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Current Gallery: Tudor & Elizabethan / tudorelizabethan250



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    • Highland Films

    A Man for all Seasons

    1966

    Costume seen on Paul Scofield as Thomas More

    • Hal Wallis Films

    Anne of the thousand Days

    1969

    Costume seen on William Squire as Thomas More

Additional Images

About the Costume

Looks like costume designer Margaret Furse pulled a – tellingly – quietly luxurious blue-grey satin doublet that Paul Scofields Thomas More wore serveral times for 1966’s A Man for all Seasons to fashion the very same character, this time played by William Squire, for Anne of the thousand Days about two years later.

The wide-necked jerkin has a curious but defining feature of a functional line of same-fabric buttons that – unusual with this type of garment’s historical predecessors – opens the jerkin midway to the left.

On Scolfield it seems to have been worn over a shirt and with a heavy, dark brown or a black over-gown. Furse added one of the usually worn jerkins between doublet and an over-gown for William Squire’s cameo.

About the Costume

Have you seen this gown somewhere else? Do you need to be given credit for this sighting? Do you have corrections, additions or changes you would like to make?

Have you ever watched a film and noticed a character walk by in a gown that you just know you’ve seen before? Recycled Movie Costumes is dedicated to documenting the life of a costume through its various appearances on film and television.

Additional Images

About the Costume

Looks like costume designer Margaret Furse pulled a – tellingly – quietly luxurious blue-grey satin doublet that Paul Scofields Thomas More wore serveral times for 1966’s A Man for all Seasons to fashion the very same character, this time played by William Squire, for Anne of the thousand Days about two years later.

The wide-necked jerkin has a curious but defining feature of a functional line of same-fabric buttons that – unusual with this type of garment’s historical predecessors – opens the jerkin midway to the left.

On Scolfield it seems to have been worn over a shirt and with a heavy, dark brown or a black over-gown. Furse added one of the usually worn jerkins between doublet and an over-gown for William Squire’s cameo.

Looks like costume designer Margaret Furse pulled a – tellingly – quietly luxurious blue-grey satin doublet that Paul Scofields Thomas More wore serveral times for 1966’s A Man for all Seasons to fashion the very same character, this time played by William Squire, for Anne of the thousand Days about two years later.

The wide-necked jerkin has a curious but defining feature of a functional line of same-fabric buttons that – unusual with this type of garment’s historical predecessors – opens the jerkin midway to the left.

On Scolfield it seems to have been worn over a shirt and with a heavy, dark brown or a black over-gown. Furse added one of the usually worn jerkins between doublet and an over-gown for William Squire’s cameo.

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Credits

Sighting Credit:
  • carsNcors
Costume Designer:
  • Joan Bridge
  • Elizabeth Haffenden

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