Costume Designer Edward K. Gibbon's Magical Interpretation Of 'The Luminaries'

By Dan Ahwa
Viva
Eva Green and Eve Hewson in The Luminaries. Photo / Supplied.


The combination of a crime, romance and high drama promises to make for epic viewing in the new six-part television adaptation of author Eleanor Catton's Man Booker Prize-winning novel The Luminaries. Screening on TVNZ 1, the adaptation has been a long time coming and a major development for Eleanor, who won the Man Booker Prize in 2013 for her 800-page blockbuster. Aged 27, she was the youngest recipient of the prestigious literary award.

However, there are notable differences between the novel and the series. The book's storyline is that of a man who stumbles into a covert council of 12 men, while the adaptation begins with adventurer Anna Wetherall, played by Irish actress Eve Hewson (Robin Hood, The Knick, Bridge Of Spies), who has sailed from Britain to New Zealand to begin a new life.

Pivotal to bringing the book to life are the costumes. The ability to highlight New Zealand during the 1860s gold rush through dress requires a keen understanding of what people wore while they crossed sea and land in search of new beginnings and, hopefully, fortune.

Tasked with helping to bring the characters to life was Bafta Award-winning costume designer Edward K. Gibbon, whose impressive credits include The Virgin Queen, Black Mirror, War & Peace, Skins, Secret Diary of a Call Girl, Holy Flying Circus, The Honourable Woman and Harlots.

Award-winning costume designer Edward K. Gibbon. Photo / Supplied.
Award-winning costume designer Edward K. Gibbon. Photo / Supplied.

"I read The Luminaries when it was first published, while I was filming Skins in Toronto - a slightly different subject matter! I loved it and was very excited when I heard it was going to be filmed for television," says Edward, speaking from London, where he is currently making scrubs for Britain's NHS, before resuming work on his next project for Netflix - another period story set in the 19th century called The Irregulars.

Invited to work on the project by the series producer Andrew Woodhead of the British film and television production company Working Title, Edward eventually met director Claire McCarthy and, last year, found himself preparing for his first trip to New Zealand and Auckland's West Coast.

“I’d never been to New Zealand and it was an extraordinary experience. The beauty of the natural landscape was awe-inspiring and I tried to feed as much as I could into my work. It was quite daunting to travel so far to somewhere I knew nobody, but I had incredible support from an amazing crew, helmed by the brilliant Alice Baker as a supervisor and Shani Gyde as my assistant designer.”

Before moving into television, Edward studied History of Design at Manchester Polytechnic. His extensive work in the West End at the Donmar Warehouse, Almeida and the National Theatre - as well as a two-year stint working with the costume team of Glyndebourne Opera - makes this self-taught sewer acutely aware of the nuances required for successful period costuming for film, especially one that involves the unique integration of Maori and Western styles of dress.

“I did extensive research both online and physically at the Victoria & Albert Museum and Sands [film production company in London]. We were lucky in that photography was becoming more widespread in that period and nearly every new frontier town had its own travelling photographer. So there was a large amount of amazing source material to reference. I was particularly inspired by the artfully posed studio shots - cartes-de-visite - which were a rite of passage for many Maori. Negative Kept, for example, is a brilliant compilation by art researcher Michael Graham Stewart. [The photographs] are heart-breaking and poignant and illustrate this new mixing-up of cultures to create a unique style.”

WATCH: The Costumes in The Luminaries

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"I looked at a lot of art from the time too, from Europe, Russia, the USA, and New Zealand. I tried to mix this up by referencing modern fashion and documentary photography and images of the natural beauty of the New Zealand landscape. I didn’t want to limit us to a painstaking recreation of what people imagine the past to look like. Eleanor’s extraordinary book, and the time and place it was set in, seemed to call for bigger flights of imagination.”

That heightened take on reality is what makes the adaptation unique - sumptuous costuming, most obvious on the two leading female protagonists - Anna's character and Bafta-winning actress Eva Green (The Dreamers, Casino Royale, Penny Dreadful), who plays the swindling brothel madam Lydia Wells, who we meet in the first episode resplendent in a rich, velvet green dress with exotic feathers in her red hair.

Victorian Gothic: Edward says some tried to replicate the world they had left behind but others, through choice or necessity, went in a different direction. Photos / Supplied.
Victorian Gothic: Edward says some tried to replicate the world they had left behind but others, through choice or necessity, went in a different direction. Photos / Supplied.

“Eva’s character, Lydia, is an incredible creation of Eleanor’s imagination,” says Edward. “She jumps from the pages of the book and screenplay so vividly as such a unique, exotic and otherworldly being. I couldn’t wait to begin clothing her. Lydia is a woman looking after herself in a wild, male-dominated world, having already travelled across continents.

“Her interests are far-reaching and esoteric; magical and spiritual. But she is also a performer, so I wanted to portray all of this in her clothing. She is her own unique creation, someone who doesn’t follow fashion and isn’t restricted by society’s norms, a true punk, pirate and romantic outlaw.”

Eva was also involved in the process of dressing Lydia, as she was with many in her resume of enigmatic characters - from the Victorian medium Vanessa Ives in Penny Dreadful to the charismatic headmistress Alma LeFay Peregrine in the 2016 fantasy film Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children.

“It was a beautiful collaboration,” recalls Edward. “She is such an extraordinary actor and invests so heavily in every role she plays, pulling references from an enormous range of sources. We talked a lot before she arrived in Auckland, and sent images back and forth, slowly getting closer to what Lydia might actually look like. Once she had arrived, we had lots of fittings, narrowing down our choices. It was constantly evolving. This went on throughout the whole shoot as Eva learned more of her character, and we responded to that through the clothes she chose.”

Left: Anna Wetherall, played by Irish actress Eve Hewson wearing the pink dress. Right: Richard Te Are plays the role of Te RauTauwhare. Photos / Supplied.
Left: Anna Wetherall, played by Irish actress Eve Hewson wearing the pink dress. Right: Richard Te Are plays the role of Te RauTauwhare. Photos / Supplied.

Also notable and central to the storytelling is a distinctive pink dress worn by Anna, embedded with gold. “That dress has so many layers - both physically and metaphorically,” says Edward. “One of the most interesting things about dressing Anna was that, apart from her initial outfit, she never chooses what she wears; she is always dressed by other people. What makes that dress even more nuanced is that it was a dress made for Lydia designed by a man, Alistair Lauderback. It was also the vehicle for transporting the gold (spoiler alert!) So Eleanor had created an extraordinarily symbolic piece of clothing - and a massive challenge.

“I also felt that a pink dress would work better in the environment than the [original] orange. Eleanor and Claire agreed and were happy to go along with a change of colour. The dress is made from layers of different weights of silk, all beautifully dyed to a multitude of shades from rose gold to magenta by our in-house textile artist, Sonia Murray.

It was cut by our cutter, Louise Paul, and made in our workroom, then painted and aged by Dan Calvert, our breakdown expert. Just to complicate things, we had to replicate it exactly multiple times to deal with filming and stunt requirements. I think we created five versions, so it’s quite an extraordinary feat by my brilliant team.”

What the men wear in the series is important too, given they are a key part of the source material and made up the majority of gold diggers during this period. We are introduced to a diverse cast of characters played by an equally diverse mix of actors including Marton Csokas, Ewen Leslie and Yoson An. One key character we meet in the first episode, Emery Stines, played by Himesh Patel (Eastenders, Yesterday), is dressed with plenty of self-expression.

 Edward says he loves the cut and the element of subtle dandyism in the men's looks. Photo / Supplied.
Edward says he loves the cut and the element of subtle dandyism in the men's looks. Photo / Supplied.

“I love the men’s clothing of the period,” says Edward. “I love the cut and the element of subtle dandyism, the little flourishes and details. But I also fell in love with the outfits of the original miners as I started to research. The unexpected colours in particular that they favoured - pink shirts and mustard kerchiefs - it reconfirmed that the past wasn’t always black and white, or even sepia.”

This pivotal moment in New Zealand’s history is further reflected in the costumes from the series, as cultural and class systems collide against the backdrop of New Zealand’s natural landscape. Combined with the rich story, this makes for one of the most exciting wardrobes to come out of TV this year.

New Zealand's natural environment lends itself as a stunning backdrop to the dramatic costumes of the era. Photo / Supplied.
New Zealand's natural environment lends itself as a stunning backdrop to the dramatic costumes of the era. Photo / Supplied.

It was so interesting to research this period and to realise what people went through [during] the journey to New Zealand” says Edward. “Some tried to replicate the world they had left behind but others, through choice or necessity, went in a different direction. In a way, clothing became much more modern as people took items from different cultures and periods and put them together in a different way.”

The Luminaries screens from Sunday, May 17, at 8.30pm on TVNZ 1

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