Netflix, BBC Deny That They’re Banning Corsets, But They Could at Least Use Ones That Fit
Actors have long complained about the physical and emotional toll of having to wear painful corsets day after day on a period drama. The problem is fixable.
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There is a trope in a lot of period dramas wherein an aristocratic woman turns her back to her maid or someone who otherwise hates her, who then bends her over a chaise lounge or powder table to aggressively tighten her corset—clearly taking out some frustrations with each lace up. In Titanic, Rose’s breath hastens as her mother laces her up and forbids her from seeing Jack ever again. Prudence Featherington in Bridgerton grimaces and squeezes the hand of a nearby maid, almost as if she is in labor, as her corset is tightened in preparation for meeting the Queen. Judy Garland grips the bedpost in terror as her character’s corset is fastened in Meet Me In St. Louis. “I feel like the ossified woman in a sideshow,” she says, her skin going pale.
All of these scenes, of which at least one has been debunked as sartorially inaccurate for its time period, are meant to demonstrate women suffering to maintain societal beauty standards. Of course, as women have picked up more rights throughout the decades, we’ve scrapped the corset along the way—though Dr. Alanna McKnight, a dress and labor historian and author of an upcoming book on Toronto corset manufacturers, argues that we continue to wear corsets today, just by other names: girdles, binders, Skims, Spanx, etc. But should actors still have to wear these garments every day on the job?
Earlier this week, The Sun reported that Netflix and BBC are on the verge of banning corsets in their productions. Netflix denies this report, and a BBC spokesperson told Jezebel that this was “not a story we recognise and having checked with colleagues it’s not a live conversation.” Nevertheless, it brings up a subject worth discussing: What can be done regarding the pain and discomfort many actors have reported from having to wear these outmoded undergarments?