

I haven’t read the book the film is based on, but just from my viewing I’m very happy with the cast, with main character Moist von Lipwig (Richard Coyle) as a reprehensible flim flam man punished by Lord Vetinari (Charles Dance, Game of Thrones) by making him the new postmaster. Going Postal is one of the few productions that get it right, with a great blend of well told story with a lot of cool genre stuff thrown in without fanfare. Visually the genre is a little mind blowing, with high tech portrayed in a low tech way, surrounded by nineteenth century fashion and mannerisms, and often alongside magical and paranormal characters and settings. Steampunk seems to be a genre that very few filmmakers get right, though many have tried, which is unfortunate because there is so much untapped potential.
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For an immensely popular series with forty one books, there have been surprisingly few video adaptations, especially professionally made films with a good budget and quality actors. It’s a beautifully steampunk, Earth-like land flying majestically through the cosmos on the back of four elephants riding on a turtle’s shell. Tickets priced £9.Terry Pratchett bequeathed to the world a lengthy series of novels set in a world he devised called Discworld. * Going Postal is on at the Charis Centre, Water Lane, Bishop's Stortford, from Thursday to Saturday, November 18-20.
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She's full of praise for the Water Lane team, who she says are very professional. She took on the job after feeling at a loose end following the death of her husband a year ago and, on seeing a post on Facebook, she sent the company an email offering her services. Part of the art of dressing actors is being resourceful and juggling items, so whereas she will change the cast's tops, she might reuse their trousers. "I collect fabric and raided my stock," she said. Amanda Green, who plays four parts in Going Postal, wearing the red scarf that was much loved by David NivenĪnne's made most of the costumes, which she says should be late Victorian/turn of the century, and it has stretched her resources. It tells the story of conman Moist von Lipwig who is condemned to be hanged, but has the chance of a reprieve if he agrees to take over Ankh-Morpork's ailing postal service.

She's relishing being involved in Water Lane's production and has been busy genning up on the Terry Pratchett Discworld novel on which the play is based. "If the costumes are showy the audience aren't looking at the actors," she said, adding: "The actors have to be comfortable with what they're wearing."
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She went on to London Weekend Television, where she worked on various classic TV shows including On the Buses, before she went freelance.Īfter being a full-time designer for 30 years, Anne stepped back and became an interior designer for a while, but has been enjoying various freelance jobs, including dressing the cast of her local panto in the village of Braughing.Īlthough with panto bling is the thing, with most other jobs for Anne it's key the costumes do not jump out at people. She joined the ITV broadcaster ATV in 1967 and dressed various pop stars and entertainers of the era, including Jimmy Tarbuck and Engelbert Humperdinck. (52873247)Īnne, who reused the scarf for actor Bill Owen when he played a tramp, got into costume design after she trained as a dress designer in Nottingham. It took her forever, but David Niven loved it." Anne Styles dressed David Niven for the 1970s TV movie The Canterville Ghost. "He appears in various costumes, and I got my cleaning lady to knit a red, woolly scarf. "The story is about an American family who comes to stay and the ghost comes out to haunt them," she said. (52873250)Īnne – who at the age of 80 is still making actors look "pretty", designing the costumes for Bishop's Stortford-based Water Lane Theatre Company's upcoming production Going Postal – recalled dressing Niven for the Oscar Wilde short story when she spoke to the Indie. Anne Styles is making the costumes for Water Lane Theatre Company's production of Going Postal. The woman who introduced the British star to the item of clothing was costumier Anne Styles, who was providing the wardrobe for 1970s TV movie The Canterville Ghost.

It may surprise fans of suave Hollywood legend David Niven that if he had been asked to choose his favourite accessory it's likely it wouldn't be a cravat, but a red, home-knitted, woolly scarf. Chris Carter talks to the costumier about her career working with some big names. The cast of Bishop's Stortford's Water Lane Theatre Company's Going Postal are being dressed for success by Braughing-based Anne Styles.
