TORONTO â Traci Loader helped devise the haunting blood tears Lily-Rose Deppâs character cries in "Nosferatu."
On Thursday, the Ontario makeup artist said she couldn't contain her own tears as she learned she'd earned her first Oscar nomination.
âIâve just been crying from happiness. As a Canadian, to achieve something like that, I just didnât think it would happen in my career. It was really overwhelming and surreal,â Loader said on a video call from Toronto.
The Newmarket, Ont., native is part of the team from Robert Eggersâ gothic horror film who are up for best makeup and hairstyling, along with Englandâs David White and Suzanne Stokes-Munton.
âIâm just glad that it was Canadians that Robert clicked with for some of the key creative roles,â she said.
Loader is one of several Canadians whoâve earned Oscar nods for their work on Eggersâ remake of F.W. Murnauâs 1922 silent classic, which stars Depp as Ellen Hutter, a young woman ensnared by the dark obsession of the enigmatic vampire Count Orlok, played by Bill SkarsgĂ„rd.
Torontoâs Linda Muir is up for best costume design, while fellow Torontonian Craig Lathrop is competing for best production design.
âI definitely had tears in my eyes because I feel the entire costume team worked so hard and so diligently to meet the demands of the script and of Robert's vision,â Muir said after receiving the news.
âAs a team of collaborators working with Robert, I think we all have very similar ideals. We all enjoy research. We all see the value in striving for authenticity in these period films that Robert writes. And it's a challenge, really, because the locations he chooses to write into his scripts, they're all periods that are not necessarily well-documented.â
Eggers first began working with Loader, Muir and Lathrop on his 2015 debut feature âThe Witch,â which brought colonial New England to life in Kiosk, Ont. The director wanted to recruit a local team, said Muir. The Canadian trio would go on to work with Eggers on several more films, including 2019âs âThe Lighthouseâ and 2022âs âThe Northman.â
âI think we both have the same vision. We don't like things to look like makeup or to take you out of the film,â said Loader, whoâs worked as a makeup artist since the early â90s and won a Canadian Screen Award for 2021âs Indigenous sci-fi thriller âNight Raiders.â
âWith âNosferatu,â itâs not your typical beauty makeup. It's all character makeup, and it's being true to the period and true to adding elements that are realistic for those characters.â
For Deppâs character, Loader used various tints and hues rather than conventional glam makeup to illustrate Hutter's gradual possession by Orkok. Loader made Depp's skin appear paler, drew her eyes out more and highlighted her natural veins.
âWhen you take a photo of her at the beginning of the film, and then the end of the film, there's a huge difference, but the progression is very planned out so itâs not like, âOh, they're possessed now.â Itâs very subtle.â
âNosferatuâ is set in 1938 Germany and Transylvania, and was filmed in Prague. Muirâs research included fashion journals from the time period, primarily from Germany.
âThat was a bit of a hunt to find. I don't read German and I don't live in Berlin,â said Muir, who has worked in film, television and theatre since the 1970s, and has Canadian Screen Awards for her work on Atom Egoyanâs 1994 erotic thriller âExoticaâ and John Greysonâs 1996 drama âLilies.â
For Orlok, who was born about 300 years before the film takes place, Muir endeavoured to find garments that a Transylvanian nobleman from the late 1500s would wear. That included clunky leather boots and a massive overcoat that draped over his gaunt frame like a shadow.
But because Orlok is undead, his outfit needed to be tattered â or âcorpsifiedâ â as Muir said, âso that the story of his death and his reanimation would have some feeling of reality.â
Muir said she hasnât given much thought to her own outfit at the Oscars, noting that she's more focused on those who have lost homes and lives to the wildfires in Los Angeles.
âItâs been really harrowing for everyone in Los Angeles. It's been extremely stressful for everyone having to contend with the wildfires. Itâs very serious and very real,â she said.
Loader also hasnât thought of the awards gala yet, but she hoped the nominations show how Canadaâs film industry has evolved over the years.
âI remember in the â90s, when bigger shows shot here, they would always bring the department heads here and then just hire their crew. And now Canada's making its mark and showing that we are capable of doing all these things. And that makes me really proud. Because we can.â
The 97th Academy Awards are set for March 2 in Los Angeles, and will air on CTV.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 24, 2025.
Alex Nino Gheciu, The Canadian Press