Costume designer Brenda Cooper talks to Shondaland about the show’s style in celebration of its 30th anniversary.
The first rule of costuming for the screen is to never let the clothes speak louder than the dialogue. But when that dialogue is spoken by Fran Drescher, the star of ’90s sitcom The Nanny, who used a now-iconic Queens, New York, accent to play the lead character, the clothes need to scream.
Enter the lady in red when everybody else is wearing tan: Fran Fine.
“Fran was sassy, spirited, outspoken, but always an underpinning of elegance, pushed right to the edge of tipping it to the edge of something not good!” says The Nanny costume designer and frequent Drescher collaborator Brenda Cooper. “I didn’t really know I was doing [it, but Drescher said] that I had the ability to elevate the comedy with style. You’re building a character. If you’re doing your job right, I wanted the audience to smile the moment they saw her, before she delivered her first line.”
Cooper certainly did her job right, with the fashion of The Nanny experiencing a resurgence in recent years after many people rediscovered the show on streaming platforms during the Covid lockdown. The fashion has become perhaps the most recognizable and iconic aspect of the show. After all, the only Emmy The Nanny won during its six-season run was for Cooper’s costuming, which is celebrated in her retrospective exhibition currently on display at Santa Monica College (the statuette for which she pulls out during her interview with Shondaland).The first rule of costuming for the screen is to never let the clothes speak louder than the dialogue. But when that dialogue is spoken by Fran Drescher, the star of ’90s sitcom The Nanny, who used a now-iconic Queens, New York, accent to play the lead character, the clothes need to scream.
Enter the lady in red when everybody else is wearing tan: Fran Fine.
“Fran was sassy, spirited, outspoken, but always an underpinning of elegance, pushed right to the edge of tipping it to the edge of something not good!” says The Nanny costume designer and frequent Drescher collaborator Brenda Cooper. “I didn’t really know I was doing [it, but Drescher said] that I had the ability to elevate the comedy with style. You’re building a character. If you’re doing your job right, I wanted the audience to smile the moment they saw her, before she delivered her first line.”
Cooper certainly did her job right, with the fashion of The Nanny experiencing a resurgence in recent years after many people rediscovered the show on streaming platforms during the Covid lockdown. The fashion has become perhaps the most recognizable and iconic aspect of the show. After all, the only Emmy The Nanny won during its six-season run was for Cooper’s costuming, which is celebrated in her retrospective exhibition currently on display at Santa Monica College (the statuette for which she pulls out during her interview with Shondaland).“I didn’t want the show to have a time stamp,” Cooper says. “I wanted to create a look that 30 years into the future, the look of that show would be as popular today as it was back then.”
My own recent rewatch confirms that not only are 95 percent of Fran’s outfits objectively wearable today, but also that her bright colors, daring patterns, and form-fitting outfits certainly influenced this writer’s style (meaning that I could pull from my own wardrobe to go as Fran Fine for Halloween this year).“Clothes can do one of three things: They can either dominate you because the clothes are too bright or an [ill-suited] style, they can drain you and make you look tired and ill, or clothes can illuminate you. My equation is always the last one,” says Cooper, who brought her formula to the masses in her book The Silhouette Solution. “Fran and I were a match made in style heaven — she loved fashion, and I loved fashion.”
This style ethos is easy to see on Drescher, who was dressed in a base uniform of a black turtleneck, black skirt, black suede stiletto heels, and black opaque pantyhose — “so it didn’t look slutty!” Cooper exclaims — during the early days of the show when there wasn’t a large budget for a wardrobe.There is a lot of outfit-repeating in early seasons; Cooper says she would swap out vests and jackets, like a striped Moschino vest or Dolce & Gabbana mirrored jacket. Designer Todd Oldham, who actually makes an appearance on the show, comes up a lot during our conversation, and his bold looks helped to define it. “[A] multicolored [Todd Oldham suit] with circles all over it. There’s another Todd Oldham suit that’s brown and crocodile print,” Cooper lists as some of her favorites, along with a Vivienne Westwood black velvet corset with a vibrant floral blouse and a yellow skirt. “That’s an example of pulling all these different elements together and putting it into an outfit, which is what I love to do,” Coope