17 Actors Who Underwent Serious Physical Transformations With Makeup And Prosthetics For A Role (And If They Loved Or Hated It)
Kristen Harris
·15-min read
I'm a huge fan of practical effects. I mean, CGI artists do amazing work, but there's something so special about a movie or TV character whose transformation is wholly the work of talented makeup, hair, and SFX artists. However, while the makeup and prosthetics may look amazing onscreen, actors don't always have the best time wearing them IRL.
Here are 17 times actors underwent serious physical transformations for roles (and if they loved or hated them):
1.Margaret Qualleytold the Sunday Times that, for The Substance, director Coralie Fargeat's “vision of Sue was '80s inspired, with butt and boobs, think Jessica Rabbit." The actor said, "Unfortunately, there is no magic boob potion, so we had to glue those on."
Here's Margaret in real life vs. in the movie:
Michael Tran / AFP via Getty Images, Mubi / Via youtube.com
2.To prepare to play Elphaba in Wicked, Cynthia Erivo went through "green tests." She told Vanity Fair that the best shade had highlighter yellow undertones because "on brown, it reads like skin."
Here's Cynthia in real life vs. in the movie:
Nathan Congleton / NBC / NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images, Universal Pictures / Via youtube.com
3.Transforming Stellan Skarsgård into Baron Vladimir Harkonnen for Dune and Dune: Part Two took eight hours. He told Business Insider, "It was painful, but it was worth it."
4.When Stellan Skarsgård played Bootstrap Bill Turner in Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest and At World's End, he "was the only one on set with real prosthetics on."
5.A penchant for prosthetics runs in the family. Stellan's son, Bill Skarsgård, enjoyed wearing them to play Pennywise in It and It Chapter Two, telling the New York Times, "I'm a pretty private person, so I don't mind not being recognized. It's nice to hide behind the makeup.”
6.In 2014, Jim Carrey told The Graham Norton Show, "When I did [How the Grinch Stole Christmas]...literally the makeup was like being buried alive every day. The first day was 8.5 hours, and I went back to my trailer and put my leg through the wall."
Here's Jim in real life vs. the movie:
Ron Galella, Ltd. / Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images, Getty Images
7.Describing her transformation into Griselda Blanco for Griselda, Sofía Vergara told CBS Sunday Mornings, "The [prosthetic] nose. The teeth were horrific. I had plastic from [my eyelids] to [above my hairline] because we needed to cover. My eyebrows are very thick, and I wanted me to disappear. And I think that was one of my features that is very strong."
8.In the design of Colin Farrell's makeup in The Batman, Mike Marino went for a more realistic The Penguin than previous onscreen iterations. Mike told the LA Times, "I put in subliminal shapes that resembled the eyebrows of a penguin, the beak of a bird. Little details, like his scarred side on the bottom of one nostril is, the exact shape of a bird’s mouth. So it’s really like a beak. His nose actually is a bird beak. I found some reference photographs of some birds that were grizzled and older and have been through the wringer. I utilized the chipping of the beaks with his skin."
9.To play Tammy Faye Bakker in The Eyes of Tammy Faye, Jessica Chastain spent up to seven and a half hours getting her makeup done. It was the most prosthetics she's worn for a role. She told the LA Times, "I got to set, and I was so panicky. I started to have hot flashes because it's so heavy and hot. I was afraid. It was like going on a long-distance flight every day. Because if it takes seven and a half hours to put on, it's going to take at least two hours to get off. It was concerning to me. I was worried about my circulation."
10.Describing the process of becoming Gorr the God Butcher in Thor: Love and Thunder, Christian Bale told The Hollywood Reporter, "We got it down to three and half hours, but usually, it was, like, starting at four hours. Transformation — sitting there, casually building Gorr with my wonderful collaborators, the makeup artists who absolutely created Gorr just as much as I did. And the fun times we had, and the weird music we would listen to to get into the Gorr headspace..."
11.In Suspiria, Tilda Swinton played multiple roles, most notably the role-within-a-role of the fictional actor Lutz Ebersdorf as Dr. Josef Klemperer. Makeup designer Mark Coulier told Deadline, "For that, we had to get away from Tilda's feminine features — she's got a long, slender neck, and a very feminine jawline, and high cheekbones, and we had to thicken up the jaw quite a lot, and the neck, to get her into those male, heavy-set proportions. She's completely covered, her entire head, in several sections. We had a tubular neck that was pulled over, made out of silicone, and separate cheeks, a chin, top lip, nose, forehead, ears, back of head, hand prosthetics, fingernails. We had a wig on there. So, it was a full deal — bits of body padding — and we painted it up."
12.To transform Oscar Isaac into Apocalypse for X-Men: Apocalypse, makeup artist Brian Snipe applied six thin silicone prosthetics. Over the course of filming, they were able to get the process down from four hours to one.
13.To play Virginia Wolf in The Hours, Nicole Kidman spent three hours in the makeup chair. The most important aspect was her prosthetic nose, which enabled her to walk around unnoticed.
Here's Nicole in real life vs. in the movie:
Steve Granitz / WireImage / Via Getty, (c) Paramount / courtesy Everett Collection
14.After wearing facial prosthetics to play an aged-up Hermione Granger at the end of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2, Emma Watson told Jo Blo, "Prosthetics are horrible. I'm never… I'm going to avoid doing a movie with prosthetics, like my life depends on it."
Here's Emma in real life vs. in the movie:
Nbc / NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images, Warner Bros. / Via Max
15.For Guardians of the Galaxy, Dave Bautista's transformation into Drax the Destroyer took five makeup artists, five hours, and 18 prosthetics. He was also painted and given dentures and colored contacts to wear.
16.Describing his three-hour-long transformation into Vision for Avengers: Age of Ultron, Paul Bettany told Business Insider, "The makeup on my face, which, you know, they’re huge prosthetic pieces that go from below my eyebrows all the way down to the mid-shoulder blade. And same thing around my neck. The only part of your skin of your entire body that’s open to the air is a sort of…part of your face the size of maybe your hand."
17.And finally, while filming X-Men, Rebecca Romjin spent eight to nine hours a day getting into costume as Mystique (though the process took less time on subsequent films). She told Entertainment Weekly, "There are four women who do it, and having them in my personal space for that many hours a day is crazy-making. You can go from being perfectly happy and having a nice time to just being, like, evil bitch woman: 'If one more person stares at me, I’m gonna pull my eyes out!'"
Here's Rebecca in real life vs. in the movie:
Vinnie Zuffante / Getty Images, TM & Copyright (c) 20th Century Fox Film Corp. All rights reserved.
Which actor had the best makeup transformation you've seen onscreen? Let us know in the comments!
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