By Eddie Keogh
CHIPPING CAMDEN, England (Reuters) – Costume makers in Britain who normally dress actors in shows from Downton Abbey to Game of Thrones and Batman have joined forces to make scrubs for medics fighting the coronavirus outbreak.
Working from kitchens, sheds and attics across the country, the team is churning out uniforms for returning medics and clinicians who do not normally wear them.
Dulcie Scott, who most recently made couture dresses for Ruth Wilson in the BBC’s adaptation of Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials, is helping lead the effort alongside a material buyer who once worked on a medical drama.
Now some 150 costume makers are producing the garments, including those who previously worked on such shows as Star Wars, Outlander and Doctor Who.
“It went way beyond anything I could have imagined,” Scott told Reuters. “We have the most phenomenal, world-class network of costume makers helping us.”
With Pullman’s series known as HDM, the group called itself Helping Dress Medics and launched a fundraising appeal (https://www.gofundme.com/f/helping-dress-medics) for 1,500 pounds ($1,900) to source materials.
Two weeks on it has raised more than 44,000 pounds, and some 6,000 sets of scrubs are being made. In one case a curtain maker donated fabric, while the bosses of factories forced shut by the outbreak are working to cut the material.
“It feels brilliant and restores my faith in people and I think this is wonderful,” Scott said. “But also it’s quite heartbreaking when you see what a need there is.”
Scott delivered her first set of scrubs to a woman in a nearby village, with the handover coinciding with the weekly evening clap for carers.
The outbreak of the novel coronavirus has sparked a surge in demand for everything from ventilators to scrubs, prompting the likes of Rolls-Royce and Formula One teams, soldiers and individual volunteers to try to fill the gap.
Scott and her team are being cheered by the actors and writers they once worked with.
“Encore,” tweeted Hugh Bonneville, the actor who played Robert Crawley, Earl of Grantham in the historical drama series Downton Abbey. “Great stuff!” said Pullman.
(Reporting and writing by Kate Holton; Editing by Mike Collett-White)