Ballet Co.Laboratory heads this weekend to the 1920s for a feminist, jazz-infused re-imagining of Georges Bizet's famous opera of love and death.
With an original score composed by Richard Erickson performed live, the St. Paul company's "Carmen in the 1920s" will be set in New York City during the Jazz Era instead of 1820s Spain and include speakeasies and swing dancing going en pointe.
Artistic director Zoé Emilie Henrot designed the Roaring '20-style costumes, along with Zander Brod and Phoebe Poole. To embody the free spirit of the era, the team included loose dress styles and used fabrics that wouldn't tear easily and that could stretch.
Here are five points that the costumers focused on:
Keeping movements in mind: The designers wanted to make sure that the performers could move freely and feel comfortable when swing dancing and doing the Charleston.
"We were working off of 1920s dress patterns, but the drop waist of so many garments for women specifically in that era don't really allow legs to go up," Henrot said.
To address the problem, the designers brought the waist up on the dress pattern but then placed a low ribbon to make it look like a drop waist from the time period.
Dancers wear wigs, an easier option than styling finger bobs and curls with the actual hair. And pearl necklaces and hats are all pinned in place for the different numbers.