When Kazu Hiro first began experimenting with make-up as an adolescent within the Nineteen Eighties, one face leapt out at him from books and magazines he noticed in outlets: legendary conductor Leonard Bernstein.
Four a long time later, the two-time Oscar winner has come full circle with “Maestro,” through which he remodeled Bradley Cooper into the towering musical nice.
And the make-up results artist has one other Academy Award in his sights.
“Leonard Bernstein was a big inspiration when I was a kid,” Hiro advised AFP in an interview.
“Every time I create a human face, I need a reference photograph. And at that time, there was no internet,” the 54-year-old defined. “So I had to go to a bookstore.”
And the face he noticed time and again was Bernstein’s. In the Nineteen Eighties, the internationally acclaimed conductor had a packed live performance schedule, together with educating and composing.
Shortly after that, the Kyoto native noticed Bernstein in a documentary on Japanese tv.
“I was really inspired by what he was talking about,” Hiro stated. “I thought, you know, ‘Someday, I want to work on a film about Leonard Bernstein.'”
Then in 2020, he obtained a name from Cooper, who directed, cowrote and stars in “Maestro,” which provides a have a look at Bernstein’s life by means of the lens of his marriage to actress Felicia Montealegre (Carey Mulligan).
“It’s really a passion project,” Hiro stated. “Bradley and me love Leonard Bernstein so much.”
Hiro first honed his craft in Japan, educating himself easy methods to change the contours of a face by trial and error.
He moved to the United States within the Nineteen Nineties, and finally turned probably the most sought-after make-up artists in Hollywood.
Hiro has labored on dozens of movies with A-list stars, together with “How the Grinch Stole Christmas,” remodeling Jim Carrey into the beloved Dr Seuss character, and “Nutty Professor II: The Klumps” with Eddie Murphy.
But after incomes two Oscar nominations — for “Norbit,” once more starring Murphy, and “Click” with Adam Sandler — Hiro walked away, “retiring” in 2012 and vowing to dedicate the subsequent part of his profession to sculpture.
However, Tinseltown quickly lured him again.
He remodeled Gary Oldman into Winston Churchill for “Darkest Hour” (2017), a feat that earned him his first Oscar.
Two years later, he earned one other golden statuette for “Bombshell,” through which Charlize Theron morphed into tv journalist Megyn Kelly.
Working with Cooper was a no brainer, given his emotional connection to the subject material.
When Cooper and Hiro first met in 2020, they talked about easy methods to convey Bernstein to life, and successfully signify the practically 50-year span the movie covers.
The make-up artist divided the film into 5 phases — from having to make Cooper, now 49, look youthful, to progressively growing older him.
Preproduction lasted longer than anticipated — largely as a result of coronavirus pandemic, but in addition due to the undertaking’s complexity.
Transforming Cooper right into a younger Bernstein took two and a half hours. The center stage required three hours, and the ultimate stage meant the actor was within the chair for about 5 hours “because he had to be covered from head to toe,” Hiro stated.
“We are both kind of a perfectionist,” Hiro stated. “He conjured Leonard Bernstein from inside out.”
But that inventive feat introduced different challenges.
When Netflix launched the movie’s first trailer final 12 months, there was sharp criticism about Cooper’s use of a big prosthetic nostril, with some saying the depiction of the Jewish maestro mirrored anti-Semitic tropes.
Bernstein’s youngsters Jamie, Alexander and Nina rallied to the film’s protection, saying they have been “perfectly fine” with the choice and including: “It happens to be true that Leonard Bernstein had a nice, big nose.”
Hiro admits it was a “difficult” second.
“I was really confused about it,” the artist stated. “It took me a while to [digest it]. We had so much respect for Leonard Bernstein. And he happened to have that nose.”
Beyond the social media furor, many individuals who had identified Bernstein advised Hiro that his numerous hours of analyzing options had paid off: that Cooper regarded “exactly like Lenny.”
“That kind of proves that our goal was accomplished,” he stated — a indisputable fact that appears confirmed by Hiro’s Oscar nomination, his fifth.
The artist and his staff are the favorites to win the award for achievement in make-up and hairstyling on the Oscars gala on March 10, over groups from “Poor Things,” “Oppenheimer,” “The Society of the Snow” and “Golda.”
© 2024 AFP

