New Zealand Native Kate Hawley Wins Oscar for 'Frankenstein' Costume Design
Hold onto your hats, folks – because a Kiwi just brought home the gold. At the 98th Academy Awards, costume designer Kate Hawley took home the Oscar for Best Costume Design for her breathtaking work on Guillermo del Toro's Frankenstein. If you weren't already cheering from your living room, you should have been.
For anyone who's been following her career, this wasn't a shock – it was a coronation. Kate, who grew up in Wellington and got her start in the local film industry, has been weaving magic on the big screen for years. From the haunting beauty of Crimson Peak to the massive scale of The Hobbit trilogy, she's proven time and again that fabric and thread can tell stories just as powerfully as any actor. But Frankenstein? That was something else entirely.
Del Toro's reimagining of Mary Shelley's classic needed a look that was both timeless and unsettlingly fresh. Kate delivered in a big way. The creature's iconic coat, the decaying elegance of the period costumes, the way every stitch seemed to hold a memory – it wasn't just clothing, it was character. You could feel the weight of Victor Frankenstein's obsession in every tailored seam. Hollywood clearly agreed, giving her the industry's highest honor.
A career built on storytelling through cloth
This win puts Kate in a very exclusive club. She's now among a handful of New Zealand designers who've changed the game on a global stage. But if you know anything about her, you'll know she's never been one for the spotlight. Her work has always done the talking – and last night, it shouted.
To give you a sense of her range, here are just a few of the worlds she's brought to life through costume:
- The Hobbit trilogy – the dwarves' armor, the opulence of Rivendell.
- Edge of Tomorrow – futuristic military gear that felt lived-in and real.
- Crimson Peak – those exquisite, gothic gowns that haunted every frame.
- The Suicide Squad – chaotic, colorful, and perfectly unhinged.
And now Frankenstein joins that list – at the very top. The moment her name was called, you could almost feel the pride ripple across New Zealand. It's one thing to see our actors and directors get recognition abroad, but when a craftsperson – someone who works with needle and thread, with leather and wool – gets that kind of acclaim, it hits different. It says that New Zealand's creative DNA runs deep in every corner of filmmaking.
So here's to you, Kate Hawley. From the streets of Wellington to the Dolby Theatre, you've made us all incredibly proud. And honestly? We can't wait to see what you stitch together next.