FX’s Brilliant Neo-Noir Designed For The 21st Century
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While writing my interview with the costume and production designers of FX’s The Lowdown, I spent a lot of time thinking about the compromises which must be achieved between the clothing actors will wear and the spaces those actors will inhabit. Costumes cannot be successful if they are fighting a set for attention, and a private interior space, like all the homes (and especially the bedrooms) we see in this series, they have to fit the unique style of the character living in them. We have to believe that the person we’re watching on screen would actually cultivate a very specific space.

Alyssa Blair, the costume designer, shared, “In Tulsa, we lack access to prop houses or costume shops. It’s quite challenging. Thus, we source everything from thrift stores or contacts within the community, even utilizing Facebook Marketplace. Over the years, we have cultivated a network within Tulsa to support us.”

Brandon Tonner-Connolly, the production designer for The Lowdown, elaborated, “As we prepared for the show, it was vital to ensure it possessed a distinctive sense of place. We aimed to construct a world uniquely rooted in Tulsa and its residents. This approach, similar to our work on Reservation Dogs, involves collaborating with local vendors and community members whose stories we are privileged to portray.”

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