What’s funny with the bath scene actually,
that bathtub water is oily.
So, a lot of my makeup, I think,
started to rub off a little bit.
I’m Yerin Ha and this is The Close Up.
[upbeat music]
[classical music]
When I got the role,
I immediately purchased the book on my iPad.
I binge read that, re-watched
all the seasons of Bridgerton.
A big mental hurdle of just telling myself that I am going
to be the next lead of Bridgerton.
I never saw myself in that romantic lead character role,
so I was like, I can’t do this, I can’t do this.
I can do this, I can do this.
I did not have a British accent in my back pocket,
I will say.
You are so eager to see me that you cannot wait
until my return to Penwood House.
I am flattered.
‘Cause when I went to NIDA,
the teacher told us that Brits don’t like to hire Aussies
because we have a lazy accent.
And then the audition came along
and I was like, oh crap, I should have practiced harder.
But luckily Jane Karen, the dialect coach on Bridgerton,
she literally held my hand throughout the entire process
and the thing that I struggled
with the most is when you think you’re doing it,
and you’re like, water.
And she’s like, water.
And I’m like, water.
And she’s like, water.
And I’m like, I think I’m doing it.
For Bridgerton, we work with a historical advisor
and her name is Hannah.
She actually did come with a bunch
of different historical sketches
and paintings of a maid like, falling asleep
because she’s so tired.
She was saying like, the maids held all the gossip
and they actually knew everything
that went in the household, which you get
to see a lot more in this season.
When I stepped into the Bridgerton drawing room
for the first time, Tom Verica gave me a tour of the set
and I was like, this is crazy.
Some of them are real houses.
I remember going to one,
I think it was shooting at Cavender House,
and they were saying it’s up for sale for 75 million pounds.
It’s crazy the amount of cash those people have.
[dramatic string music]
With the makeup, it’d be a very no makeup makeup look,
so we kept it really simple, paired back.
Vali would use a Giorgio Armani Luminous Silk Foundation,
Dior concealer, and just an eyebrow pencil,
a very simple liner.
Nic Collins, the head of makeup and hair department,
she talked to me about what products I like to use,
what kind of eyeliner shape I like
or I, she thinks is flattering,
would test different colors on me
to make sure it suits my skin tone.
I think what’s great about the makeup team
is they get a shot list obviously,
and whenever there is a closeup they’ll spend extra time
cleaning up anything and you get really close
with your makeup person, let’s just say that, yeah.
She would pump on that blush a lot.
I think my cheeks can take a lot of it.
I believe that’s a Dior tint, lip tint as well.
Miss Gung, may I have your first dance?
You may, Mr. Bridgerton.
This scene is right towards the end.
She’s really coming into her own skin at this point,
so there’s a bit more of a color on the eyeshadow
that she didn’t really have as The Lady in Silver.
It was a lot simpler than this.
And even with that lip color,
I think it’s just those little nods
to perhaps Sophie being more comfortable in her skin
and embracing her womanhood and her femininity.
We tried a lot with different eyeshadow palettes
and I think we went with a Dior eyeshadow palette
I think, like a little almost pinky hazy hue.
My makeup artist, she did this great thing of wetting the,
it was almost like an eyeshadow actually, and she wet it
and she used that almost as the eyeliner
rather than using a liquid eyeliner
because those can come across quite heavy, I think.
So, having something more powdery gave it a bit more
of a subtler texture to it.
[gentle string music]
Sophie.
Wow, yes.
Going into a wedding look, you know,
you’re really embracing all your flaws
and you know, when you see someone
standing at the other side of the aisle
completely looking at you in love,
it really does help you play the arc
of where you’re about to go.
They just wanted my skin to look glowy
and dewy, maybe go a bit heavy on the mascara.
[Director] Those are your real lashes?
Those are my real lashes, yes.
[Director] Hey, look- Congrats.
A lash perm can do a lot of things.
[classical string music]
It is a pain sometimes to go to the bathroom
in those toilets,
but you just have to do it to keep your skin hydrated.
It is so difficult to the point
where sometimes you just don’t wanna drink water
and stay dehydrated because it’s annoying [laughing]
to go and, to the bathroom.
But no, you do have to stay hydrated and it’s important.
It’s important to stay hydrated.
I would prep kind of at home.
When I’m working I do tend to splurge
a little bit, so I do go for like an SK-ii,
like Pitera essence and then just a simple
but thick moisturizer
that would really keep my skin hydrated,
so I’d go for like the Tatcha cream,
go for the Beauty of Joseon eye cream.
You know what, I would actually go to Face Gym quite a bit.
That was a thing that I discovered while living in London.
Face Gym is a gym for your face.
It’s such an original title.
Basically, they just try to massage your face
and lift it in a very natural way, I guess.
[gentle music]
What’s funny with the bath scene actually,
that bathtub water is oily,
so a lot of my makeup, I think,
started to rub off a little bit.
It’s just a little bit of oil
to make your skin look really nice
and glistening and [laughing] smooth.
There was like a powder that they put in
to make it opaque.
I thought they were gonna use a bath bomb,
but no, it was like a powder that they did
and they would just stir it with their fingers
and I was like, I can help you.
Let me stir it for you.
I’m proud of being able to do the intimacy scenes
’cause I was really scared of them.
I obviously deal with self-confidence
or lack of, as I think a lot of women do,
and so being able to feel comfortable in my skin
took a lot of courage, I think.
Luckily for me, because I didn’t have to have like,
lipstick or lip gloss, it was all really easy
for the makeup team.
I think I could say that, but it was just about making sure,
’cause I have a few tattoos actually, so we’d have
to make sure that they’re not being rubbed, you know,
onto the sheets or the costumes or whatever
with our movements.
We have an amazing intimacy coordinator,
Lizzy Talbot, and she talks with us beforehand,
like one-on-one and then she,
we also have quite a extensive rehearsal period with her.
What’s great about the scripts is that it’s written
in a lot of detail, I think,
of how they imagine the intimate scene
to play out and then Lizzy would kind of talk to us
about what do we feel comfortable with,
what do we feel comfortable with showing?
And then she’ll create almost like a blueprint
for us to follow.
Some people prefer to do it like, literally
in paint by numbers, like literally
put your hand here, then here.
But I think because Luke and I had gained
quite a lot of trust, she trusted us for us
to be able to follow the arc that she painted.
It’s amazing because what sometimes you think feels good
doesn’t always look good
and there’s a lot of toe pointing
to make a good intimacy scene look good, you know?
And it’s not something I think you would actually clock
if you’re watching it, but it just looks prettier
from an audience perspective.
‘Cause yeah, some flexed feet, I’ve seen some takes,
it’s, it does not look great. [laughing]
[gentle string music]
I actually had short hair beginning filming of Bridgerton
so we had to use a wig, actually.
Sophie’s transformation is something
we talked about a little bit quite early on with Nic.
You know, when we see her in the Penwood household,
she has a really slick bun.
Even her costume represented that, with like the high color
and the darker tones
and then as she transitioned throughout the series,
we wanted her hair to be looser, maybe the necklines
to be softer.
Little details like that I think really helped me remember
what stage I was in,
’cause we also shoot quite of sequence.
For that masquerade ball we wanted
to almost take a spin on a bun, the classic bun
that she would wear and we’d know that she didn’t have
as much time, so we thought that she would just
kind of elaborate on that.
So then she would add a plait around the bun
and have like these little curls on the sides,
just like extra little bits,
but then it would also be quick
to like, fix up when she goes back home.
We did a few different hair trials for the wedding look.
We wanted Sophie to obviously be a bit more extravagant
than what we’ve seen her throughout the series,
but still a bit simpler perhaps
than perhaps other brides would be.
And so I guess this is like almost an extension
of the Queen’s Ball look.
But yeah, that was my own hair.
But then with a lot of extra, I think maybe like three
or four extra hair pieces on top of that.
[lively string music]
With more of these extravagant dresses, you know,
we obviously had the corset, then the petticoat,
the little stockings for the shoes.
To be honest with you, it’s really
just the corset that is a bit of a pain.
True lace-up corset, you do really have to grab on
to something because you do lose your balance.
Yeah, I’m bracing.
I’m like, oh, yeah.
We tried on the silver dress
and there was like an embellishment team, a team
that created the bows like, separately to add it on.
They measured my hand
and everything from different circumferences
I didn’t even know you would need.
There’s the jewelry team, the mask team,
there’s hundreds of people.
Yeah, it’s insane.
Yeah, we tried on different colors,
like, the specificity of, you know,
the different type of silver.
Is it silver enough or is it too cream?
Like, they would argue over,
to us, what seems like very small details,
but to them is like quite big
and you know, those little layers make up
for such a beautiful image, which is why
they’re so incredible at what they do.
There were so many different iterations of the mask
because we want to cover enough of her
that Benedict doesn’t realize her,
but also be able to see enough of me
to see my expressions, I guess.
We would spend a good morning putting on the makeup
to then cover half the makeup.
But yeah, they molded my face
and the material is actually so delicate that we had
to put compeeds on the inside of the mask
because my skin is quite sensitive
because they kind of see through,
like the color is quite transparent
and it’s thin enough that it just sticks on
like a thin layer on top of the fabric
that it looks like the fabric.
It also protects my skin.
Well Sophie’s necklace obviously holds a lot of weight
and yeah, the costume team told me
that obviously the amethyst pendant
is the Korea national gem, which I didn’t know, actually,
and so they made it into like a purple little necklace
that she would always wear.
It was a memory of her mother.
She would always look at it
and remind herself to never become like her
and not make mistakes like her.
[gentle classical music]
It’s amazing what hair, costume can do to your posture,
to your gestures, or even like, things like having an apron.
It just really reminds you of like your work and your duty.
The costume and makeup team really helped me be able
to feel like Sophie
and be able to go on that journey with them, yeah,
and not do it alone.
I wouldn’t have done it without them.
[gentle classical music]