Monica Howe is a British
costume designer
A costume designer is a person who designs costumes for a film, stage production or television show. The role of the costume designer is to create the characters' outfits or costumes and balance the scenes with texture and colour, etc. The costum ...
. She received nominations for two
BAFTA Awards
The British Academy Film Awards, more commonly known as the BAFTAs or BAFTA Awards, is an annual film award show hosted by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) to honour the best Cinema of the United Kingdom, British and Worl ...
. Her career includes social realist and literary adaptations for both TV and cinema releases from 1974–2000.
Career
Howe's first film costume design project was ''
Bugsy Malone
''Bugsy Malone'' is a 1976 gangster musical comedy film written and directed by Alan Parker (in his feature film directorial debut). A co-production of United States and United Kingdom, it features an ensemble cast, comprising only child actor ...
,'' a musical about American gangsters featuring only child actors, directed by
Alan Parker
Sir Alan William Parker (14 February 1944 – 31 July 2020) was an English film director, screenwriter and producer. His early career, beginning in his late teens, was spent as a copywriter and director of television advertisements. After abo ...
. The costumes for ''Bugsy Malone'' were nominated for a BAFTA Best Costume Design award, and several were later acquired by the BFI for the Museum of the Moving Image on the South Bank in London.
The actors in the film had an average of twelve, which gave an added complexity to the costume design. Press at the time recorded, "Howe and her army of helpers had to supply nearly 500 cut-down but absolutely authentic 1920s costumes". Despite the ages of the performers, the filmmakers wanted to make the film as "uncompromised as possible - the cars, the spurge-guns, the clothes", according to Executive Producer David Puttnam. Bespoke costume for principal cast were made by theatrical costumiers Wallace & McMurray.
For the film ''Breaking Glass'' (1980), Monica Howe worked with co-designer Lorna Hillyard to dress actor Hazel O'Connor as Kate, a pop star in the dystopian late 1970s music industry. The film historian Claire Monk has observed that the designers, "excel in providing Kate with a succession of on- and off-stage looks which draw credibly on new wave trends (from Gary Numan to Blondie) while expressing her transformation to glossy product".
The following year, Howe designed costumes for The BBC television adaptation of D H Lawrence's ''The Trespasser'' (1981)''.'' A decade later, she costumed another literary adaption, E M Forster's ''Where Angels Fear to Tread'' (1991), starring Helena Bonham Carter and Helen Mirren.
In 1983, Howe did the costumes for ‘Tales Out of School’, a series of four films about contemporary England, education and unemployment, written for television by David Leland, and shown on ITV: ''
The Birth of a Nation
''The Birth of a Nation'' is a 1915 American Silent film, silent Epic film, epic Drama (film and television), drama film directed by D. W. Griffith and starring Lillian Gish. The screenplay is adapted from Thomas Dixon Jr.'s 1905 novel and ...
'' (directed by Mike Newell); ''Flying into the Wind''; ''RHINO''; and ''
Made in Britain
''Made in Britain'' is a 1983 British television play written by David Leland and directed by Alan Clarke. It follows a 16-year-old racist skinhead and his constant confrontations with authority figures. It was broadcast on ITV on 10 July 19 ...
''. In the last of the four, Howe dressed actor
Tim Roth
Timothy Simon Roth (; born 14 May 1961) is an English actor. He was among a group of prominent British actors known as the " Brit Pack". After garnering attention in television productions '' Made in Britain'' (1982) and '' Meantime'' (1983), ...
in his breakout role as a young skinhead.
Monica Howe had a long-standing collaboration with the director
Terence Davies
Terence Davies (10 November 1945 – 7 October 2023) was a British screenwriter, film director, and novelist. He is best known as the writer and director of autobiographical films, including '' Distant Voices, Still Lives'' (1988), '' The Long ...
. Her first project with Davies was designing costumes for
''Distant Voices'', ''Still Lives'', an acclaimed period film that is a "highly stylised" vision of the 1950s. Later collaborations with the director included ''
The Long Day Closes''; ''
The Neon Bible'' and ''
The House of Mirth
''The House of Mirth'' is a novel by American author Edith Wharton, published on 7 October 1905. It is a sharp, brutal, and destructive tragedy which tells the story of Lily Bart, a well-born but impoverished woman belonging to New York City's ...
.'' Davies's biographer, Monica Everett, explained that Monica Howe was chosen for her considerable skill and experience, and also the ‘affinities’ with Davies, having grown up around the same time. Davies himself described Howe as "a costume designer of genius".
Howe's final film credit was for ''The House of Mirth'' (2000), the Terence Davies-directed adaptation of Edith Wharton’s story of hypocrisy and predatory practices in Old New York. Howe's costumes achieved widespread acclaim from contemporary critics. The Denver Post wrote: "Wearing costume designer Monica Howe's gorgeously outsized hats (you could sit in one!) and tapered outfits,
ctor GillianAnderson looks as if she's an elegant artwork". And they have remained popular among fans of period costuming: "mournful veils, gauzy flounces, and apparitions of blood-red eveningwear indicate a more theatrical understanding of social mores", or simply described as "gorgeous". In academic critique, Howe's costumes have been described as a "remarkable" translation of historic fashion to film.
Awards and nominations
References
External links
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Howe, Monica
British costume designers
British women costume designers
English costume designers
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)