‘Lawmen: Bass Reeves' Star David Oyelowo on the Character's Branding: It Represents the ‘Juxtaposition of the Beauty and the Violence'

David Oyelowo plays the title character in "Lawmen: Bass Reeves," the true story of a man who escaped enslavement and went on to become one of the first U.S. Deputy Marshals. While there is no shortage of stories from the 1860s and 1870s, there are only four known images of Bass Reeves.

So, for the Paramount limited series, a team of artisans worked to tell the story with as much authenticity as possible while only using those four photos as a visual reference.

"What David wanted to show on camera was the growth of him and the difference in his hair. But for me, it was showing the transformation of his skin - the aging process without prosthetics - showing him from a young man in his 20s to an older man," said makeup department head Vonda Morris.

Morris' secret weapon to Oyelowo's aging transformation was Peter Thomas Roth's skin tightening strips. "I would tighten that skin so tight to give him a youthful look, and as he started to age, I took that same product to give him creases to age him," Morris revealed. She didn't want audiences to look for prosthetic pieces, so the key was giving Oyelowo a natural look. "Our skin doesn't age in the same way. It just weathers a bit. I designed the creases and weathered the area in certain areas. And along with that, we started adding facial hair. It was hand-laid."

Oyelowo wanted to come in with his natural hair, so he spent time growing it out. "When he came to work and we began filming, he had his natural Afro," hair department head Wankaya Hinkson said. "Once he gets his badge, we cut his hair to a more groomed look." However, due to weather and production delays, Hinkson had to alternate between a wig and natural hair for continuity.

‘lawmen: bass reeves' star david oyelowo on the character's branding: it represents the ‘juxtaposition of the beauty and the violence'

David Oyelowo grew out his hair for "Lawmen: Bass Reeves"

The creative team had significant conversations about the branding of Reeves and how to portray that in the show.

"We made the choice to have a brand, which typifies the truly evil and violent nature of possessing another human being," said Oyelowo. "What we didn't want to do is sit in the trauma and pain of that form of Black existence in a way that is prohibitive for being able to engage with the narrative, but we wanted visual representations that put you in the reality of the place without dwelling on it."

Oyelowo continued, "Seeing a brand saying RVS (Reeves) on his back in a tender moment when he's about to make love to his wife or when he's having fun fishing for catfish; the juxtaposition of the beauty and the violence is something that we really worked on. It's one thing to see the whip marks which we've seen, and you're almost anesthetized to, but the brand is a different thing."

Added Morris, "I sculptured it because I wanted to show our story of keloid. If you look at it, you can almost feel it. I was able to design things that represented us."

‘lawmen: bass reeves' star david oyelowo on the character's branding: it represents the ‘juxtaposition of the beauty and the violence'

David Oyelowo and the show's artisans had extensive conversations about his branding.

Isis Mussenden did extensive research in designing the costumes for "Bass Reeves." Her most valuable resource was a Time Warner book series about farmers, pioneer women and the Civil War. "In researching these books deeply, we started to get an idea of where Bass Reeves landed in this world," said Mussenden, who also brought in a Civil War consultant.

The artisan knew Reeves needed two main suits. "The collarless shirt and jacket really came from the few pictures we had of Bass Reeves," said Mussenden, who observed he never had a collar in the photos. "That's how we amplified that against the other lawmen, so we could get some separation and contrast."

‘lawmen: bass reeves' star david oyelowo on the character's branding: it represents the ‘juxtaposition of the beauty and the violence'

Costume designer Isis Mussenden didn't give him a collar because the real-life photos showed he never had one.

In building the sets, production designer Wynn Thomas worked to help ground Oyelowo and the rest of the cast in the time period. "Most people have no sense of what life was like back in those days, how people lived and what their day-to-day life was like," he said. "The details that we provide as production designers help give the actors a sense of time and place, which will shape the choices that an actor will make."

Thomas put a lot of thought into building the slave quarters. "They were probably made out of log cabins. I wanted to keep it stark, simple and neat because that's who Jenny is. She may be in these harsh circumstances, but her own personal living space is quite well maintained," he said.

When Reeves heads into Indian Territory, Thomas wanted that journey to be as "stark as possible." That meant open skies and not a lot of trees. "I put in all these stone locations. If you look at the locations very carefully, they're filled with harsh surfaces. The whole idea is that this man is walking across these locations without any shoes on, so the physical struggle is reflected in his environments."

Thomas' color palette was grounded in browns, creams and earth tones. "You don't see you don't see a lot of primary colors like reds and blues. You see a lot of earth tones specifically because all of these characters are very earthbound," he said. "The whole idea is that these characters are really building their worlds in the environments from the earth."

Snydersville, Penn., proved to be the perfect location to build the main city. "We could construct period-correct facades on all the lower parts of the buildings. And then all the upper parts of the buildings were done through visual effects."

‘lawmen: bass reeves' star david oyelowo on the character's branding: it represents the ‘juxtaposition of the beauty and the violence'

As for the music, composer Chanda Dancy used a big orchestra, plus solo fiddling on the violin and viola for a soulfulness to the soundscape. For the show's opening cue, as Bass is on a horse trotting behind Confederate soldiers, Dancy used the timpani for the military nod. Otherwise, there were low tones from the bass and cello to create a sense of dread: "It's setting up this dark, bleak tone."

Ultimately, the show is about family, which becomes the beating heart of Bass Reeves - the character, the real man and the series. "A Light in No Man's Land" is the first cue she wrote. "He's full of pride, justice and love for his family. He loves his family so much, and considering everything he's experienced, he has this light," Dancy said. "That theme keeps coming out throughout the show. it gets you in that headspace of a great man of great justice with a great family."

More from Variety

OTHER NEWS

4 hrs ago

Broadway Star Lea Salonga Honored with Lifelike Wax Figure at Madame Tussauds‌

4 hrs ago

Spurs draft picks 2024: When does San Antonio pick? Full list of NBA Draft selections

4 hrs ago

‘Supacell' Lead Tosin Cole on Bringing South London's Black Experience to the Sci-Fi World in Netflix Series: ‘It's About Time'

4 hrs ago

Social Security Update: Payments of Up to $4,873 to Go Out Today

4 hrs ago

NGCP seeks full recovery of P87.9B investment in completing 2 major projects

4 hrs ago

Banyan Tree set to open Manila Bay property in 2028

4 hrs ago

US Flexes Most Advanced Fighter Jets in Joint Drills With PH

4 hrs ago

NBA: New coach Charles Lee out to turn around struggling Hornets

4 hrs ago

NBA: Knicks to acquire Mikal Bridges in trade from Nets

4 hrs ago

Israel Is Ready for Another War

4 hrs ago

JanOne Appoints Vay Tham as its Chief Revenue Officer and President of its Fintech Subsidiary, ALT5 Sigma

4 hrs ago

Chinese ships have left Sabina Shoal in West Philippine Sea - Navy | INQToday

4 hrs ago

Ozempic Maker to Construct $4.1 Billion US Factory

4 hrs ago

Stock market today: World shares advance after Nvidia's rebound offsets weakness on Wall St

4 hrs ago

Dollar rises on hawkish Fed talk; key inflation data looms

4 hrs ago

Status Quo's Somerset tour could be its 'last ever'

4 hrs ago

‘Kinds of Kindness' Star Jesse Plemons Explains Why He Missed Accepting Cannes Best Actor Prize and What He Loves About Working With Yorgos Lanthimos

4 hrs ago

Doubling down on De Lima

4 hrs ago

Italy's Meloni says EU top jobs deal ignores voters' wishes

4 hrs ago

Popular Republican and Trump running mate contender makes first Senate endorsement in 2024 races

4 hrs ago

Bosses are using 'silent lay-offs' and 'quiet firing' to get rid of employees. It could backfire.

4 hrs ago

Meralco draws 8 bidders for 600-MW baseload supply

5 hrs ago

Rivian just got a $5 billion investment from Volkswagen, and it could help Rivian solve one of its biggest problems

5 hrs ago

Is Alex Sarr to the Wizards a lock at No. 2 in the NBA Draft?

5 hrs ago

No need to polish your Cybertruck — you can now buy one that comes with a mirror-like sheen for $150,000

5 hrs ago

La Salle's Escandor, Phillips apply for PBA Draft; Tiongson to follow?

5 hrs ago

ZUS to select Thea Gagate as No.1 pick

5 hrs ago

Matthew Stafford has 3rd-largest cap hit in NFL. Could a new contract change that?

5 hrs ago

Aston Martin Valiant Is an Auric Revival of '80s Brutalism

5 hrs ago

Reds place their most effective starter on injured list

5 hrs ago

Profar hits a grand slam 5 innings after dustup to boost the Padres to a 9-7 win vs. the Nationals

5 hrs ago

Red Sox 'ideal' deadline acquisition is an Angels infielder

6 hrs ago

J.Crew's Double-Discount Sale Includes an Extra 50% Off Dresses, Shorts, and More—From $17

6 hrs ago

Pagasa: Cloudy Wednesday with rain showers

6 hrs ago

Vantage Foundation partners with Doorstep Library to enhance literacy among families living in areas of disadvantage in the UK

6 hrs ago

Warning as road closure barriers 'severely vandalised'

6 hrs ago

Actor killed in shark attack in Hawaii was a former pro surfer

6 hrs ago

Transaction Growth Confirms Fliggy's Strength Connecting International Brands to Chinese Consumers

6 hrs ago

Walmart says automating its warehouses will actually give workers longer careers

6 hrs ago

CoinEx Charity Supports Blockchain Education in the Philippines at the Blockchain Campus Conference