State of the Arts

State of the Arts: December 13, 2012 Archive

Recreating the Nutcracker, one stitch at a time

Posted at 12:30 PM on December 13, 2012 by Marianne Combs (0 Comments)
Filed under: Dance, Education

Ballet Minnesota's dancers are impressive to watch on stage, but just as impressive is the work of the seamstresses who ensure their costumes are ready for the annual production of Nutcracker.

A single performance of the holiday show involves 130 dancers and upwards of 230 costumes. All of these costumes are designed by Ballet Minnesota's co-founder Cheryl Rist.

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25 years ago Ballet Minnesota performed its first production of Nutcracker to an audience of 200. Now it plays annually to an audience of more than 10,000. Photo by Dave Trayer

Executive Director Cynthia Betz says the costumes are a huge asset to the production.

"Even though this is the 'traditional' Nutcracker production, there are lively things that occur in this company's version that are specific to the costumes and choreography," explains Betz. "Every single thing in the first act foreshadows what's going to happen in the second act, and that's supported heavily by the costumes."

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Ballet Minnesota co-founder Cheryl Rist holds up the costume for the Sugar Plum Fairy, which she wore 25 years ago in the company's first production of Nutcracker. Each year the lace has to be cleaned with tiny brushes in order to avoid damaging the velvet.
MPR Photo/Marianne Combs

For example, Clara's mother's dress (seen up top) is reminiscent of a candy cane when she twirls in the first act. That effect is exaggerated in the costume of Madame Ginger in the second act. The masks worn by the adults in a waltz in the first act - Russian, Chinese, snowy, flowery - all reference dances performed in the second act.

"It's just like when you see or feel something in real life then it shows up exaggerated in a dream," says Ballet Minnesota's School Director Cheryl Rist.

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The costume for Rose in 'Waltz of the Flowers' - seen up close, and on stage - has endured 25 years.
Left: MPR Photo/Marianne Combs
Right: Photo by David Trayer

In order to keep costs manageable, the company pays close attention to the cleaning and maintenance of its massive collection of costumes and props.

Starting in September, volunteers gather at Ballet Minnesota's headquarters in the Jax building in downtown Saint Paul for "sewing Sundays" to help with preparations. Rips are repaired, sequins are replaced, and rhinestones are brightened using alcohol applied with a toothbrush.

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Lisa Gray, who serves as both a costume assistant and the President of the company's board, works on one of the costumes for the snowflakes.
MPR Photo/Marianne Combs

Many of the costumes are dry cleaned every year, a process for which all decorative jewels must be removed. Sometimes a new tutu needs to be made, a process which takes a full week (there are 42 tutus worn in Nutcracker). The Sugar Plum Fairy's tutu alone involves 14 layers of tulle.

After the Nutcracker performances have ended, Cheryl Rist takes home those costumes that don't need to be dry cleaned and washes them in a bathtub, or on the hand-wash cycle in the washing machine.

Thanks to this vigilance, several of the original costumes are still in use 25 years later.

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Julia Swee, who dances the part of an angel in this year's Nutcracker, works on her ballet moves. Ballet Minnesota's Nutcracker is choreographed by Cheryl Rist's husband, Andrew Rist.
MPR Photo/Marianne Combs

Ballet Minnesota is not just a performance company; it's also a school, and the annual production of Nutcracker is an opportunity to get the more than 200 students performing before a live audience.

To make that happen, many of the parts are danced by different students each night. That means every day the seamstresses need to refit the costumes to a different body, in addition to handling any damage that occurs to the costumes during the run of the show. They work long days in a costume shop in the basement of the O'Shaughnessy that dwarfs the stage above it.

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The inside elastic of the costume for the Reed Flute boasts a string of 19 names of dancers who have performed the role.
Photo by Carolyn Will

Over the years the costumes have become an important part of Ballet Minnesota's history. Dancers recognize they are taking their place in a long line of Claras, snowflakes and fairies, and to mark the moment they write their names in the elastic waistbands.

Thanks to the care of the seamstresses and their many helpers, dancers will have the opportunity to add their names for years to come.

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Art Hounds: SINderella, David Petersen and a holiday opera in Duluth

Posted at 7:45 AM on December 13, 2012 by Chris Roberts (0 Comments)
Filed under: Art Hounds, Arts around the state, Dance, Events, Galleries, Opera

dpg.JPGPart of the current exhibit at David Petersen Gallery, "City of Seals" featuring work by Kristopher Benedict and Fabienne Lasserre (Image courtesy of David Petersen Gallery)

The hounds have great enthusiasm for an arts instigator in Minneapolis who's opened a gallery, a saucy, salacious take on a standard fairy tale, and an opera designed to be an alternative to the nutcracker.

(Want to be an Art Hound? Sign up!)

debervin.JPGFreelance stage manager Deb Ervin has long admired the work and vision of Ballet of the Dolls. She's even studying the group for a course at St. Mary's University, where she's getting a master's degree in arts administration. Deb will attend her first Dolls' performance ever when she goes to "SINderella," the group's new holiday production. Ballet of the Dolls is presenting a family version of the show (Cinderella), and a much naughtier, lustful 18 and older version (SINderella) at the Ritz Theater through Dec. 31.


catkins.JPGChristopher Atkins at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts says Twin Cities visual art impressario David Petersen blazed a trail with his Art of This one-nighter series and The Dressing Room exhibition space, programmed out of his own home. Christopher, who runs the Minnesota Artists Exhibition Program at the M.I.A., says Petersen has now opened a contemporary art space called, appropriately, David Petersen Gallery. The gallery will focus on supporting the careers of regional, national, and international artists.


Claire Kirch knows what's going on in Duluth. When she's not doing her job covering the midwest literary scene for Publisher's Weekly, she's out and about, on the town. Two years ago, she saw Lyric Opera of the North's production of "Amahl and the Night Visitors," and was incredibly impressed. The show is back, at the Scottish Rite Auditorium in Duluth, and Claire thinks -- no, she DEMANDS that you see it. It runs Dec. 14 & 15 at 7:30pm, and Dec. 16 at 2pm.

For more Art Hounds' recommendations, check us out on Facebook and Twitter. Art Hounds is also available as a podcast on iTunes.

Art Hounds is powered by the Public Insight Network.

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This activity is made possible in part by the Minnesota Legacy Amendment's Arts & Cultural Heritage Fund