|
You are here:
the-vu>
Dance> Bodies
Bodies, Monks
and Mourners, On Stage!
(Backstage
call for Act III "Romeo and Juliet.")
By Cherie Magnus
Published May 2001
I'm in an elaborate costume on stage in
front of 6,000 people, there 's a full orchestra
playing Prokovief in the pit, my teenaged
son, dressed as a Renaissance servant, is
standing next to Natalia Makarova, Barishnikov
is watching from the wings. Am I dreaming?
No, I'm a ballet mother and a Supernumerary
for American Ballet Theatre's "Romeo
and Juliet."
The Shrine Auditorium, cavernous, ornate,
rarely used except for the Academy Awards,
was ABT's usual home when in L.A. While
the company proper was off at a gala fete
and fundraiser at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel,
a motley crew of thirty men and women hoping
to make the Super cut lined up for appraisal
in the Shrine's freezing rehearsal hall
on a cold Sunday in March, 1985.
We were all types, sizes and ages, not just
the "tall, ballet type" advertised
for on the bullet board at my son Jason's
ballet school. We all took off our jackets
and sweaters and lined up according to height
in front of a seated panel of three.
I had dressed for warmth and comfort not
beauty, and I felt strangely vulnerable,
fat and naked in the lineup. I'm too old
for this, I thought.
Immediately I was asked to step forward
along with two other middle-aged women.
They're eliminating me at once because I'm
not right, not what they want, I thought.
The old insecurity and fear of rejection
was lurking close to the surface.
But it was just that we three had been pre-selected
to be "Market Ladies" because
of our height. At first I was disappointed
that I was not to be an "Elegant Lady"
(due to my bust size--the first time 36A
was ever too large) Our roles were determined
by what costumes we fit, that's all.
We Market Ladies had fun mixing with the
company on stage, walk around acting naturally,
participate in the action first hand. Some
of us treated the dancers by sprinkling
candy in our market baskets among the plastic
products. I put M&M's in with my grapes.
We wore different multi-layered costumes
weighing perhaps twenty pounds each. Underneath
was a full-length heavy petticoat with a
ruffle. Then, in my case, a dress of heavy
beige upholstery-like fabric with slit sleeves
and lacing up the front and back, plus a
long tunic of another beige fabric laced
up the front and sides. My headdress, of
faded-looking beige and violet muslin, had
an Arabic flair and a wimple fastening under
the chin. Each of us wore similar but differently
detailed costumes.
Since there was only one professional union
dresser, it was necessary for us Supers
to help each other in and out of the difficult
hooks and laces-no zippers! We formed a
costume daisy-chain before and after each
act with the dresser at the end. In this
way we got our laborious changes down quickly,
and I got an amusing snapshot of eight people
concentrating hard on lacing each other
up.
Jason was cast as a Green Little Bearer
for the ball in Act I, and a monk in the
Capulet tomb in Act III.
When the Supers arrived for our first rehearsal,
the company class was just winding up. Dancers
familiar to us from photographs and the
stage looked like typical ballet students
in their colorful and eccentric rehearsal
clothes. But a sight unfamiliar in a ballet
studio was the several animals stationed
around the outside of the practice floor,
tethered to the barres with leashes.
At that time, there were about twelve dogs
and eight cats which traveled with the dancers,
and the dogs usually attend class and rehearsals
with their owners. There's even a dog walk-on
in "Giselle" and "Swan Lake,
so often the larger animals get a chance
to be on stage.
In the meantime, the pets add love, comfort,
and companionship to the dancers' life on
the road. There were so many animals backstage
(they were always polite and well-behaved)
that a dog and a large bag came to mean
"dancer" to the fans at the stage
door. Opening night there was a black-tie
reception after the performance in the rehearsal
hall for the Friends of ABT--those who contributed
substantially.
All during dress rehearsal and the performance
afterwards, the caters were setting up.
Topiary trees with fairy lights surrounded
white tables topped with Cinzano umbrellas
around a small dance floor. Festive tents
covered the bar areas and the disc jockey's
equipment, which included Italian popular
songs.
There were white flower carts filled with
fruits and cheeses, an Italian ice pushcart
dispensing zabaglione, chocolate-hazelnut,
and wild-blueberry ices in little paper
cups, and a long buffet of hot and cold
pasta dishes. The preparations went on for
hours before and during the performance,
and as we hurried back and forth between
dressing rooms and the stage, we Supers
eyed the food and drink being set out. After
the second act the lighted Italian fountain
was turned on and we were ready to run over
and stick a paper cup under it, hoping it
was champagne.
The word went around that the cast was invited
to the party and that the Supers were considered
part of the cast! This was an unexpected
perk to our $10 per performance with free
parking, and one we enthusiastically appreciated;
by that time we had been in the Shrine for
ten hours.
Jason dashed over and grabbed a glass of
champagne, and began a conversation with
the late principal dancer Patrick Bissell.
("Loved your double cabrioles last
night in "Raymonda!")
But I didn't know what to do; i.e., On the
one hand, I love gala parties like this
under normal conditions; On the other, I
was dressed in a red corduroy jumpsuit and
sneakers, not the latest word among the
sequin-and-fur set now streaming through
the doors from the auditorium.
On the one hand, many of the company dancers
were wearing warm-up clothes; On the other,
obviously I was not a skinny young company
ballet dancer. But I was hungry, thirsty
and excited, and so I sidled over and got
some champagne (Italian, too, I supposed)
and tried to look natural.
I got a plate of pasta and retreated from
the glittering garden back over to a circle
of metal folding chairs near the Supers'
makeshift dressing rooms, where several
Supers were sitting like happy outcasts.
Occasionally some of the regal people seated
at the white tables inside the circle of
lighted fichus trees would turn their heads
and glance in our direction, not actually
seeing us at all.
Most of the guests were looking for celebrities,
of course, and Baryshnikov was there at
one of the umbrella tables, as were most
of the company dancers.
One of the little boys playing pages ran
around asking the dancers to sign his program.
Even Jason felt too much a part of the adult
world, of the dance world, to ask, though
he too would like the souvenirs.
Asking for autographs definitely divides
the pros from the amateurs. There's them
and then there's us, and for the duration
of "Romeo and Juliet" the illusion
of being part of American Ballet Theatre
was worth more than autographs of the stars.
People were raving about the Italian ices,
and so Jason grabbed me and pulled me over
to join the short line in front of the cart.
Behind us stood two tall, black-tied men,
who assumed we were ABT members and politely
asked us questions as if we knew the inside
stuff.
We ate our ices and faded into the background,
and eventually out the stage door into the
cold night, trailing stardust and fatigue.
After a few performances we felt like true
professional company members as we hurried
to sign in, put on our makeup, and prepared
to wear our heavy, uncomfortable costumes.
It was difficult even to walk in those outfits,
and we Market Ladies didn't mind at all
when we were ordered to remove them immediately
upon exiting the stage and put them on again
right before Act II. We were not allowed
to sit down in them or eat, drink or smoke
in them. I wondered about going to the bathroom,
but knew it would be impossible to lift
those heavy skirts anyway. Luckily the subject
never came up for me.
By this time we had learned to quickly dress
into our street clothes after coming offstage
and sneak into the box right next to the
wings. You could only see half of the stage
from there, but it was better than standing
in the wings where we were in the way. The
large orchestra rendering Prokofiev's powerful
score sounded fuller and more immediate
from the audience, too.
While onstage, we Supers were to react to
the events taking place and join in with
the company at certain times, acting and
interacting.
We didn't have to feign fear in Act I when
the Capulets and the Montagues whipped out
their swords and set about killing each
other. The stage was crowded with people
and the large set, and each performance
of the fight got more wild.
Twenty men thrusted and parried with real
swords (with tiny rubber tips), jumping
from landings, leaping through doorways.
It was different every time, but always
skilled and exciting, and the supers didn't
always know where to stand to get out of
their way.
As the bodies piled up, the "dead"
Capulets and Montagues made jokes and funny
faces to those onstage who could see them.
They seemed to have a wonderful time.
Nor did I have to pretend sorrow and horror
in Act II at the death of Tybalt. I was
moved to tears every time Lady Capulet (Georgina
Parkinson) rushed down the stairs to Tybalt's
body and seized the sword in a frenzy to
attack the remorseful Romeo. Then, convulsed
with grief, she sank agonizingly to the
floor and rocked the dead Tybalt in her
arms to the wailing of French horns, trombones,
trumpets and the pounding of the tympani.
It was incredibly powerful, indelible. (She
always gave him a friendly pat after the
curtain fell.)
The last performance was danced by Natalia
Makarova and the house was packed, 6,000
people. I couldn't believe she could be
better than the other Juliets I saw, but
she was.
When she died in the tomb to that poignant
minor theme, the audience was on their third
Kleenex. Even Martin Bernheimer, the Los
Angeles Times' Critic Terrible at the time,
praised her performance, saying that "Makarova
is Juliet!"
Fourteen-year-old Autumn, Jason's ballet
classmate who was playing an Elegant Lady
super, pressed a beaded bracelet she had
made into Makarova's hands in the wings
after the many curtain calls. Overcome by
emotion from the performance, Autumn couldn't
stop her tears. We were all aware that Makarova,
at 44, was nearing retirement by her own
admission and that we may not see this Juliet
again.
In seven performances with seven different
casts, including six Romeos and six Juliets,
we saw seven different ballets. The choreography
was the same and was always danced at a
high technical level. But this proved to
us the importance of acting, personality,
drama, interpretation beyond technique.
When Danilo Radojivic's Mercutio felt his
wound in his death scene, I actually "saw"
blood on his hand, and I was six feet away
from him!
It was "our" last performance,
the next ABT "Romeo and Juliet"
would be danced in Detroit. Supers were
frantically snapping instamatics on the
"Cinderella" set which was being
assembled near our dressing rooms, as that
was the next full-length ballet planned
for Los Angeles. We all wanted to see how
we looked (no full-length mirrors in the
ladies' dressing room, no mirror at all
in the men's) and to record our moment of
glory for scrapbook posterity.
As each costume came off after a scene,
it was packed away, and by the end of the
ballet, nothing remained of "Romeo
and Juliet" in the dressing rooms but
huge labeled and sealed cardboard boxes
ready for loading onto the trucks.
Most of the supers were anxious to see Superstar
Himself, Mikhail Baryshnikov, and since
he wasn't dancing at all during this Los
Angeles season, we wondered if we would.
But we did see him, several times in fact,
the first week. (What a shock to see my
fifteen-year-old son Jason tower a good
three inches over this bigger-than-life
man!) Misha was there opening night, the
next night for the party, and the night
Makarova danced.
That night, during Act III, Jason and the
other Supers playing monks were waiting
in the wings for their cue, many still transfixed
from watching Makarova. The monks were to
enter the Capulet Tomb carrying huge lighted
candlesticks. Seven monks on the right,
eight on the left (the last one being the
disguised Romeo sneaking into the tomb),
circle the biers and exit up long flights
of stairs on each side.
From my seat in the box, I saw the eight
left-hand monks enter, but only three right-hand
monks--Jason's side. It looked strange and
off-balance, and Romeo's significance as
an extra monk was lost. Jason and three
other monks were waiting in the wings for
their cue as they had the previous nights,
but somehow missed it tonight. Suddenly
they saw the lighted candles of the rest
of the monks moving across the stage, too
late for them to catch up.
"Great, that's just great!" uttered
sarcastically in a Russian accent caused
Jason to look to his left and see the great
Baryshnikov himself watching this blunder
from the wings. Pulling his cowl down over
his head, Jason slunk away in shame to take
off his robe and to remain anonymous!
Afterwards, Baryshnikov was hounded for
autographs inside the stage door by audience
members who had found their way backstage.
Jason and I made our way through the crowd
with our shoulder bags as people stared
at us, hoping we were somebody.
By the time we got into our cars and were
slowly inching by the stage door on Exposition
Blvd., we were just in time to see Baryshnikov
gleefully carrying a cello case quickly
through the crowd which was not on the lookout
for a musician.
He nearly made a successful escape until
the crowd as one body recognized him and
took off after him into the parking lot
like a swarm of bees. That was the last
we, too, saw of the legendary artist during
our ABT season. And for this whole two-week
wonderful adventure, we had to say a most
super enthusiastic, Great, just great!
 |
About
this author: With degrees in English,
Dance, and Library Science from UCLA,
Cherie has published many articles in
professional journals and magazines.
Her solo travels to Europe and Latin
America have inspired several pieces
published in Skirt!, PassionFruit, Moxie,
JourneyWoman, Dancing USA, GoNomad,
Open Spaces, Porthole, The Cusco Weekly,
the-vu, and various online magazines.
She was the dance critic for the Cerritos
News in Orange County, California before
moving to San Miguel de Allende, Mexico.
She is currently at work on a novel
situated in France, when she's not out
dancing. |
 |
| Cherie
Magnus and Carlos Gavito, star
of "Forever Tango." |
|
|
You are here:
the-vu>
Dance> Bodies
|