Ballets almost always guarantee a riotous spectacle of sound and movement. With the National Ballet’s remounting of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, you can add a dizzying palette of colour. The show, whose premiere run in 2011 remains the highest-grossing mainstage production in the National Ballet of Canada’s history, returns to the stage March 6-17.
The classic story, choreographed by the masterful Christopher Wheeldon, features some of the ballet world’s most lavish craftwork, from the sumptuous sets to the intricate costuming, including the whopping 284 pairs of shoes that outfit more than 70 dancers.
“When you hear that Alice is happening, because it takes so much to keep up with the production, you take a big breath,” says Lacey Hammond Harrington, with a simultaneous laugh and sigh. “But it is very fun.”
Harrington is the National Ballet’s footwear co-ordinator and dye workroom manager, responsible not only for the quintessential pointe shoes, but the heeled court shoes, Wellington boots, tap shoes, gold slippers and so much more.
Harrington not only co-ordinates and organizes every pair of shoes in each NBC production, but fits each dancer, and then paints, dyes and embellishes each shoe that hits the stage. After all, flamboyant characters such as the White Rabbit, the Queen of Hearts and the Mad Hatter demand such attention to detail. While most might be familiar with the rabbit ears, the top hat and the endless tea cups, a tremendous amount of work goes into the shoes they twirl in on.
“The colours are pretty set in stone because they, for the most part, have to match the tights, the colour of which has been chosen by the designer,” explains Harrington. Dancers want their shoes to match their tights “because they ... want their leg to look as long and beautiful as possible; that’s my job.”
Most ballet-goers are likely unaware of how much work goes into creating and maintaining a dancer’s footwear.
For more than 10 years, Harrington has been working in this position at the NBC, nestled among shelves upon shelves of pointe shoes. A master of colour theory, for whom creativity runs in the family (her parents were artists), she’s a craftsperson through and through.
Harrington begins by taking measurements of each and every dancer. If nothing existing fits, she orders it or builds it, or sends measurements off to a U.K.-based boot maker.
From there, she mixes her paints and gets to work dyeing shoes, tights, elastics and ribbons. The only time Harrington really gets to see her work in action before showtime is the rehearsal, and then there’s no going back.
All in all, Harrington’s job can be quite physically demanding, from hauling metres of fabric to working amid dye fumes, but her passion runs deep, evidenced alone in her “bible,” a thick notebook crammed full of scrawled notes on every shade and shoe.
“It becomes my everyday,” she says. “At some points, I tell myself, you have to go home, you have to eat. But then I’ll think about it while I’m sleeping, I’ll wake up in the middle of the night, and be like, ‘Purple! That’s it!’ ”
While it might be one of the more underexposed artistic processes behind the scenes of the NBC, footwear and dyeing is clearly one of the more intricate elements in creating an effective production. To bring one of the most colourful stories of all time to life, it’s essential.
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