Friday, December 11, 2009

What is the best way to do stage makeup to make the actors look as though they are in a black and white film?

If you want to know the actual make-up program, try the following:





For women:


-dark lipstick tones


-pale foundation (you want as much contrast between skin and lips)


-VERY dark mascara only on the lower lashes.


-No pencil, if any, then only on the upper lid.


-use heated rollers on 95% dry hair for effect


-dark nail-varnish





For Men:


-straight side-parting


-lots of hair oil


-plain foundation and nothing elseWhat is the best way to do stage makeup to make the actors look as though they are in a black and white film?
gray or white pancake. Gray is actually better.





We use 60% gray scale cards for light readings because that's how white people's flesh tone are seen by the black and white light meter (light meters are color blind to a degree).What is the best way to do stage makeup to make the actors look as though they are in a black and white film?
I knew someone in a play who tried to do this. They took black and white photos of the actors and then tried to blend black and white make up to get the right skin tones as they appeared in b%26amp;w. (Different shades of gray, really)





It was really time consuming - and it looked horrible. My friend kept saying that she looked like the tin man from the Wizard of Oz (even though he's silver - not grey).





In the end - they stuck with the black and white set and costumes - but they used their natural skin colors and hair colors. They tried to keep everything as neutral as possible. No bright lipsticks - and blush was not ';pink'; but simply a dark skin tone color.
Not with makeup. with stage lighting and set design. Paint the set with gray tones, light with chocolate or gray gels. Use as much grey tone costuming as possible.

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