Monthly Archives: April 2010

Designing Trace: a Q&A with Georgia Lazzaro and Crystal Dunn

Designing Trace: a Q&A with Georgia Lazzaro and Crystal Dunn

Georgia Lazzaro is currently in New York on an internship with Narciso Rodriguez and Calvin Klein and Crystal Dunn works for Melbourne-based label MATERIALBYPRODUCT. Early in the year Georgia and Crystal came together to design costumes for Alice Topp’s Trace, an intimate pas de deux performed by Vivienne Wong and Calvin Hannaford for Bodytorque.à la mode. We spoke to Georgia and Crystal about how they transformed basic hosiery into costumes fit for the ballet stage.

What has it been like working as the only design duo in Bodytorque?

We’ve really enjoyed working together, and have found that our thinking has been in sync the whole way through. It has been so great to have another person to bounce ideas off and get ideas from.

Do you find your ideas complement one another?
The Trace costumes are almost a perfect intersection of our ideas and ways of thinking. We are both fascinated by gesture; the motions of garments; the actions of bodies; the way the two relate to each other. We are both very interested in the language of fashion, and in the way fashion, objects, images and events relate to the living body.

Have you worked as a partnership before?

Not really, although at uni we spent time critiquing each others’ work. We will definitely work together in the future, though!

How did you respond to Alice’s choreographic concept during the initial stages?
When we read Alice’s outline of her concept for the piece – an intimate pas de deux exploring the traces of moments and memories – we were very excited as we felt it fit so perfectly with ideas that we had already been exploring for the Bodytorque promotional images, which we styled. (more…)

29 April 2010

The results are in!

What makes an electric dance movie? Motorbikes, garish leotards, leg warmers and lustful tear-jerking tales about dancers coming out on top, apparently. A fortnight ago we asked the members of our Facebook fan page to tell us what their all-time favourite dance movie is. We reveal your top-five films below!

1. Centre Stage (2000)
With a tagline like ‘Life doesn’t hold tryouts’, you know exactly what Centre Stage will offer: the high drama of competition for prestigious dance troupe positions. The film is given authenticity by the fact many of its actors are also professional dancers – and the leather-jacketed, motorcycle-riding bad boy of ballet, Ethan Stiefel is empirically dreamy.

2. Mao’s Last Dancer (2009)
Mao’s Last Dancer is based on Li Cunxin’s best-selling book – describing his poor childhood in China, transformation to a world-famous ballet star, and eventual defection to the West. It’s obvious why it’d be a sentimental favourite in Australia. Not only is it directed by Bruce Beresford, but the real-life Li joined the Australian Ballet in 1995.

3. The Red Shoes (1948)
A restored print of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s 62-year-old melodrama The Red Shoes managed to wow audiences at Cannes just last year. It’s widely regarded as a masterpiece of British cinema – and the ballet it contains is one of the best dance sequences ever put on film. You’ll gasp, you’ll laugh, you’ll cry. Well, okay – you’ll mainly cry.

4. Billy Elliot (2000)
For the past decade, Stephen Daldry’s coming-of-age drama has plucked heartstrings the world over. Its appeal to dancer-lovers is obvious. Not only does the film show young Billy Elliott choosing ballet over boxing – initially against the wishes of his working-class father – the final triumphant performance places its star in Matthew Bourne’s celebrated all-male Swan Lake.

5. Flashdance (1983)
Narrowly beating out Dirty Dancing (so I guess someone does put Baby in the corner, huh?) comes Flashdance. It’s the story of Alex Owens (Jennifer Beals), a steel-mill welder and late-night bar dancer who hopes for a career in ballet. Alex’s water-drenched chair routine has become an icon of both post-disco dance and the absolute excess of ‘80s cinema.

What’s your favourite dance movie? Leave a comment below!

28 April 2010

Designing Nocturnal Phantasm: a Q&A with Bridie O’Leary

Designing Nocturnal Phantasm: a Q&A with Bridie O’Leary

Considered the first female dandy, the Marchesa Luisa Casati was muse to a list of painters, photographers, fashion designers, writers and European thinkers. She was photographed by Man Ray, dressed by Paul Poiret, and directly inspired Cartier’s ‘Panthere’ jewellery series. In the streets of Paris at midnight the Marchesa, with wildly teased hair and kohl-blackened eyes, could be seen taking her pet panthers for a stroll. The Marchesa Casati was – in her prime – the most scandalous and daring woman of her day. Bodytorque choreographer Timothy Brown is the latest artist to to draw inspiration from the Marchesa for his new ballet Nocturnal Phantasm. Bridie O’Leary, the costume designer for Timothy’s work, chatted to us about how she recreated the Marchesa for the ballet stage. The sketch above is from Bridie’s last millinery collection.

Tell us about the design brief that Tim gave you …
The brief was very extensive. It not only included his design brief, but  a biography on fashion muse Marchesa Luisa Casati, a detailed description of the music, and notes on his style of choreography. The general idea was to explore the eccentric, macabre and dramatic traits of  the Marchesa. The broader themes were based on the antiquity of the fashions and social high-life of the early 20th century art scene, including the artwork of Erté. The suggested colour palette included the use of monochrome greys and silvers – inspired by the silver screen – with particular attention to the textures and shine of the fabrics. Most of all, Tim wanted to create a sense of drama and tragedy.

And how have you interpreted his ideas?
Firstly, I got a hold of as much as I could on Marchesa Casati and Erté; in particular, paintings of the Marchesa and Erté’s illustrations. The idea was to represent the dramatic glamour and grotesque beauty of the Marchesa’s character that was represented in famous paintings and illustrations, and photos taken of her during her wealthy years, through to her downfall and ultimate poverty. I decided that it was imperative to emphasise the creation of the silver screen. The grey, black and silvery hues and textures would help to capture this. The dancers surrounding the Marchesa loosely reference the Belle Époque style of the period while exaggerating a kind of eeriness and keeping that neo-Gothic edge. I decided red was an excellent colour to use as a highlight not only for its striking appearance on stage but also as an ode to Marchesa’s flame-red hair. The trick was to balance the decorative and excessive qualities in the designs with a modern and minimal style … so as not to hinder the dancers, or overpower the choreography. (more…)

23 April 2010

Legs: the dance of Cyd Charisse

In Ziegfeld Follies (1945), Cyd Charisse’s ballet solo steals the limelight in a scene featuring show girls in plumed hats, solemn white horses, Lucille Ball whipping a litter of dancing panthers into line, and a pink satin carousel. In a later scene she dances amidst a quivering mass of foamy soap bubbles, which apparently wreaked havoc with the technical equipment. Such stunning production numbers are key to appreciating the star power of Cyd Charisse.

Charisse had suffered polio as a child but overcame her frailty with the help of dance lessons from the age of eight. At 15 she joined the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo. When WWII caused the break up of the company, Charisse returned to Los Angeles where she joined the MGM film studio as a ballet dancer. Her career saw her pair up with two of Hollywood’s dancing greats: Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly.

Her first breakthrough role was 1952’s Singin’ In The Rain. The Broadway Melody Ballet shows off her ability to do things with her body we cannot define in a technical language; she is, as Fred Astaire once put it,  “beautiful dynamite”. In the diaphanous dream ballet she commands Gene Kelly with a 25-foot Chinese silk scarf that wafts over an ultra violet landscape at the blowsy provocation of an unseen wind machine. (more…)

21 April 2010

Nesting dolls: Coppélia’s comedy, Petrouchka’s tragedy

“Just as Giselle is ballet’s great tragedy,” wrote legendary choreographer George Balanchine, “so Coppélia is its great comedy.” The massive success of Arthur Saint-Léon’s 1870 production about young lovers, a mad scientist, and his automated ‘Girl with the Enamel Eyes’ ensured it remained a staple of ballet repertory for years to follow.

But it had another side-effect, too: popularising the use of dancers as mechanical dolls on the ballet stage. The Nutcracker famously brought three toys to life in 1892: a spring-activated trio consisting of Harlequin, Columbine, and a Toy Soldier. In 1919, The Magic Toy Store – or, more snappily, Boutique Fantasque – featured a love story between a ballerina doll and a toy soldier who refuse to be sold to separate customers.

Perhaps the most interesting response to Coppélia’s success came in 1911, when a Russian puppet made from straw and sawdust was brought to life by the Ballets Russes. Petrouchka is a colourful and lively ballet but a tragic one, too. Its living puppet is enslaved by a wizard, unloved by a puppet ballerina, and finally meets his doom at sword-point.

The creators of Petrouchka were certainly aware of Coppélia – in fact, the set designer Alexandre Benois said that his entire artistic development was “immensely influenced” by the earlier work. And if Coppélia turned E. T. A. Hoffmann’s grim original tale into a joyful comedy, then Petrouchka took hold of the same material and dragged its puppets back toward darkness again.

Why is it so appealing to turn dancers into living puppets, toys, or other automatons? One Shakespeare critic, Phyllis Rackin, suggests it might be the same reason that the Bard’s so-called ‘crossdressing comedies’ are so tempting for actors: it clearly demonstrates the incredible skill of the performers who are suddenly transformed.

The Australian Ballet performs Coppélia in Sydney and Melbourne

Marc Cassidy in Petrouchka. Photography Tim Richardson
19 April 2010

Designing Fold: a Q&A with Ryan Euinton


When Bodytorque.à la mode choreographer Robert Curran and fashion designer Ryan Euinton met for the first time to brainstorm costume designs for Fold, they were on the same page. Robert wanted to explore ideas of flesh, layers, and touch; Ryan’s work had explored these themes before (pictured above). Ryan let us in on how he approached the costume designs for Fold.

Tell us about the design brief you were given for Fold
Robert Curran spoke to me about the ideas, feelings, colours and textures of the piece. From the very start we knew the title of the work – Fold – and that it would involve an exploration of skin and the body. Bodytorque 2010 focuses on fashion so, naturally, we wanted the piece to stand alone as a product of fashion.

Your RMIT graduate work centered on ideas of covering and uncovering the body; have these ideas filtered into your Bodytorque work?
Yes, definitely. As a group of designers working on the various ballets within the programme, we all remarked how there was piece almost waiting for each of us.

What are some words that were flying around your head when you were designing this piece?
Corsets, legs, flesh. (more…)

16 April 2010