Marin Independent Journal

What to know in Nutcracker season

What you don’t know about ‘Nutcracker’

- By Randy McMullen Bay Area News Group

It’s “Nutcracker” season. And across the globe, dance companies, costumers, set designers — not to mention parents and kids — are getting ready to dive into the opulence and magic that is the tale of Sugar Plum Fairies, dancing snowf lakes, a massively blossoming Christmas tree and childhood dreams.

“The Nutcracker” is such a holiday institutio­n, you may think you already know everything about it. But here are some behind-the-scenes secrets, from DIY tutus to sunflowers, quick- change artists and recycled snowflakes.

An epic fail

Adapted from an 1816 E.T. A. Hoffmann story, “The Nutcracker and the Mouse King,” the famous ballet debuted in St. Petersburg, Russia, in 1892, with choreograp­hy by Marius Petipa and Lev Ivanov and a score by Tchaikovsk­y — and it pretty much bombed. Except for Tchaikovsk­y’s score. The composer craftily culled a 20-minute suite from the ballet, which was an immediate hit. The ballet, of course, has since become a mega- success. The U. S. premiere was 75 years ago — — on the San Francisco Ballet stage on Christmas Eve, 1944.

Then and now

San Francisco’s original “Nutcracker” was staged on a tight wartime budget that included just $1,000 for all the costumes. S. F. Ballet dancers Jocelyn Vollmar (the Snow Queen) and Gisella Caccialanz­a Christense­n (Sugar Plum Fairy) had to make their own tutus. The current production uses Martin Pakledinaz’s eyepopping costumes, from the Snow Queen’s tutu and its hundreds of Swarovski crystals to Drosselmey­er’s coat, which cost $11,000 all by itself.

A lot of snow

S. F. Ballet’s lavish “Nutcracker” set designs, created by Tony Award winner Michael Yeargan, include 600 pounds of “snow” — fire-retardant paper confetti — fluttering gracefully to the stage during the “Dance of the Snowflakes.” It takes six stagehands to make that happen.

Now, that’s recycling

San Jose Dance Theatre, which has presented “The Nutcracker” every year since 1965, uses rice paper to create its magical snowflakes. After each show, the flakes are swept up and used again the next night — and the next and the next.

Snow in L. A.?

Los Angeles Ballet’s “Dance of the Snowf lakes” scene results in 3 inches of “snow” fall for each performanc­e — more than the Los Angeles region gets all year.

California stylin’

The Los Angeles Ballet sets its popular version of “The Nutcracker” in 1912 L. A., with nods to historic neighborho­ods like Hancock Park, the snowy pines of the Angeles Forest and the Pacific Ocean view as seen from Venice Beach. The show also uses SoCal flora, such as citrus trees and bougainvil­lea. And the “Waltz of the Flowers?” Giant sunflowers.

Quick change

In San Jose Dance Theatre’s “Nutcracker,” the dancer who plays Clara has just 20 seconds to change from party dress to nightgown. She rarely needs even that much time. The current company record is 6 seconds.

A tree grows (and grows)

San Jose Dance Theatre’s “Nutcracker” Christmas tree grows to a height of 60 feet under the spell of Dr. Drosselmey­er ( yes, the guy with the eyepatch). It takes 15 crew members to move the Stahlbaum home apart to accommodat­e the mushroomin­g evergreen.

A show shortens

Bay Area choreograp­her Mark Foehringer got the inspiratio­n for his take on the ballet while watching a traditiona­l “Nutcracker” performanc­e. “I heard a little boy turn to his mom at the beginning of the Second Act and say ‘ Is it almost over?!’” he recalls. “A light bulb went off in my head.” The result: “Mark Foehringer’s Nutcracker Sweets,” a 50-minute, streamline­d production aimed at kids (and their grateful parents).

A hip-hop ‘Nutcracker’

The ballet has been adapted into all sorts of musical frameworks, including rock, metal and rap. Music/dance producer Mike Fitelson, who debuted his “Hip Hop Nutcracker” in New York in 2014, grew up in Oakland’s Montclair neighborho­od and got his first look at the ballet right here. He was “horribly bored” by it, he says, except for one segment featuring highleapin­g Russian dancers. That memory fuels his “Hip Hop Nutcracker” — set on New Year’s Eve in the present day — which embarks on a nationwide tour this season, with stops in Oakland on Nov. 19, as well as San Diego and San Luis Obispo.

Mariah Carey does New Orleans

SoCal’s popular, kid-friendly “Hot Chocolate Nutcracker” is set in New Orleans in 1928. And, yes, the young girl at the center of it falls asleep after a cup of cocoa. Created by famed choreograp­her Debbie Allen and performed by her dance academy, the production also features Raven Symone. And the original score was written by Mariah Carey, Arturo Sandoval, James Ingram and others. It returns to Redondo Beach in early December.

The San Francisco Lesbian/ Gay Freedom Band is all about

bringing together people from all walks of life, so it’s no surprise that its take on the famed ballet is the annual “DanceAlong Nutcracker.” There’s no stage separating audience from cast and musicians, and when the disco ball and the “Dance

Along!” sign alight, viewers — particular­ly kids — are encouraged to get up and bust a move. Each year features a different, usually comedic, theme — this year’s is “Nutcracker­s in Space.”

Strings attached

Some very famous dancers have starred in “The Nutcracker.” But puppets? Yes, Virginia, there is a puppet “Nutcracker.” The beloved, L. A.- based Bob Baker Marionette Theater has its own kid-friendly version of “The Nutcracker,” currently on hiatus, as the troupe has recently relocated to a new home in Highland Park.

Stars take their shot

Among the pop culture icons who have starred in lesser- known adaptation­s of Hoffmann’s “Nutcracker” story are Barbie, in the 2001 direct-to-DVD animated feature “Barbie in the Nutcracker”; Tom and Jerry, in “Tom and Jerry: A Nutcracker Tale,” noted for being the last project that animation legend Joseph Barbera (of Hanna-Barbera fame) ever worked on, as he died during production; and Robert Goulet and Carol Lawrence, in a poorly received 1961 TV film “The Enchanted Nutcracker.”

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DANCE
 ?? COURTESY OF STAPLETON BALLET ?? The Stapleton Ballet brings the “Nutcracker” to life Dec. 7 and 8 at the Marin Center in San Rafael.
COURTESY OF STAPLETON BALLET The Stapleton Ballet brings the “Nutcracker” to life Dec. 7 and 8 at the Marin Center in San Rafael.
 ?? HIP HOP NUTCRACKER ?? The touring show “Hip Hop Nutcracker” was created by Oakland native Mike Fitelson, who thought the original “Nutcracker” was boring when he first saw it.
HIP HOP NUTCRACKER The touring show “Hip Hop Nutcracker” was created by Oakland native Mike Fitelson, who thought the original “Nutcracker” was boring when he first saw it.
 ?? PHOTO BY MARK STRASSMAN ?? Stapleton Ballet performs its 31st “Nutcracker” this year.
PHOTO BY MARK STRASSMAN Stapleton Ballet performs its 31st “Nutcracker” this year.

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