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fuckyeahcostumedramas · 11 months
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Chantel Riley as Trudy Clarke in Frankie Drake Mysteries (TV Series, 2017–2021). 
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marcmarcmomarc · 4 months
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The Owl House: The New Year’s Special
A post-epilogue special starring Luz and her two families celebrating the new year between the two realms.
Cast:
Dee Bradley Baker as Princess
Eric Bauza as Gilbert Park & Faust
Bob Bergen as Barcus
J.B. Blanc as Professor Hermonculus
Steve Blum as Salty
Benjamin Bratt as Manny Noceda
Kimberly Brooks as Skara & Eileen
Isaac Ryan Brown as Gus Porter
Bruce Carey as Mason
Matt Chapman as Steve Tholomule & Harvey Park
Parvesh Cheena as Tibblet-Tibblie Grimm Hammer III “Tibbles”
Noshir Dalal as Adrian Graye Vernworth
Felicia Day as Bria
Ariana DeBose as Tía Valentina Noceda
Elijah DeJesus @not-so-average-fangirl as Prima Gabi Noceda
Grey DeLisle as Masha, Katya, Cat, Usurper, & Bonesborough Brawl Security Guard
Jorge Diaz as Matt Tholomule
Michaela Dietz as Vee
Nik Dodani as Gavin
Deb Doetzer as Gwendolyn Clawthorne
Jason Douglas as Osran
Tati Gabrielle as Willow Park
Eileen Galindo as Flora D’splora
Peter Gallagher as Dell Clawthorne
Noah Galvin as Jerbo
Kimiko Glenn as Long-Haired Bat Kid
Elizabeth Grullon as Camila Noceda
Harvey Guillén as Angmar
Arin Hanson as Eye-Eating Monster, Snaggleback, & Papa Titan
Alex Hirsch as King Clawthorne & Hooty
Holly @hollowtones as Mohawk Bat Kid
Chris Houghton as Bill
Oscar Isaac as Tío Emilio Noceda
Keston John as Darius Deamonne
Cissy Jones as Lilith Clawthorne
Mela Lee as Kikimora
Jason Liebrecht as Vitimir
Erica Lindbeck as Emira Blight
Kevin Locarro as Braxas
Rachael MacFarlane as Odalia Blight
Ally Maki as Viney
Wendie Malick as Eda Clawthorne
Shannon McKain as Morton
Mosco Moon as Olive (Gabi’s Girlfriend)
Rita Moreno as Abuela Luna Noceda
Ryan O’Flanagan as Edric Blight
Johnny Ortiz as Tío Mateo Noceda
Penny Parker @snapscube as Bucket Hat Bat Kid
Jim Pirri as Alador Blight
Anairis Quiñones as Azura
Matthew Rhys as Philip Wittebane/Emperor Belos
Kevin Michael Richardson as Tarak, Bonesborough Brawl Commentator, & Tom
Eden Riegel as Boscha, Amelia, Bo, & Abominations
Bumper Robinson as Hieronymus Bump
Zeno Robinson as Hunter, Derwin, & Male Camp Friend
Sarah-Nicole Robles as Luz Noceda
Avi Roque as Raine Whispers
Isabella Rosselini as Bat Queen
Roger Craig Smith as Jacob Hopkins & Warden Wrath
Hailee Steinfeld as Female Camp Friend
April Stewart as Greater Basilisk
Christopher Swindle as Graveyard Keeper
Fred Tatasciore as Malphas
Jen Taylor as Hettie Cutburn
Dana Terrace as Tinella Nosa & Severine
Morgan Terry as Hecate
Kari Wahlgren as Amber, Eberwolf, Villainous Lucy, & Barista
Mae Whitman as Amity Blight
Gary Anthony Williams as Perry Porter
Debra Wilson as Terra Snapdragon
Fryda Wolff as The Collector
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wmproprt · 5 months
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Victor Davis Hanson @VDHanson
The Colorado Insurrection
@realDonaldTrump is being erased from the Colorado primary (and general?) ballot, by warping the 14th Amendment, and in a way never envisioned by its creators.
So now can one be guilty by fiat of Confederacy-like “insurrection,” when he has never been charged with, much less convicted of, such a crime?
How can a buffoonish January 6th riot become an “insurrection,” when no one was armed, there was no plan to seize power, and protestors were advised by the purported insurrectionist leader “to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard”?
As far as election insurrectionary interference, why did liberal journalist Molly Ball label the leftwing effort to defeat Donald Trump in the 2020 election a “cabal” (e.g., “That’s why the participants want the secret history of the 2020 election told, even though it sounds like a paranoid fever dream–a well-funded cabal of powerful people, ranging across industries and ideologies, working together behind the scenes to influence perceptions, change rules and laws, steer media coverage and control the flow of information”)?
And why did Ball double-down and further call it a “conspiracy” (“There was a conspiracy unfolding behind the scenes, one that both curtailed the protests and coordinated the resistance from CEOs. Both surprises were the result of an informal alliance between left-wing activists and business titans, of CEOs, Silicon Valley billionaires, street protestors…Their work touched every aspect of the election. They got states to change voting systems and laws and helped secure hundreds of millions in public and private funding. They fended off voter-suppression lawsuits, recruited armies of poll workers and got millions of people to vote by mail for the first time. They successfully pressured social media companies to take a harder line against disinformation and used data-driven strategies to fight viral smears.”)?
As far as efforts to nullify the popular vote, do we remember the pathetic 2016 ensemble of C-list Hollywood celebrities (e.g., Martin Sheen, Debra Messing, James Cromwell, BD Wong, Noah Wyle, Freda Payne, Bob Odenkirk, J. Smith Cameron, Michael Urie, Moby, Mike Farrell, Loretta Swit, Christine Lahti, Steven Pasquale, Dominic Fumusa and Emily Tyra)?
They were drafted by leftwing groups to cut commercials urging the electors to reject their constitutional duties of reflecting their states’ popular votes, and instead, as faithless electors, to vote instead for Hillary Clinton, the loser in their respective states’ popular votes.
How did they rationalize that anti-constitutional gambit? Well, remember Martin Sheen’s shameless sophistry to ignore the Constitution and the election results?
“As you know, our founding fathers built the Electoral College to safeguard the American people from the dangers of a demagogue, and to ensure that the presidency only goes to someone who is to an eminent degree endowed with the requisite qualifications.”
So what makes a high elected official an insurrectionist?
Current or past advocacy for using violence against the government, as represented by, say, the Supreme Court?
Or urging on more protests that had already turned violent, eventually leading to 35 deaths, 1,500 injured police officers, $1-2 billion in property damage, and a torched courthouse, police headquarters, and iconic church?
Attempting to break into the White House grounds? Sending the president into a secure underground bunker?
If so, remember Kamala Harris’s summer 2020 boasts about the protests that, she knew (contrary to “fact checkers”) had already a long history of violence:
“But they're not gonna stop. They're not gonna stop, and this is a movement, I'm telling you. They're not gonna stop, and everyone beware, because they're not gonna stop. They're not gonna stop before Election Day in November, and they're not gonna stop after Election Day. Everyone should take note of that, on both levels, that they're not going to let up — and they should not. And we should not.”
What was the Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer intending, when in 2020 he incited a throng at the very doors of the Supreme Court, warning of violence to come to two justices whom he called out by name?
“I want to tell you Gorsuch. I want to tell you Kavanaugh. You have released the whirlwind and you will pay the price. You won’t know what hit you if you go forward with these awful decisions.”
“Hit you”?
Now we have ballot suppression to add to the long list of farces, hoaxes, and lies all designed to destroy a candidate who otherwise might win popular support for an agenda the majority of Americans have consistently supported.
So the leftwing Colorado Justices join the “Russian collusion” spectacle, the Alfa Bank “pink” hoax, the “Russian disinformation” laptop ruse, the precedent breaking two impeachments of a president in his first term, the caper of trying an ex-president as a private citizen in the senate, and the ploy of raiding an ex-president’s home.
What exactly is the Left doing?
They accept they have no majority support for the current President or his agenda. They fear the voters will elect a Republican. They are horrified that it might be Donald Trump, whom they especially loathe. And they are terrified that Trump might do to them what they would certainly do if they were in his position.
The Left is mightily frustrated that after controlling all the sources of information, communications, and institutions (e.. CEOs, traditional and social media, entertainment, the Internet, Silicon Valley, academia, K-12, foundations, sports, and popular culture, etc.), and having a vast advantage in fund raising and money, they still cannot stop the will of the majority.
And the Left wages lawfare because they assume the Right is either too timid, too incompetent, too preoccupied, or too principled to reciprocate in kind—especially given they gloat that there were never any consequences for all the past hoaxes and ruses they perpetuated.
But this time they may have jumped the proverbial shark and shown themselves to be the true and only insurrectionists that will face the consequences of any angry public in November 2024.
9:28 PM · Dec 20, 2023
@VDHanson
https://x.com/VDHanson/status/1737661200866136571?s=20
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retailvewor · 2 years
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Dave erickson smithfield utah
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Dave erickson smithfield utah zip#
Logan UT x LOG15 Logan 1 Green Porter 367 East 500 North Logan UT x LOG15 Logan 1 Hutchins Dillon 620 East 600 North #4 Logan UT x LOG15 Logan 1 Peterson Jim 541 Boulevard #2 Logan UT x LOG16 Logan 1 Hanson Rayann Logan UT x LOG16 Logan 1 Dahl Dallin 303 East 1240 North Logan UT x LOG16 Logan 1 Griffin Clair Logan UT x LOG16 Logan 1 Sackett Richard Logan UT x LOG16 Logan 1 Wood Julie Logan UT x LOG22 Logan 1 Mayer Rick Logan UT x LOG22 Logan 1 Ellis Braden Logan UT x LOG22 Logan 1 Seamons Brian Logan UT x LOG22 Logan 1 Taylor Melody Logan UT x LOG24 Logan 1 Davis Kraig 157 South 560 East Logan UT x LOG24 Logan 1 Leishman Carolyn 586 East 170 South Logan UT x LOG29 Logan 1 Thomson Theo 1361 Mt Logan Loop Logan UT x LOG29 Logan 1 Blotter Greg Logan UT x LOG29 Logan 1 Merriam Leica Logan UT xĢ LOG29 Logan 1 Misustin Jim Logan UT x LOG29 Logan 1 Noorda Suzanne Logan UT x LOG29 Logan 1 Noorda Barry Logan UT x LOG29 Logan 1 Sanchez Carlos Logan UT x LOG29 Logan 1 Ward Karl 1542 Hayden Ct Logan UT EX-OFFICIO LOG32 Logan 1 Godfrey Tyson 122 W 1320 S Logan UT x x LOG32 Logan 1 Campbell Jacob 125 W 1320 S Logan UT x LOG02 Logan 2 Myers Warren Logan UT x LOG03 Logan 2 Birkey Constance 545 West 600 South Logan UT x LOG03 Logan 2 Burt Pat 90 Crayon Court Logan UT x LOG03 Logan 2 Crook Debra 605 South 575 West Logan UT x LOG03 Logan 2 Croshaw Adam 422 West 300 South #1 Logan UT x LOG03 Logan 2 Dahle Melissa 705 Southwest St Logan UT x LOG03 Logan 2 Dahle Lynn 705 Southwest St Logan UT x LOG03 Logan 2 Hinkley Alan Logan UT x LOG03 Logan 2 Johnson Dan 526 W 600 S Logan UT EX-OFFICIO LOG03 Logan 2 Mortensen Jolene 612 South 575 West Logan UT x LOG04 Logan 2 Gee Pam 323 North 300 West Logan UT x LOG04 Logan 2 Bosworth Bryce 475 West 100 North Logan UT x LOG04 Logan 2 Nielsen Bryan 320 North 400 West Logan UT x LOG04 Logan 2 Clark Darla Logan UT x LOG04 Logan 2 Jensen Dan Logan UT x LOG04 Logan 2 Jensen Judy Logan UT x LOG04 Logan 2 Robison Ray 335 North 400 West Logan UT x LOG05 Logan 2 Edwards Todd Logan UT x LOG05 Logan 2 Coppin Karla 209 West Center St. LOG01 Logan 1 Yost Gail Logan UT x LOG01 Logan 1 Wood Robert Logan UT x LOG01 Logan 1 Wood Sally Logan UT x LOG07 Logan 1 Nielsen Sandra Logan UT x LOG07 Logan 1 Janssen Dan Logan UT x LOG07 Logan 1 Struve Swede 261 North 100 East Logan UT x LOG08 Logan 1 Strong Jacob 462 North 200 East #3 Logan UT x LOG08 Logan 1 Haymond Ben 240 East 400 North #9 Logan UT x LOG08 Logan 1 Landroche Darrin 459 North 600 East Logan UT x LOG09 Logan 1 Harris Andy 665 E 100 N #4 Logan UT x LOG09 Logan 1 Gortler Kevin Logan UT x LOG09 Logan 1 Gortler Julie Logan UT x LOG09 Logan 1 Jenkins Jeremy Logan UT x LOG10 Logan 1 Player Cami Logan UT x LOG10 Logan 1 Player Aaron Logan UT x LOG10 Logan 1 Boman Rosella Logan UT x LOG14 Logan 1 Martinez Wendy 316 Lauralin Dr Logan UT x LOG14 Logan 1 Ashcroft Erik Logan UT x LOG14 Logan 1 Bush Teancum 718 East 200 North Logan UT x LOG14 Logan 1 Williams Kurtis 50 Canyon Cove Logan UT x LOG15 Logan 1 Haderlie Sheri Logan UT x x LOG15 Logan 1 Cox Brian 658 East 600 North #12 Logan UT x LOG15 Logan 1 Gibson James 20 Raymond Ct.
Dave erickson smithfield utah zip#
1 Precinct County Council District Last Name First Name Address City State Zip Phone Precinct Chair County Del.
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patrickbluer · 4 years
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Levy drew design inspiration from working with its costume designer, Debra Hanson. “I really got to understand the value of every piece of clothing and accessory that we put on every day—every single piece that we wear says something. It doesn’t have to say something loudly, but it says something,” says Levy of collaborating with Hanson.
(Dan in Vogue talking about DL Eyewear but also Patrick’s costuming.)
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flurryheaven · 3 years
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2021 Canadian Screen Awards - Best Costume Design Television Nominations 
Nicole Manek - Baroness Von Sketch Show, Season 5 Episode 6 ‘Baby Toe Disease’ 
Bernadette Croft - Cardinal,  Season 4 Episode 1 ‘Robert’ 
Jennifer Jarvis - Frankie Drake Mysteries, Season 3 Episode 7 ‘Out on a Limb’ 
Joanna Syrokomla - Murdoch Mysteries, Season 13 Episode 12 ‘Fox Hunt’ 
Debra Hanson - Schitt’s Creek, Season 6 Episode 14 ‘Happy Ending’ 
Updated: 
Congrats to Debra Hanson for the win. 
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thecostumevaultblog · 4 years
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Congratulations to the Nominees for Excellence in Contemporary Television for the 22nd Costume Designers Guild Awards!!
Alix Friedberg for BIG LITTLE LIES (S2E4 “She Knows”)
Ray Holman for FLEABAG (S2E1 “2.1″)
Charlotte Mitchell for KILLING EVE (S2E4 “Desperate Times”)
Jennifer Rogien for RUSSIAN DOLL (S1E5 “Superiority Complex”)
Debra Hanson for SCHITT’S CREEK (S5E4 “The Dress)
What’s your favorite contemporary costume design for television? Which one would you give the CDGA to? And which one do you think will get it?
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busstop · 4 years
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The 5 Schitt’s Creek fashion lessons we’ll keep forever - Vogue Australia
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simblrbyambsey · 3 years
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Wayne is an elder now!
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danieljradcliffe · 3 years
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2021 SCHITT’S CREEK APPRECIATION WEEK
Day 5 — Favourite Outift(s) | Costume design by Debra Hanson
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fairweathermyth · 4 years
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Congratulations Debra Hanson and Darci Cheyne, WINNERS at the 72nd Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards
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stevienick · 4 years
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MOIRA ROSE’S ICONIC LOOKS Schitt’s Creek (2015 - 2020) Costume Design by Debra Hanson
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tylerposey · 4 years
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OUTSTANDING LEAD ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES Catherine O’Hara — Schitt’s Creek
OUTSTANDING LEAD ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES Eugene Levy — Schitt’s Creek
OUTSTANDING SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES Annie Murphy — Schitt’s Creek
OUTSTANDING SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES Dan Levy — Schitt’s Creek
OUTSTANDING CONTEMPORARY COSTUMES "Happy Ending” — Schitt’s Creek (Darci Cheyne & Debra Hanson)
OUTSTANDING DIRECTING FOR A COMEDY SERIES "Happy Ending” — Schitt’s Creek (Andrew Cividino & Dan Levy)
OUTSTANDING WRITING FOR A COMEDY SERIES "Happy Ending” — Schitt’s Creek (Dan Levy)
OUTSTANDING CASTING FOR A COMEDY SERIES Schitt’s Creek (Jon Comerford & Lisa Parasyn)
OUTSTANDING COMEDY SERIES Schitt’s Creek
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wild-aloof-rebel · 3 years
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I knew the wardrobe budget was low, but I really didn't know what that meant in a dollar figure. But Debra Hanson just mentioned in an interview that Moira's Pamella Roland gown cost almost half the budget for the year. AFAIK the purchase price of the dress was $10,000, right? What Debra, Dan and the rest of the wardrobe team did with the budget was truly miraculous.
the infusion of fast fashion pieces and dan’s own wardrobe certainly helped things, especially in the early seasons, but they truly did so much with so little
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holmesapothecary · 4 years
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'Schitt’s Creek' cast reflects on series' beloved characters, lamented end
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The Rose family is all here, albeit in small rectangular windows on screens scattered across North America. Dan Levy is in his Los Angeles home with his rescue pup, Redmond. Annie Murphy connects from Toronto. Catherine O’Hara can’t get her video to work but then appears in all her glory from L.A. Eugene Levy is the last to join. Apparently his watch is 10 minutes slow — he holds it up to the camera as proof — prompting an eye roll from son, Dan.
“You could use your phone, you know?” he says, his tone of exasperated reproach instantly recognizable from the beloved television show the Levys created, the late, great “Schitt’s Creek.”
This quartet has done this kind of thing before, gathering with the show’s cast and crew to watch the “Schitt’s Creek’s” series finale on Zoom in April. It was a bittersweet evening. They were together, but, because of the COVID-19 pandemic, not in the same room, a celebration punctuated by laughter and a few tears — not all that different from the conversation today. Of late, almost every time this group unites, there are a couple of lump-in-the-throat moments amid the acerbic humor and good-natured ribbing.
“Here we go,” Eugene says after longtime friend O’Hara reacts with sympathy to an emotional story Dan tells about the final day of filming. “It never ends.”
Except it has. After six seasons and a journey that has taken the series from cult status to Emmy favorite, “Schitt’s Creek” has finished its run in a manner that few shows do — on its own terms, at the peak of its popularity and, perhaps, just a bit sooner than some of its cast members (and nearly all of its devoted fans) would prefer. When Dan Levy, who took over running “Schitt’s Creek” in its third season, laments ending the series just as many people began binge-watching it on Netflix during the COVID-19 quarantine, Murphy perks up.
“Being cooped up in my house for months has led me to write seven more seasons,” he says.
Finding their place
“Schitt’s Creek” premiered on the little-known Pop network in 2015 as a straightforward fish-out-of-water comedy about the wealthy Rose family — businessman Johnny (Eugene), soap actress Moira (O’Hara) and their adult children David (Dan) and Alexis (Murphy) — who lose their entire fortune, save for ownership of the isolated titular town once purchased as a gag. They relocate there, taking up residence in adjoining rooms at the shabby Rosebud Motel.
Initially, the show’s stories followed the Roses’ attempts to scrape some money together and restore some semblance of their old lives. But slowly, over the course of 80 episodes, the family discovers the small pleasures of community and a real love and understanding for one another.
The Roses’ perfectly paced journey of self-discovery, which included David meeting and, in the finale, marrying his fiance Patrick, imbued “Schitt’s Creek” with a warmth that deepened its connection with its audience. You could feel that appreciation not long ago when the cast toured the country with the “Schitt’s Creek: Up Close & Personal” evenings, gatherings that fostered such a sense of tribal belonging that, O’Hara says, “We almost didn’t need to be there.”
“There was a family thing going on in the audience, and we just got to have the love come our way,” she says.
The cast was scheduled to take a victory lap with a farewell tour this spring and summer. In fact, we spoke when they were supposed to be together in Los Angeles for an evening at the Orpheum Theatre. “I miss it,” O’Hara says. “Oh, how I miss the kindness that you’d feel radiating toward you on those nights.”
Planning for the end
But there’s a difference, Dan says, between communing with the fans and being beholden to them. One benefit from having the show fly under the radar for most of its run came with the timing of its conclusion. When “Schitt’s Creek” was renewed for two more seasons after its fourth year, Levy began charting the arc of its ending. The series had seen a bump in its viewership since Netflix began streaming it in January 2017. But it didn’t really start peaking until its fifth season, by which time Levy knew when and how he wanted to wrap up the show. And he had plotted it without worrying about satisfying audience expectations — though, of course, he hoped everyone would like it.
“It was important to make the show’s last episodes just feel like very great episodes and not feel bloated with a backlog of revelations that we need to quickly wrap up,” the younger Levy says. “To me, ‘Six Feet Under’ was one of the greatest finales ever made — fresh, unexpected, creative, emotional. It spoke to the format of the show in a way that was, ‘Of course, this is how it should end,’ and yet, as a viewer, it was the last thing you could have ever imagined.”
Levy did make one concession to fan service in the “Schitt’s” finale. He knew Moira’s ensemble would have to somehow top all the fabulous wigs and iconic couture that had come before. When O’Hara learned she would be officiating David’s wedding in the episode, she suggested a papal theme. That’s the only direction costume designer Debra Hanson needed. Moira wound up wearing a white Alexander McQueen gown, along with a gold chain belt and gold metallic gloves, her Botticelli-inspired hair wrapped around a hat that Pope Francis would bless.
“I will always remember Catherine walking on set for the first time in that garb,” Murphy says. “There was a long silence and then a collective intake of breath and then just slow applause from everyone on set.”
“I loved that the look could be what it was and not take the focus from the beautiful wedding,” O’Hara says. Levy nods. “It’s something to consider when you have a look like that,” he says. “But even though she was in knee-high gold Tom Ford boots,” and here O’Hara bursts out laughing at the image, “there was a calmness and softness about it that allowed it to sit in the background.”
Saying goodbye
Now that we know David and Patrick are married, Alexis is pursuing a career in New York, and Johnny and Moira are heading to Los Angeles so Moira can work on a soap opera reboot costarring Nicole Kidman (“I’m not sure I like the direction my career is heading, but I’d do anything with Moira,” Kidman says with a laugh over the phone from her Nashville home), it would seem the story is over. But Dan, who has a three-year deal with ABC, does remain open to revisiting the characters.
“The hardest thing for me these past few years,” Eugene interjects, “was just to kind of walk in and pretend it’s just another day at work without going up to everyone on set and saying, ‘What do you think about the work this kid is doing?’ It’s been a very rewarding experience for me.”
“And I understand people are sad it’s over,” he continues. “I’m sad too. For the past few years, people have been looking for something to pick them up a little, and they’ve gravitated toward this show as this tonic they could go to for a half-hour and forget what was happening in the world.”
Eugene pauses. “When you think about it, the fact that it went out (during) a pandemic seems almost apropos in a way. People couldn’t feel any worse, and here’s our show going out.”
(X)
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flurryheaven · 4 years
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Costume Designers Guild Awards Nominations (2019)
Excellence in Contemporary Television
Big Little Lies Season 2 Episode 3 “She Knows” - Alix Friedberg
Fleabag Season 2 Episode 1 “2.1” - Ray Holman
Killing Eve Season 2 Episode 4 “Desperate Times” - Charlotte Mitchell
Russian Dol Season 1 Episode 5 “Superiority Complex” - Jennifer Roger
Schitt’s Creek Season 5 Episode 4 “The Dress” - Debra Hanson
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