Fresh Air - ‘Wicked’ Costume Designer Paul Tazewell
Episode Date: December 1, 2025Tazewell made history as the first Black man to win the Oscar for costume design for the first installment of Wicked. He talks with Tonya Mosley about Wicked: For Good, the movies that inspired him, a...nd learning to sew as a child. “I made the decision that I would devote myself to costume design and live vicariously through other characters,” he says. “Where I might not be cast in certain roles because of how I looked, as a designer, I could be anyone.Follow Fresh Air on instagram @nprfreshair, and subscribe to our weekly newsletter for gems from the Fresh Air archive, staff recommendations, and a peek behind the scenes. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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This is fresh air. I'm Tanya Mosley.
In Wicked for Good, when Glinda descends from her bubble and iridescent blue and lavender,
or when Elphabas sweeps through the sky for the first time in a weathered trench coat in trousers,
their looks aren't just dazzling us.
They're an integral part of the story, telling us who these women have become and the choices they've made.
My guest today, costume designer Paul Taswell is one of the visual architects of that world.
For more than 30 years, his designs across Broadway, television, and film have shaped how we see stories,
from the worn revolutionary textures of Hamilton to the saturated palette of Westside story.
Taswell won the Academy Award last year for his work on Wicked, and during his acceptance speech,
he paused to acknowledge the significance of that moment.
I'm the first black man to receive the Costume Design Award for my work on Wicked.
I'm so proud of this. Thank you, Mom and Emma, so much.
Thank you everyone in the UK for all of your beautiful work.
have done this without you. My Ozian muses, Cynthia and Ariana, I love you so much. All the other
cast, thank you, thank you, thank you for trusting me with bringing your characters to life.
This is everything. Tazwell's work now continues in the next chapter of the Wicked Universe with
Wicked for Good, which picks up where the first film left off. Elphaba, played by Cynthia
Arevo is now on the run, branded as the Wicked Witch, while Glinda, played by Ariana Grande,
rises as the face of a new Oz. The film also stars Jonathan Bailey, Bowen Yang, Michelle
Yo, and Jeff Goldblum as the Wizard of Oz, and Coleman Domingo joins the cast as the voice
of the cowardly lion. Paul Taswell grew up in Ohio, a kid who loved to perform and gradually
found his way into costume design. Since then, he's won two Tony Awards for Hamilton and
Death Becomes Her. And in addition to his Oscar win for Wicked, he's also earned an Emmy in 2016
for The Wiz Live. And Paul Taswell, welcome to fresh air. Thank you. It's so good to be here, Tanya.
We're going to get into Wicked for Good, but I could hear you sort of chuckling when you were
listening to your acceptance speech. It's still like a surprise for you when you listen to it.
Oh, my God, completely. It's just so out of body. And that whole experience was so out of body. I mean, although I
I trained to be a performer.
That's not what I do.
So it's not what I, you know, kind of carry forward.
You know, so it's always a surprise
when I have to get up in front of millions of people
and say something that's coherent.
And because I was so moved, I mean,
that's one of the things that I was chuckling about.
I was like, oh, I forgot to say,
I forgot to say thank you to all the other cast.
I mean, it wasn't that I forgot.
I just, you know, just like listing all of them off.
And, you know, it's, it minimizes the impact
that it's had on me creatively to say that it was, you know,
just to say that it was life-changing.
I think that it really has affected my life in great ways.
Well, one of the ways that it's affected your life is that you're now a name.
It's very few times, I mean, where we've been able to name people who set the worlds behind the movies.
We're often talking to the performers or we're talking to the directors or the producers.
But as a costume designer, especially for Wicked, I mean, it's such an integral part of the storyline.
And right from the start of this second film, we're watching your work.
We're watching these two women step into their new personas.
Glinda as the Good Witch, Elphaba as the Wicked Witch.
And the costumes are really working to tell that story.
Elphaba's elaborate dress from the first film at the end, it's now shredded into a tunic.
and Glinda is wearing this blue and lavender instead of that signature pink.
Walk me through what you were trying to communicate with those opening looks.
I see my work as a costume designer to be one of a storyteller.
And I'm telling a silent story that reveals itself adjacent to the performances of the characters.
Throughout these two beautiful films, you know, I was giving context to what their backstory
was, I mean, you know, for each of our principal characters, Elphaba and Glinda, where they came from.
With Elphaba, we have been left at the very end of the first film, Wicked Part 1, with Defying Gravity.
And she's in her very best dress, dressed to meet the wizard for the first time.
And she's also paired that with her pointed hat.
And when she jumps out of the window with the velvet cape that she's added on and her broom,
we realize that she's completely self-empowered.
I mean, she has arrived and has taken hold of her own power.
So to enter into the beginning of Wicked for Good,
we get this sense that she has never really gone back to society.
She's stayed in exile.
And a way of expressing that was to keep her in the same dress,
but because she has been out there, you know,
she's advocating for animals, saving animals, really,
and taking down lines of guards that, you know,
we see at the very beginning where they're all laying the Yellow Brook Road,
she has become a huge force and, you know, kind of a superhero.
So I wanted to relay that with her silhouette,
but also to show the weathering of her garment.
So it's the same cape that we saw at the end of Wicked Part 1
in Defying Gravity.
The lining has come out of it.
It's starting to fray.
And it just adds to the texture of who she is.
The same with her coat, the sweeping coat that she's upcycled
from a raincoat.
But the idea that she has taken just a few things
into the forest, and then she's re-execkel.
creating herself as this heroic image, paired with the pants that we have and also
her knee-high boots. So, you know, in setting that up, I'm making choices about what is the
silhouette going to be. How does it potentially align or become nostalgic of the 1939
film and that Wicked Witch of the West? So that we're always threading, you know, all of these
ideas of the Wizard of Oz and Oz, you know, just the Ozian sensibility, all together.
and wrapping it up in a way that makes sense
and says something more, as I was saying,
says something more about the characters as well.
You know, one of the things I'm so interested to know
is, I mean, both of these films,
one and two, were shot simultaneously.
And Cynthia Arrivo was on the show a few weeks ago,
and she told us that she created scents.
So she created perfume, smells,
that she could help differentiate the days
that she was shooting for each of the film
since it was happening.
For your role,
you had to know Elfabah's entire journey
before you started shooting.
When you're designing across two films like that,
knowing where a character ends up,
how does that change the way you approach?
I mean, really, the very first costume.
Well, it's the way that I approach any production.
You know, if I was doing a musical,
I would be figuring out my characters
from the beginning to the end.
Because that's how the audience
is going to experience them.
And then I need to make choices that are consistent
as I'm telling that story.
The same for Wicked.
It was about clothing and style
and how the different groups,
like the Munchkinlanders
versus the uplanders,
which is where Glendez family is from,
versus the Winkies or Kiyamoko,
which is where Fierro was from,
each of those very specific sensibilities.
But together, they help to define each other.
I mean, they're consistent by, you know, silhouette.
It's by, you know, the shapes of sleeves and the shapes of skirts and the kinds of textures that I use.
I needed to make a world that would be plausible within itself so that you believe in it as an audience member.
You're able to, you know, it doesn't, you know, I'm not going to throw a, you know, a bunch of scenes with sneakers in it unless it's a very specific Ozian sneaker, you know, because that's why, you know, everything in this world needed to be bespoke.
I mean, it was all created specifically for this world.
How did you come to the decision to have Elphaba wear trousers?
Something happened just to my design brain
when John M. Chu said that he was casting Cynthia Arevo,
and this is after looking at a number of different Elphabas,
and I was actually privy to some of those audition tapes
just to see where his mind was.
But to then see that he was thinking of putting Cynthia in that role,
One, I had already worked with Cynthia in Harriet, and I knew her range.
I mean, I knew I fully understood her connection to clothing, how she develops a character,
but I knew that she would be able to go to a place that would use the agility of wearing
trousers as a means of athletic expression and power, the ability to move.
move allowed for her to navigate the world in a way that was more expansive than being in a
skirt and jacket all the time, which is how I set her up. I mean, she enters into the world
of she is dressed in black, you know, and that was another part of the equation was, why does
she wear black? And there are many conversations that John, John M. Chu and I had, the director,
around how do we define why she is wearing black?
And I made the decision that, well, she lost her mother very early in life.
She was in mourning, so she wore that color, you know, signifying mourning,
and then to adopt that as a way to pull herself apart from the rest of the community,
which we see, you know, presented, you know, when she's a little girl
and, you know, how the other children in the neighborhood make fun of her.
of her. And that holding onto that armoring that's created by wearing black, it felt real in a way
because, you know, you think about high school students or young students who dress in black
or in a very goth way to make themselves feel special or to, you know, create a separation
from the rest of, you know, those bullies that might be hurting them, you know, just to create
some significance in their personality.
This is so fascinating what you're saying,
because in that way, the black stands out
because I would guess that black is one of the hardest colors
to make visually interesting.
But up against this colorful world,
I mean, it feels like that texture
and that detail in her costumes
also show up in the black.
Thank you for mentioning that.
I mean, that was, again, another element
is that she's side by side with Galinda, Glinda, who is always
dressed in pink or in light tones, and they are often very feminine in feminine fabrics,
light, airy, elegant, beautiful, those things that are desirable. I made the decision that
there had to be balanced, and then it just continues to expand. You know, I was talking about how
Cynthia was cast. You know, it was the first time that a black woman had ever been cast in that
role, which is surprising because the whole point of the story is that she is, you know, being
ostracized or vilified or, you know, that she's othered because of the color of her skin.
Now, it's a direct connection to, you know, the racial structure of, you know, even our country.
There are so many similarities in the emotional story for a person of color and how that
relates to Elphabah. I want to ask you about something that fans have also noted that there is one
steamy, very intimate scene in the film between Elphaba, you know where I'm going, and Fierro, played
by Jonathan Bailey. And Elfabah is wearing this long, gray, chunky wool sweater. It is such a
specific choice. Why? Just lately, people have talked about it. They call it the sex cardigan.
It came out of, you know, very literally, an organic decision of what does Elphaba have access to?
And living alone, what choice would she make when she's, you know, looking for a robe, some way to be protective and warm?
And the sweater is one of comfort.
When you put someone in a cardigan or in a sweater,
what you're doing is you're creating,
there are many different, you know, connections that we have.
Sometimes it's a hand-knit sweater,
so it means, you know, you're connecting it to the person
who actually made it, you know,
which might be a mother or a grandmother or an aunt.
So that gives you comfort.
You know, you think about a boyfriend sweater,
and that, again, is there's the idea of an oversized,
comfortable, something that you could wrap in,
how it makes you feel.
I get that.
Yeah, I mean, like, but intimate time with the man
that you've been secretly loving forever
to put on a sweater, what does it signify?
It's operating as her robe for that moment
and for the, you know, her in exile,
and she is making a softer choice alone
in her surroundings of roots and vine.
and, you know, all the elements that are around her.
And you can imagine that, you know,
because she's crafting all of that.
You know, she's got a loom in her live space,
in her treehouse, where she's weaving her own clothing.
She's manifesting all these things from the elements that are around her,
and the sweater is just in keeping with that.
Now, indeed, you could say, well, you know,
why wasn't it a black, slinky, penwar, but where would she get, like, why would she have that?
Where would she get that?
Well, why would she even have it?
Because it's not like she's, she's, at that moment, she's not thinking about Viero.
She's thinking about saving, I mean, she angst some about the love that she has, but she's not expecting that he's going to arrive, and therefore she's got her special sexy penwara that she'll pull out.
I mean, that's very much in line with Glinda.
but why would she have that?
I think that it just follows through
with reasonable choices that
define who a character is
and what is important for them,
where their priorities are.
And I felt like the underwear that we have her in,
which is very sexy underwear,
it's all knitted as well,
and it's revealing of her skin.
You know, it's short, you see your legs
and her arms, her stomach even.
to use both, and then they're together
and they're actually using the robe as a blanket.
So, again, it's a much more organic connection
to clothing and how the characters relate to it.
It wouldn't be realistic that she'd have
a little black lingerie in this forest.
As much as everyone wants her to have, yes.
Okay, Paul, I want to go back to your childhood
because the 1939 version of The Wizard of Oz
with Judy Garland, it's a traditional.
for many families to watch it.
And growing up, your family would watch it on Easter.
Absolutely.
Do you know why your family made in an Easter tradition to watch?
I think that that was when it actually played.
You know, because we, you know, this was before there was VHS tapes.
As I happened in my memory, it was annually that, you know, my three brothers, myself,
and my two parents would sit and we would experience, you know, the Wizard of Oz.
And it became very, you know, informative.
I mean, it was, you know, for me as a designer, you know, the idea of visual magic, you know, when you think about, most specifically, going from sepia tone in Dorothy's house to Technicolor when she enters into Munchkinland.
I mean, that's one of the most magical transitions that I've, you know, that I can remember.
So, you know, I have that in my bank of imagery as I think about, you know, other projects that I'm designing.
There are other films as well.
I mean, if you think about Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, or you think about Mary Poppins or Cinderella, Disney.
I mean, so at that time, all of those magical stories, all those movies were folded into our, you know, just our family culture, you know, and what we,
would watch for entertainment.
Were there things about the costuming in The Wizard of Oz, even back then when you were a young boy, that you noticed.
For instance, I'll just say, you know, with Glinda the Good, it would be part of my daydreams to think about me dressed as her, you know, holding a little wand.
I just wonder for Little Paul, what were there any moments that you would think about?
Well, I'm dressed as Glinda.
I mean, no, but, but the, uh,
I think that I was transfixed by that costume just to understand what's going on in that, you know, that fairy princess dress.
And, you know, it's very classic, you know, it is an archetype of who Glinda is, but then who, you know, when you think of the Good Witch of the North, that's the image that comes up.
It's this bell-shaped skirt, tight waist, full sleeves, sheer, lots of sheer layers.
and then sparkle.
And, you know, so just understanding,
so what are those qualities that allow for us to think this about this character?
And then to adopt that and transform it into the Glenda that I created,
the pink bubble dress, that is actually Glinda's moment of coming to power.
Our guest today is Oscar-winning costume designer Paul Taswell.
We'll be right back after a short break.
I'm Tanya Mooseley.
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Your mother taught you to sew when you were around nine years old?
That's right.
What made you want to learn?
You know, I think that I was always transfixed by crafts and working with my hands.
And my mother, you know, I was always, you know, right at her side.
You know, as she would draw and paint or early on in my life,
she was making puppets and doing puppet shows with her sister
and with my older cousins, they would create these puppet shows for libraries in and around
Akron for the schools and for the church. And so I was really fully connected and engaged with
what they were doing and that kind of crafting. And so in some way, that fed into my desire to
create, to work with my hands. I think that creating clothing was just the next step. You know,
My mother had a singer sewing machine, and she would set it up, and she would make costumes and clothing for us, you know, my brothers and myself.
Also, she was making things for herself.
And then, you know, it was just a skill that I wanted to have so that I could start to create things for myself.
So I would make dashikis and different kinds of clothing, you know, shorts.
And, you know, it's just a way of, you know, it was an activity.
It really sounds like your family was pretty creative in one way or another.
it seems like almost everyone was an artist.
We were definitely surrounded within my family.
I mean, my grandmother was a painter.
My dad, you know, also, he loved model trains.
So I remember for a period of time,
he had this huge model train table
that, you know, where you would have little, you know,
model houses, you'd create a little town
and the train would ride around it.
And then, you know, there was the element of live production.
I mean, they would take us to productions of musicals,
you know, that were in the acronym
in Cleveland area.
They encouraged us to join the drama club,
and my brothers and myself,
we were all Suzuki violin or cello students.
So culture was really big.
And my grandmother had studied at Oberlin music,
and she was a piano teacher and piano player.
And so, you know, it was just a part of our family culture
that, you know, we were expressive in that way.
Your great aunt was also the president of Bennett College, which is an HBCU in Greensboro.
That's right.
Yeah, she was there when the sit-ins happened, you know, so she was very much connected with A&T and, you know, just how the, because Bennett is a girl school and A&T was a boy school at that time or largely male, so they would work together.
But at that time, you know, there was just a lot of navigational.
what was going on in the city and, you know, how to be an activist, you know, at that time.
It was, you know, a serious time.
I'm thinking about the aesthetics for the time because, okay, when you were a very young boy,
the civil rights movement was so defined by that visual language of respectability.
So the suits and the press dresses and the carefully composed presentation.
But by the time you were a teenager, I mean,
there was a whole different aesthetic that was emerging.
And where did you fall for yourself?
Where did you see that?
Where did you sit with your aesthetics
and also the way that maybe you were thinking about it?
I think that I was engaging with both, really.
You know, I remember when my mother cut her hair
to become an afro.
So making the decision that she was no longer
going to press her hair and grow along,
but she was going to cut it
and have it curl up into an afro
and go with a natural style.
And my grandmother was, you know, completely against it.
I was against it even, you know, it was like because of that change.
But then, you know, that was a...
I mean, you know, I think that it was just a romantic alignment with, you know, that long, straight hair
and just how much white culture had infused itself into how black people were making choices about how they were going to show up.
but wearing jeans to school.
I was in grade school at a time
where you weren't allowed to wear jeans to school
and girls weren't allowed to wear slacks
unless it was snowing outside
and they just needed to walk to school
and then they would change out of them.
So I experienced all of that
and then that shift into a much more casual style.
But I was still brought up by grandparents and parents
who, you know, my dad was a research chemist at Firestone
and he dressed in a suit every day and tie.
We all dressed up for church.
So there was a formality about what we were taught.
But how I design is very much informed by the portraits of my family through the ages,
from the turn of the century and before up until that contemporary time
and seeing how my family chose to present themselves,
which was usually in a formal way,
especially if it was going to be for a photograph.
Right. Do you have a lot of photographic evidence
that you guys have a lot of...
I do, I do, yeah.
We've kept a lot of it, yeah.
You know, and that has informed, you know,
when I remember a photograph of my great-grandmother
and my great-grandfather and my grandmother as a little girl
and grandaunt that you were talking about
who was president at Bennett,
it was a beautiful turn-of-the-century family
with, you know, my great-grandmother
had this large hat, and my great-grandfather had this amazing Hamburg on. And, you know, so that
sparked my interest in period clothing in my home, and then how it expanded into researching, you know,
so what was, you know, she was wearing a corset, obviously, and her clothes were created in a very
specific way, and my great-grandfather's clothes were tailored in a very specific way,
according to the period, because they were dressing to armor themselves up for the world.
I mean, they wanted to be seen in a certain light, kind of black families who have arrived.
They've migrated from the south, and they've now arrived to the north,
and they are respectable people with dignity.
And the idea of, you know, you've got one pair of shoes and you make sure those shoes are shined,
when you're going out into the world just downtown
because you want to be seen in a certain light
by both the black community and the white community.
You're going to put forward your dignity
by what you're wearing on your body.
And that became a really powerful message for me.
And I still think about it.
That's how I show up.
I show up in a very intentional way.
You show up in a very simple,
black way. You love black clothing. I do tend to, well, I try to, you know, that energy that it takes
to put together clothing, I use professionally, you know, so if I can have a uniform and I know that,
you know, I know what I'm going to wear when I go out, you know, lately it's been a navy blue
turtleneck and navy blue trousers. It's tone on tone. I know that I can look good and not have to
worry about being fashion forward. I mean, it's only if I'm doing a red carpet or something
like that, that I want to make sure that, you know, I show up in, you know, something that makes a
mark. Otherwise, I kind of want to recede. Well, the thing about it is, and I hope I'm not
overstating this or stepping into a territory that I don't really know, but when you were
talking about Elfable wearing all black and the reasons why and what it signified, in many
ways, I was just wondering, is that how you think about yourself?
and your own style.
Well, I do have to say that.
Elphaba is the main character of Wicked,
the Wicked films that I align myself with.
There's a sensibility about her
and how she walks through life,
both as an introvert and one that is a listener.
Also, she's with Nessa Rose.
She's a people-pleaser in a way.
You know, she's working to combat the fact that she's been other,
by taking care of
making sure that other people are okay
before Wicked was even in my life
and that's a part of my own personality
but then the draw to armor
is definitely a part of my personality
because I dress according to how I want to be seen
whether it's an interview with a person
that I've never met
or you know it's going out on a red carpet
You know, I'm dressing in a way very conscious of how I might potentially be seen.
And that's what all of us do, really.
It is not as intentional, but we're not thinking about it quite as much.
You might say, well, you know, I like this, I don't like that.
This is my style.
This isn't my style.
But you're also making choices about how you or what that is is making choices about how you want to show up for a specific moment.
You know, as a black man, I mean, you're hyper-visible.
And I mean that literally because when you're a black man in predominantly white spaces, you stand out. You're seeing. It's just what happens, you know? So that has to factor into how you understand the way people interpret what you wear and how you present yourself and what you say. Do you remember when you became conscious of that?
Early, early on, maybe junior high.
You know, I wasn't aware of, you know, growing up in Akron.
And, you know, Akron, it has its racist moments, areas, you know, just have that dynamic there, especially when I was coming up.
I mean, there were certain areas that you didn't go into.
And it was also the time that, you know, the original roots, the novel was created and then, you know, the television series happened.
So that was in our, in our home.
Oh, for the roots, yes.
Yeah, for roots.
And, you know, all this is folding in, and I'm trying to figure.
out who am I and how can I be true to myself and embrace all that I am drawn to?
Because I was operating with two different things.
One, that it tended to be more feminine than masculine.
It tended, you know, because I was drawing and painting and making puppets and creating
clothing.
So all those were seen as more feminine.
And then, you know, I couldn't get around being a black man or a black boy.
You know, that was how I was seen as well.
So, you know, navigating that, you know, when you think about it, when I think about it, you know, just sitting here with you, it's like, well, that informs why I'm doing what I'm doing because I'm actually trying to control how people see other people before they've said anything.
Let's take a short break.
If you're just joining us, I'm talking to Oscar, Tony, an Emmy-winning costume designer, Paul.
Paul Tazwell. We'll continue our conversation after a short break. This is fresh air.
Okay, you have been living in the world of Oz for a really long time in various different ways. We talked about the Wizard of Oz as a child. And in high school, you designed costumes for your school's production of the Wiz. That's right.
What do you remember about that experience and what drew you to design rather than to perform?
at that time I had not let go of performance but you know in 1978 the whiz came out as a film
yep the one with diana ross and michael jackson nipsy russell was in it um and richard pryor
and lena horn and that was hugely formative for me visually you know to see again to see black
faces in this epic film rendered in great style and amazing
music by Quincy Jones. He did all the orchestrations for that. It blew my mind, you know,
to see that kind of expression of disco iconography represented as the Emerald City world, you know,
because I knew the Wizard of Oz from 1939, but then to see it told in our, you know, my cultural
language was, you know, life-changing. It was like, oh, yeah, well, of course, you know, this all
works beautifully, you know, or like the, I think they call them the Winkies in the film.
Those people in the factory that are working for Eveline, when they unzip out of their bodies
and the skin falls away and then there are these beautiful dancey at or Harlem dancers.
And you see their brown skin and, you know, just, you know, that was, again, mind-blowing.
It was magical.
Then, because I went to a magnet school in Akron, part of that was that there was a performing arts program within that school.
And at that time, I wanted to be an actor, singer, dancer.
That was my hope and drive.
And I found theater through a production of West Side Story that I was in maybe two years before.
So at 16, my teacher, Arnold Thomas, he realized that I was very interested in costume design.
and he offered me the project of designing all the costumes for this production of The Whiz that they were going to do in the spring.
Now, I also auditioned for The Wiz as well, and I was given the role of The Wizard or The Wiz in that production as well.
Yeah.
So I was designing the costumes and also in the production at the same time.
Yeah.
But, you know, I was in heaven.
You know, I loved creating these fantasy characters through my lens.
Now, it was greatly informed.
When I think about what I created, I was very much inspired by, or, you know, you could say, you know, copying the film, you know.
But it was, you know, it transformed into what we could actually manifest.
Thankfully, my, you know, my mother, my dad, my brothers, we all, you know, they all chipped in, you know.
Oh, it was a family affair.
At the end, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, but, you know, much of that time I was creating them on my own.
Were you creating, like, designing and then sewing them and putting it all to everything?
Yeah, the only thing that I didn't sew was my white suit that my mother made for me as the whiz.
So, you know, she made my white suit.
It was a double-breasted suit I love.
I love it was a shark skin suit and a white cape with green lining.
Oh, my God.
You know, there was a gold lamay pleaded cape and dress that was designed, that I designed for Glinda.
That was my continuing evolution of problem solving and the creation of worlds that I continued to fall in love with.
Once I graduated, I ended up going to Pratt Institute to study fashion.
And the reason that I wanted to be in New York
was because I wanted to continue to pursue an acting and dancing career.
But I didn't create a bond with the world of fashion at that time,
so decided that I really wanted to get back into costume design.
And for that, I went to North Carolina School of the Arts
in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
And while I was there, I made the conscious decision
that I would put myself whole hog into becoming a costume designer
because I was still grappling with how can I be seen
in the way that I want to be seen as a performer?
How can I get the roles of a leading man in a musical on Broadway
in the way that I want to do that?
And will I ever be able to?
because the climate at that time was just it didn't feel as inclusive. It wasn't.
Well, let's slow down a little bit because you left Akron for New York City. This was around 82.
I mean, what a time to be in the city. You're 18. You're away from home for the first time. You're discovering yourself.
But you also are kind of coming to grips with maybe you won't be a performer. Maybe you will go into this other direction.
Was there something pivotal that happened during that time period that really?
solidified that for you?
I mean, one of the things was just how difficult it was to, you know, because I was trying
to double major, and it seemed like at every turn, I wasn't able to merge both of them
together, and what was really encouraged was my design ability, meaning I was getting a lot
of encouragement.
I was excelling very quickly.
it was in the direction of costumes.
And I made a decision my junior year
that I would devote myself to costume design
and live vicariously through other characters,
where I might not be cast in certain roles
because of how I looked.
As a designer, I could be anyone.
I could live through that process
of character development
and what they would wear
it just so happens
that I wasn't going to be
on stage playing the role.
Let's take a short break.
If you're just joining us,
I'm talking to Paul Tazwell,
the Oscar-winning costume designer
whose work includes Hamilton,
West Side Story,
and the new film, Wicked for Good.
We'll be back after a break.
This is fresh air.
Your Broadway debut was in 1996,
but Hamilton
in 2015.
was the moment when the world saw your work.
And the costumes, as in all of your productions,
do so much storytelling,
the way the revolutionaries are earth tones
and the British are in jewel tones,
the way that final dress is both like a morning and a triumph.
And how did you and Lynn Manuel, Miranda,
approach the visual language of that show?
I mean, I would give it up to,
and I love working with Lynn,
And we work together on In The Heights first.
But I also want to throw in and acknowledge Thomas Kale, who was the director of both in the Heights and of Hamilton.
Because it was Thomas Kale that I was directly engaging with for the overall production.
You know, I had a large body of work that I did between bringing to noise, bring into funk, and Hamilton.
And all of that work defines where I was creatively as a designer to be able to step into Hamilton and do what you were suggesting, which is being in control of the imagery that I was using as it relates to these characters that we know, our forefathers and the world around them, but to show it through the lens of a modern voice.
and making choices about silhouette and very directly research silhouette and where it's useful and movement as well.
And that's where my background and dance, that's, you know, I'm always infusing that into my design because it just becomes part of the performance.
You know, the extension of a costume or fabric from the body and how it connects to and is reactive,
of how the body moves is paramount for me.
Because you get an emotional result from that.
When you think about West Side Story, let's say,
or even in Hamilton where you have the winner's ball
and because the turntable is turning
and the women are moving in a circular manner,
the skirts then sweep around in a way that becomes very romantic.
And the ensemble of ladies,
in those skirts, you know, so they've gone from being soldiers into being these women in this ball.
And, you know, when they're lifted up and they're swirling around,
it creates this really magical, romantic moment that you are swept into.
And that's in support of the three primary women that we're looking at,
which is the Schuyler sisters, and then experiencing Eliza's, you know, her transformation.
And then we go into Angelica.
and how she remembers that moment.
You know, so all those things are very visceral for me.
And I become very emotional about it.
Are there any funny moments, though,
when you thought a garment might work out
and then you practice it and you learn,
not so much.
This is actually not going to work, you know?
I know my life is full of that.
But it's, you know, you have to have trial and error, you know.
And so I build into the process a period of R&D to fail, you know,
to make bad choices.
There were probably seven different versions
of the alphabet hat that I created.
One, because I wanted to figure it out,
and I wanted for it to be able to collapse.
I wanted for it to live within the design rules
that we had created for the film
to somehow be a very original version of a hat.
Was it going to be straight and pointed up
you know, in a symmetrical way, or was it going to curve?
And, you know, just, you know, a little blip is, as John M. Chu would describe how he was planning on starting the film,
it was going to be a close-up of the hat that you really couldn't see what it was.
You really didn't know if it was a mountain or a building or, you know, like what that structure was.
So that defined why it spirals around.
But then the spiral became definitive of everything around.
around, you know, like, it resonates throughout the film. And, you know, you see that usage of spiral
defines our world of Oz. Paul Taswell, this has been such a pleasure to talk with you.
Thank you so much. Oh, so great to talk to you as well. Thank you.
Paul Taswell is an Oscar Emmy and Tony Award-winning costume designer, known for his work on
Hamilton, West Side Story, and the new film, Wicked for Good. Tomorrow on Fresh Air,
Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist Lindsay Adairio.
A new documentary explores the intersection
of her all-consuming and dangerous work in conflict zones
and her life at home as a wife and a mother.
I hope you can join us.
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