The costumes for Scottish Ballet's new production of Sleeping Beauty
-- premiered tonight -- reflect the inspiration of designer Jasper
Conran (left) and sewing skills of scores of volunteer seamstresses.
LIFE at Scottish Ballet is, these days, very sew-sew. Push open the
doors of their Glasgow headquarters and you will find even the
receptionist has got the needle . . . and is resolutely threading it. In
attics and basements, on trains, and in odd moments between cooking and
cleaning, the followers of Scottish Ballet have answered the clarion
call of the bugle bead.
Where Jasper Conran has said ''Let there be light-catching
decoration'' they have applied themselves -- and thousands of
teensy-weensy sparkling vermicelli -- to acres of net and velvet and
silk. No one who looks on this Sleeping Beauty will be able to say
Scottish Ballet didn't keep her nice!
Day after day for weeks now, scores of volunteer seam-
stresses have been popping in and out of the company's wardrobe
department. Their willing fingers have made jewelled leaves sprout on
waiting bodices. Waistcoats have gained glittering class, skirts have
flounced with an added spingle-spangle allure.
''You just wouldn't get this with the Royal Ballet. I mean, it's the
most amazing response.'' Jasper Conran -- world renowned fashion
designer and award-winning costume designer -- is looking at the latest
crop of handiwork from the outworker team.
Word of mouth, spread among the Friends of Scottish Ballet, among
staff and their immediate circles, has brought all hands to the tutu.
For an incomer, this kind of active local commitment is impressive.
And in a way, it reinforces what Conran sees as the hands-on
challenge, fascination, and personal fulfilment of costume design. ''It
is couture work, ballet. Really, it is that vanishing thing, couture. It
is the four fittings. The precise detail, the crafted detail. And it is
what I know. It's my background knowledge. My knowledge of how to fit
cloth to a body. How to structure something. Ballet also allows me
something lavish. A bit of frivolity that can't quite fit in elsewhere.
''I design 10 collections a year. But I do have a very puritan . . . a
very pointed simplicity in my clothing. I couldn't possibly have a frill
in my clothing. In theatre it's demanded. Absolutely, positively,
demanded.''
By now the demands of Sleeping Beauty are the stuff of legend. No way
was this to be an off-the-shelf project. Barring the pink-pointe shoes
everything has been conceived afresh. And so, materials have been
specially dyed, specially printed. Acids have eaten out carefully
designed patterns on velvets -- ''It's an old twenties technique called
devore,'' Conran explains. ''It gives a much better result than applique
which is really costly, messy, and difficult.''
For the wardrobe staff simply co-ordinating all the various stages,
the various workers, has been like planning a battle campaign. There
have been glitches -- the timescale lurched alarmingly when various
materials had to reordered: the designated colours didn't correspond
with the master shade card. And since Conran's concept for the ballet
is, literally, a tone poem colour is a very emotive thing.
Time was, or so I gather from Morag McKerrell in wardrobe, that
formaldehyde was crucial to tutus -- manufacturers used it to stiffen
the netting. But now no more. EU regulations have designated it a
pollutant and new solutions have had to be found to keep those
powder-puff skirts up to scratch. Which is what they do -- scratch.
At the end of a day's tutu-making, the costumier's hands are often a
mesh of little cuts -- ''Only you don't notice,'' said Morag, ''until
you go to do the washing up and find your hands are stinging.'' Ah, the
hidden costs of art.
Caro Harkness, from amidst a rainbow scatter of organdy points out the
true economy of buying the best. It lasts. As head of wardrobe she has
seen some productions come and go, others -- like Swan Lake -- have gone
on and on since the seventies in their original plumage. ''It really
works out very cheaply in the end,'' she said with a twinkle. ''By the
time a #600 tutu has been on stage up to 100 times, it's giving you the
effect for pennies, really.''
Costumes past are almost as much on her mind as the present ones for
this new production of Sleeping Beauty. Later this year -- in
celebration of Scottish Ballet's silver jubilee -- there's to be a major
exhibition of props and costumes drawn from the company's 25 years of
dance. Whether the Conran contribution will be on show is yet to be
confirmed.
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