So there were lots of
versions but we got there in the
end and I think it just feels like
we’re in the heavens during
that dance. I feel like we’re
floating in a cloud and it’s
so romantic.
SO YOU HAD YOUR
OWN INPUT INTO
BELLE’S COSTUMES?
Yeah, I always have
input into my costumes.
They’re a very important
part of me creating my
character – it’s always
a really important part of
the preparation process too,
for me to get into the role.
WE HEARD TRADING BALLET
FLATS FOR BOOTS WAS YOUR
IDEA. WHY THE CHANGE?
Obviously an animated film is an animated
film, but a film set in a real-life setting
requires something different. Belle is
a horserider and works in her father’s
garden, and if you’re going to get on
a stallion in the mud and ride through
an entire forest to get to a haunted castle
that’s x number of hours away, you can’t
really do it in ballet shoes. You actually
have to be wearing something that you
can get on and off a horse in. I wanted
to make sure that what Belle is wearing
seems real, authentic and practical – and
something that you could believe Belle
was doing what she was doing in.
SO TELL US, DID YOU EVER DRESS
UP AS BELLE WHEN YOU WERE
A LITTLE GIRL?
I didn’t, actually. I was very into
Pocahontas, so I never had Belle’s yellow
dress, although I always had a thing about
the blue apron. I always liked the country
look. Rustic chic! I’d like to go and live
in Provence and carry a basket and eat
bread and cheese every day and wear
an apron. That sounds great!
WHY IS THE DANCE SUCH AN
IMPORTANT SCENE IN THE FILM?
There’s not a lot of scenes in which Dan
and I get to tell the story of Belle and
the Beast falling in love, and one
of the really big moments for that
is this dance that they do together.
It was a great bonding
experience. We got sweaty, we
stood on each other’s toes, we
made mistakes. It was really
sweet actually because I was
supporting Dan as much
as Dan was supporting
me, in the sense that
Dan was also on stilts...
IS IT TRUE THERE
WERE A FEW
VERSIONS OF
THE DRESS?
We had designed a very
traditional dress, which would
have been true to the time
period, but the material was
very heavy. Trying to get that to
do what it does in the animated
film, where the dress kind of
floats, I very quickly realised
that this kind of dress just wasn’t
going to work. It needed to be
light and chiffon so it could
do that floating thing.
It’s a story about seeing
deeper and seeing beyond the
superficial and the exterior,
and I think that really
resonates with people.
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ADDITIONAL WORDS
BREE PLAYER
PHOTOGRAPHY
GETTY IMAGES, DISNEY & INSTAGRAM