Hollywood star Olivia Colman has had a creepy bridal makeover for her role as Miss Havisham in the BBC's new adaptation of Great Expectations.
In a teaser trailer for the drama, adapted from Charles Dickens' novel, Olivia, 49, sports yellow teeth, white hair, a floral head display and a stained wedding gown.
The short clip shows a young Pip, played by Tom Sweet, arrive at Satis House, to meet the vindictive Miss Havisham for the first time.
She says to Pip: "Let me see you, what a prize creature we have fished from the river."
Great Expectations follows Pip as he strives to be a gentleman in the mid 1800s, and falls in love with Miss Havisham's adopted daughter, Estella.
The reclusive Miss Havisham always wears her wedding dress after being jilted at the alter, unable to move on from the terrible day.
Olivia joins a long line of celebrated actresses who have played the literary icon, such as Olivia's The Crown co-stars, Helena Bonham Carter and Gillian Anderson.
The latest adaptation is set to star well known faces such as Matt Berry and Fionn Whitehead at Pip. Shalom Brune-Franklin, seen recently in Line of Duty, plays the aloof Estella.
It has been a buy time for Olivia, as she recently starred in Sam Mendes' Empire of Light, as a lonely cinema worker.
The actress plays Hilary Small, a lonely duty manager at a coastal cinema in the 80s.
As well as battling mental illness, Hilary is having an affair with not one but two men – her boss, Mr Ellis [Colin Firth], and new colleague Stephen, played by Top Boy’s Micheal Ward.
The Oscar winner told the Mirror she found the premise "a little bit scary".
She said: “Playing a woman of my age who’s having a love affair with a younger man, that’s the most terrifying part of the whole film for me.
“But then I met Micheal [who plays Olivia’s young lover, Stephen] and he made me feel much more at ease. Micheal was much more mature about it than I was!”
Luckily for Olivia, having played such troubled characters, she's not one to dwell on a role once the cameras stop rolling.
She explained: “I’m not one that takes things home with me, so I was fine,” she says. “I like to throw myself in, I like to be as truthful and honest as possible – but then, I don’t have that problem [switching off], which I’m very grateful for. It can leave a residue, but I don’t have that.”
Olivia will also reprise her role as Nick Nelson’s supportive mum, Sarah, in the Netflix smash Heartstopper.
She voices Mama Bear in the DreamWorks animation Puss In Boots: The Last Wish, out now, while later in the year she’ll star Timothée Chalamet in the much anticipated Charlie And The Chocolate Factory prequel, Wonka.