InTucker Magazine
October 2019
Ready for his Closeup

Roy Wooley is an artist. Just like Matisse or Degas, Wooleyâs masterpieces are familiar to millions of people the world over. Unlike the works of those luminaries, his pieces donât include watercolors of a sunset on the horizon or beautiful women painted in oils. In fact, Wooley doesnât do his work on canvas at all.
âIâve always loved monsters,â he explains. âI was 17 years old and saw âAmerican Werewolf in Londonâ. As I watched, I came to the realization that somebody gets paid to do that.â
The âthatâ Wooley refers to is makeup art. Transforming an actor into a werewolf or a zombie or simply altering his appearance has been a part of movies as long as Hollywood has been around. Jimmy Stewartâs bloody lip in âItâs a Wonderful Lifeâ? The work of a makeup artist. Oompa Loompas in âWilly Wonka & the Chocolate Factoryâ? Makeup artists. Spockâs ears in any of the âStar Trekâ films? The result of prosthetics created by, you guessed it, a makeup artist.

Makeup art is so critical to major motion pictures that in 1981, the Academy of Motion Pictures began handing out Oscars for Best Makeup. Because of this award, films like âTerminator 2: Judgement Dayâ, âThe Nutty Professorâ and âHow the Grinch Stole Christmasâ have all received Academy Awards. While theyâre not going to be confused with âCasablancaâ in terms of quality, these movies would have gone nowhere at the box office if not for makeup art.
Now Wooley, an eight-year Tucker resident, is building upon that legacy. A makeup artist for nearly a quarter-century, he didnât catch his big break until 2012 when he made the cast of the SyFy reality show âFace Offâ.
âI made the semifinals of Season Three and then finished in the top three of Season Five,â Wooley recalls. â[Three-time Oscar winner] Ve Neill was one of the judges. Sheâs done âBeetlejuiceâ and âThe Hunger Gamesâ. She said, âWeâre shooting âMockingjayâ. Do you want to come to work?â Ever since then, itâs taken off.â
In recent years, Wooley has worked on blockbusters like âBlack Pantherâ and âAvengers: Infinity Warâ, as well as doing television work in âSleepy Hollowâ and âConstantineâ. The work is exciting, especially, Wooley explains, because you never know whatâs coming next.
âBeing a freelancer, youâre always chasing the next job,â he says. âItâs feast or famine. When things are really going, thereâs more work than you can handle. Other times thereâs nothing.â
During those slow times, Wooley can fall back on his permanent job as head of the makeup department at Netherworld in Gwinnett County. Not only is he responsible for overseeing a team of 20 artists who apply makeup to actors at the seasonal haunted house, he gets to engage in his passion of creating three-dimensional characters to scare the daylights out of those who are brave enough to trek through the facility.
âWeâre working 365 days a year at Netherworld,â Wooley explains. âYou do it once and youâre either hooked for life or you hate it. For me, itâs fun to see someone totally terrified.â
Originally from Alabama, Wooley is able to live and work in the Tucker area because of Georgiaâs thriving film industry. He says heâs noticed a shift over the years, with more and more professionals leaving Hollywood to open effects schools and special effects shops in metro Atlanta. Itâs a trend, he says, that allows him to follow his passion and one he hopes will continue.
âI get to create stuff,â he says with a smile. âHow many jobs can you have someone say, âgo make stuffâ? In my career, I pretty much have done everything Iâve wanted to do.â
Wooley sits back, thinks about it and adds, âA werewolf movie. I want to do a good werewolf movie one of these days.â
With film production going gangbusters across the area, itâs only a matter of time before Wooley gets to add that last piece to his artistâs portfolio.