Bridgerton became a cultural sensation when it first arrived on our screens on Christmas Day in 2020. The steamy Regency-era period drama was watched by over 80 million households in its first month, becoming one of the streaming platformâs biggest hits and catapulting its young, relatively unknown stars to household names.Â
Now in its fourth season, the show continues to be a runaway success. âItâs like one big movie, it just keeps going and doesnât stop,â the showâs lead costume designer, John Glaser, exclusively tells HELLO!. âItâs always evolving. A movie, at some point, stops, but this just keeps adding to itself.â
The way in which the show captured the zeitgeist was somewhat unexpected for Glaser, whose luxurious creations are part of what makes the drama so appealing â and won him an Emmy Award for Outstanding Period Costumes last year.Â
âNone of us knew the reception that it would have when it was first released,â says the designer, who, alongside his department of over 100 people, made more than 700 costumes for the new season, including 172 unique looks. âWhen youâre in the moment, you never know how big something may be or how insignificant it may be. This just happened to be massive.â
Benedict takes centre stageÂ
Adapted from Julia Quinnâs bestselling novels, each season of the dizzyingly glamorous drama has focused on different members of the Bridgerton family.
In season four, actor Luke Thompson takes centre stage as the rebellious, bohemian second Bridgerton son, Benedict, whose life as an eternal bachelor is turned upside down when he meets Sophie Baek (Yerin Ha), a maid disguised as a debutante at a masquerade ball.Â
âBenedict was building up for this season.â
âHe was building up for this season,â says associate costume designer Dougie Hawkes. âHe really sees himself as an artist, heâs a bit playful, and heâs trying to find himself on the sexuality side of things, as well. So it was a chance to pull that out and show it in his relaxed costume.â
An evolution of Colin Firthâs Mr Darcy in Benedictâs wet shirt scene
One particularly memorable scene emulates an iconic moment from the BBCâs 1995 adaptation of Pride & Prejudice, when Colin Firthâs Mr Darcy emerges from a lake in a sopping wet shirt. In Bridgerton, Benedict also appears lakeside in a sodden shirt while Sophie bashfully hides behind a tree nearby.Â
âItâs become a bit of a game for me,â says Hawkes, who worked on the BBCâs 1995 Jane Austen adaptation. âWe tried to perfect it with the weight of the shirt, what it would look like, how we would play the pantaloons. Itâs become a bit of an evolution of Colin Firth,â explains the designer, who says that this time, Benedictâs dangerously low-cut, half-buttoned trousers have become a talking point among viewers.Â
âWith Colin, it was his shirt, but with this one, itâs become about the pantaloons,â says Hawkes, adding, âLuke Thompson just effortlessly did that.â
Embracing the âupstairs-downstairsâ element of season 4
As well as shifting the spotlight to a new Bridgerton sibling, the show also pulls the lives of the downstairs staff into focus. âThis is the first time where thereâs a lot of integration between the upstairs and the downstairs,â says Glaser, whose previous credits include Gotham, Brotherhood, and another Shonda Rhimes hit, How to Get Away with Murder. âWe had to find a nice balance. We had to make sure that the downstairs was elevated enough and not too contrasty with the upstairs. If it had been a really sad downstairs and a really fantasy upstairs, the interactions wouldnât have worked,â explains the designer, who said the maidsâ necklines are âmore elegant and sexyâ this time around.Â
âThere are no divas, thereâs no pulling rank.â
The maids arenât the only ones to get a new look this season, however. Lady Violet Bridgerton (played by Ruth Gemmell) dons sexier and softer styles as she explores a new romance after years of widowhood.Â
âThat was a really lovely journey this season,â says assistant costume designer George Sayer, who, before this, worked on the Oscar-winning film Poor Things. âHer clothes had been quite conservative before, and we were trying to feed into that whole, blossoming, finding love again, narrative,â Sayer says of the Bridgerton matriarch, who embraces her sexuality as a mature woman, sparking a relationship with Lord Marcus Anderson (Daniel Francis), the brother of Lady Danbury. âEverything was softened and made a little bit sexier.â
With the show already renewed for another two seasons, work on the next instalment is well and truly underway ahead of filming in March. According to Glaser, returning to the show is like âgoing back to schoolâ. âYou get your notebooks out and think about how to approach it in a different way, what can keep it fresh,â he says.Â
There are no divas on setÂ
While plot details for season five remain firmly under wraps, what is for certain is Glaser and his teamâs continued appreciation of the production.Â
âItâs a great project,â he says. âAnd that comes from the top, from [executive producers] Shonda Rhimes and Betsy Beers. Itâs like, no muss, no fuss. Letâs have a pleasant and rewarding experience.â
As for the two leads, Thompson and Ha, Glaser couldnât be more complimentary. âThey are great people and theyâre very self-sufficient,â he reveals. âThis production is like a Woody Allen film where an actor comes in and theyâre glad to be here. Theyâre glad to have their job.Â
âThere are no divas, thereâs no pulling rank,â says John. âItâs a great project. We appreciate it and I think the actors appreciate it too.â
Bridgerton Season Four is available to stream on Netflix now.Â
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