Bronco behind the big screen: Alumna uses makeup to tell stories in movies and TV
KALAMAZOO, Mich.âEllen Arden, BFA â13, has worked on some of the most prominent films and television shows of the last 15 years, from âGuardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3â and âBatman v Superman: Dawn of Justiceâ to âOzarkâ and âThe Walking Dead.â
As makeup department head and designer, Arden manages entire makeup teams for Hollywood productions while also working on design elements, like liaising with special effects teams to ensure that the look is right for every set piece and critical moment.
âI work with the special effects houses to tell them our needs in putting concepts together. If somebody is injured in a scene, I have to figure out what prosthetics we should be using, how that will look and how far into reality we're going to go.â
So how did a girl from a small town in Michigan end up working on blockbuster films known throughout the world? Cut to Ardenâs childhood in Albion, Michigan.
Stars in her eyes
Ardenâs early memories of film involve watching old Tom Mix cowboy movies with her grandparents. It wasnât until she saw Robert Altmanâs 1992 film, âThe Player,â at age 10 that her passion for moving pictures took shape.
ââThe Playerâ is about the film industry. There's this opening sequence that is a long tracking shot, and there was something about it I didnât understandâthese old cars and fast-paced conversationsâit was so different than where I grew up, on a dirt road outside of town.â
After high school, Arden began working on independent film productions and enrolled at Grand Rapids Community College, where she discovered her love for alternative film processing. Two years later, she transferred to 51¸ŁŔűÉç to pursue a Bachelor of Fine Arts in photography and intermedia.
It was in the hills of Westernâs campus where Ardenâs Hollywood story was just getting started. When it came to 51¸ŁŔűÉç, it was love at first sight.
âOne thing I loved about Western was the great facilities that werenât available at other places,â she says. âWestern had a dark room that students could go and use whenever they wanted.â
As she honed her artistic craft, Arden found great support from Ginger Owen-Murakami, professor of photography; Bill Davis, professor and area coordinator of photography; and Adriane Little, director of the Gwen Frostic School of Art and professor of kinetic imaging.
With excellent professors, interactive facilities and the freedom to experiment and explore, Ardenâs art flourished, enabling her to learn lessons that would influence her later work in film.
âAt Western, I learned how to look at and read art differently, which helps me when I'm interpreting what we're shooting for films.â
Off campus, Arden also came to love the city and its vibrant arts scene. âKalamazoo was a good environment to thrive in if you're a creative person trying to figure out where you're going, â she says. âââWe were encouraged to participate in the community and start putting our work out there for others to look at.â
Her big break
After graduating from 51¸ŁŔűÉç, she continued working in film. Her big break came with the Lifetime movie âPrayers for Bobby.â Asked last minute to help with makeup on the film, Ardenâwhose makeup experience was fairly limited at the timeâsaid yes.
âI really shouldn't have been there, but there I was. Sigourney Weaver was our main actress, and she had an assistant named Peter Robb King. He was the department head on âStar Wars.â I ended up going to work with him; he became my mentor.â
From there, plenty of lights, cameras and action would follow. Under the tutelage of King, Ardenâs career flourished working as a key second-in-command makeup artist before eventually heading up entire makeup units for major productions like âThe Fear Street Trilogy,â âWerewolf by Nightâ and âHawkeye.â
Arden is now working on yet another potential piece of pop culture gold. Her current project is an untitled film from David Robert Mitchell, director of âIt Follows.â While the plot is largely under wraps, it is set to star Ewan McGregor and will take place in the 1980s. With the filmâs makeup and design elements grounded in the past, Arden has been reflecting on her own past at 51¸ŁŔűÉç.
âI loved the art school. It's just such a tight little community and being able to look at everybody's work and see what people were creating, it was just a lot of fun,â she says. âOverall, I wish I would have had more time 51¸ŁŔűÉç. I feel like it was just too short.â â