Tailored for the big screen

605

ALGETE, SPAIN (AFP) – With a vast wardrobe catering to everything from House of the Dragon to The Crown, Spain’s Peris Costumes has carved out a well-tailored niche for itself, renting costumes to producers across the globe.

“Here, you can find everything,” said CEO Javier Toledo showing off a vast array of costumes and accessories – from suits of armour to frock coats, sailor suits and monastic robes.

All around him mannequins dressed in 18th-Century gowns stand next to posters of the many films his company has worked on in recent years.

“There are starting to be rather a lot,” admitted the 63-year-old entrepreneur with white hair and a neatly trimmed goatee whose business is based in Algete, a small town just outside Madrid.

Since Toledo took over 10 years ago, the business has been transformed.

What began as a small family firm set up by tailors specialising in theatre costumes in the eastern coastal city of Valencia in 1856 has become a world leader in costume hire for the film industry.

And it’s a success story closely linked to the rise of on-demand streaming giants such as Netflix, Disney+ and HBO.

ABOVE & BELOW: Peris Costumes CEO Javier Toledo poses next to pictures of workshops with (background) costumes to hire for the film industry, stored in one of the company’s warehouses in Algete, northern Madrid; and leather pieces to realise helmets are stored at the Peris Costumes company. PHOTOS: AFP

An employee tidies up accessories at the office

“We have responded to the changes that have taken place in the market,” he told AFP, pointing notably to the explosion in popularity “of the series”.

When he bought the company, Peris Costumes only had a dozen staff, all based in Madrid.

Today, the group employs 250 people and has offices or workshops in 15 capital cities, including Budapest, Berlin, Paris and Mexico City.

“During the first half of the year, we were involved in almost 600 productions. And by the end of the year we’re hoping that will be more than 1,000,” said marketing director Myriam Wais.

Among the films and series that have chosen the company are numerous super-productions which are very demanding in terms of period or fantasy costumes.

Whether it’s The Rings of Power, Mulan or Marco Polo, many productions prefer to rent costumes rather than invest in making their own.

“Trying to make (the costumes) from scratch is practically impossible because of the time and costs involved,” said Toledo.

And producers appreciate “having costumes that have been worn in and aged with time”, he explains.

To expand its catalogue, Peris Costumes has in recent years has bought up millions of gowns, hats, pairs of shoes and uniforms from studio giants like Warner Bros.

And all these complement its own in-house collections put together in the workshops of its costume designers.

“In total, we have more than 10 million articles” of clothing and accessories, says Wais, reeling off a list of the most popular styles and eras.

It is, she said, “the biggest wardrobe in the world”.

In a nearby room, four garment makers are working with pieces of leather, with a hammer-like maul and pliers on hand.

“Right now, we’re working on our inventory but there are also orders,” she said.

In another room is the jewellery workshop, where close to 20,000 pieces are stored, including the jewels worn by Elizabeth Taylor in the 1963 epic Cleopatra and the papal cross worn by Jude Law in the 2016 series The Young Pope.

At Peris Costumes, the rule is to never throw anything away, not even if it is damaged during filming.

“We have an area called The Walking Dead in which we put everything that is broken or damaged but that could be reused,” Wais said, the term referencing a TV series about zombie apocalypse survivors.

With demand showing little sign of ebbing, this Spanish outfitter has recently started digitising some of its catalogue with the help of a studio equipped with 144 high-resolution cameras.