Prosthetics: The use of form-changing materials,
applied, blended, and colored on a performer's skin. Can be
foam latex, rubber, plastic, gelatine, or other
materials. In the medical field, "prosthetics" refers to synthetic
replacements or enhancements for defective body parts. The
talents of sculpting, moldmaking, laboratory work, painting,
and hair application come into play when creating prosthetic
appliances to create a character. First, a mold is made of
the performer's face or appropriate body part. Then, a rigid
duplicate, usually made out of plaster, is cast from this
mold. The sculpture is done in a non-drying oil-based clay,
so that it can be worked over a number of days and blended
thin without cracking. A second mold is made of the
sculpture. The clay is then thrown away, and the void
between the mold filled with your favorite "fake skin": foam
latex, gelatine, silicone, etc. The resulting piece is called an "appliance." The
appliance is sometimes prepainted, then glued to the actor's
face with medical adhesives. All exposed edges are blended
imperceptibly onto the actor's own skin, taking care to
match skin textures. More color is usually applied and, if
hair is to be added, it is laid on and a final touch-ups
made. Some complex prosthetic makeups can take up to 6 hours
or more to apply! Need to turn someone into an ape, a ghoul, or an
abominable snowman? Call TCS; we'll bring out the
beast in anybody!
Actor Carl Struyken ("Lurch" from "The Addams Family" movie)
in a three-piece foam latex appliance with punched hair in
pieces, also lace hair pieces. Colored with PAX paints. For
CBS' Journey to the Center of the Earth remake.
A face cast, sculpture, and screen capture of a "Planet of
the Apes" homage as seen in the feature film
Spaceballs. A one piece appliance, created and worn
by Rick Lazzarini (who also played "Pizza the Hutt" in the
same film!)
Actor Emilio Estevez in an old-age makeup test for Young
Guns II. On the strength of this test, the prosthetic
approach to an aged Billy the Kid was chosen over using an
aged actor.
Mischievous gnomes who steal golf balls for a Japanese golf
association spot. The happy gnome on the right is played by
female actor Debbie Carrington, best known for her
mini-prostitute role in Total Recall. Multi-piece
prosthetics, hair, and custom costume were created by TCS as
well.
TCS created 13 Albert Einstein makeups for this Olympic
Stain commercial. It took only three weeks to create all the
prosthetics and hair pieces (and a team of twenty makeup and
hair artists on the shoot!)
Funny, but Robert De Niro just couldn't seem to find the
time to slip back into makeup for the CD-ROM version of
Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. So we created a
look-alike makeup that was put on a look-alike actor. Here's
a test of the 4-piece appliance.
Makeup tests for Disney TV's remake of The Shaggy
Dog. (Hey now, the transformation was supposed to
be a throwback to the original film!) Hand-laid hair, foam
latex prosthetics, false teeth and hair pieces made from
Icelandic sheep wool! What's New | Features
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are the property of The Character Shop, Inc. and copyright
1995-99
PROSTHETICS
Select any photo to view a larger version.
Makeup created and applied by David Anderson and Rick
Lazzarini.
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