as in Jane Austin's novels. Blue jeans with bell bottoms and painted or embroidered with many bright colors tell us a character belongs in the late 1960's.

Costumes give us information on individual characters, on the relationships among characters, and on groups of characters. First consider your own wardrobe, and what you would choose to wear on a job interview, on a big date, to wash the car, or to come to class. What you wear says a great deal about who you are and about what you are intending to do. The same is true on the stage, but on stage we make even more associations with a character's clothing because we know it is specifically chosen for the play. If we see a woman on stage in a bright red dress, we will make associations with the dress's cut and color. For example, we might decide that the character is dressed for a night on the town. We might associate either passion and love with the red color, or perhaps blood and violence, or perhaps images of the devil. If other characters on stage wear subdued tones or cool colors, then the character in red will contrast with the other characters. On the other hand, other characters in shades of red will be visually linked the character in the red dress. Similarly, characters will be visually linked on stage if they wear clothing with similar silhouettes or colors.

The costume designer works closely with actors. He designs costumes for that specific actor's body as much as for the role the actor is playing. For example, if a designer had planned the red dress mentioned above for the central female character in a play, but the director casts a woman with orange hair and freckles, the red dress will no longer have the intended effect when worn by that actress. A more complimentary color will be chosen. Similarly, costumes can be used to enhance an actor's height, girth, natural coloring or to draw attention to any part of the actor. In the end, the actor must be comfortable wearing her costume: the work of the actor and of the designer can be undermined if an actor is uncomfortable in the clothing or does not know how to wear it and move in it correctly. For example, actors today must practice walking around in full length, hooped skirts or in a top hat and tails so that the character can appear to the audience to be comfortable in such clothing.

Finally, the costume designer must support the director's concept and must work with the other designers to create a coordinated visual effect.

Costume Designer's Tools

As discussed in the last chapter, the elements of visual design are line, mass, composition, space, color, and texture. The costume designer uses the design elements somewhate differently from a set designer. The first important element of a costume is its silhouette, which combines its line and mass. Silhouette is the fastest way to identify the time and place of a period costume. Silhouette also tells what parts of the body are emphasized, hidden, or displayed by the clothing. Contrast a Restoration woman's silhouette with a woman dressed to go out today: the Restoration woman wore an enormous skirt with underskirts and panniersm

User Kostix
by
7.8k points