From sewing machine to silver screen: meet the amateurs who acted with Day-Lewis

FAN Editor
FILE PHOTO: Actor Daniel Day-Lewis arrives for a news conference before the first screening of the movie
FILE PHOTO: Actor Daniel Day-Lewis arrives for a news conference before the first screening of the movie “Phantom Thread” in Athens, Greece, February 1, 2018. REUTERS/Costas Baltas/File Photo

February 3, 2018

LONDON (Reuters) – Living thousands of miles from Hollywood and lacking any acting experience, Susan Clark and Joan Brown seemed unlikely candidates to land roles opposite Daniel Day-Lewis.

But, experts with a needle and thread, Brown, 74, and Clark, 67, have speaking roles in “Phantom Thread,” in which the triple Oscar winner Day-Lewis plays a couturier.

The film is set in a fashion house in 1950s London, a world the pair experienced, Brown as a ladies’ seamstress and Clark a dressmaking teacher.

The pair’s involvement in the film began when they were consulted for their fashion expertise – in their capacity as specialist sewing volunteers at London’s V&A Museum, but did not initially realize who they were dealing with.

“I was talking to this very nice gentleman about one of the pieces of costume that they’ve got out and I looked down at his security pass and it said ‘Daniel Day-Lewis’ and I looked up into his face and I thought – oh, it is, isn’t it?” Clark said.

Initially, the pair were recruited as technical advisors, but were subsequently asked to play seamstresses working for Day-Lewis’ character, small roles, but ones in which they appear regularly throughout the film.

Day-Lewis, known for his meticulous preparation, studied with designers for months and made a couture dress in preparation for his role as designer Reynolds Woodcock.

During production he sought to draw on Brown and Clark’s knowledge to ensure the accuracy of period details, as Clark found when she pointed out that a garment was being assembled in an inauthentic way.

“I sort of said ‘no, it’s not like that – do it like that,’ and (Day-Lewis) said ‘you must tell us – you must tell us because it’s got to be right,’ … because he’s such a method actor.”

With “Phantom Thread” nominated for six Oscars – will Brown and Clark’s Hollywood adventure stretch all the way to the film world’s most prestigious event?

“I think we haven’t been invited yet, so we’re just going to wait and see. My passport is out of date at the moment,” Clark said.

(Reporting by Ania Poullain; Writing by Mark Hanrahan; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)

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