Costume discussion: The Lion King
Jun. 12th, 2008 05:40 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
First, some context which may seem self-centered, but is also relevant:
I've got a couple of really exciting gigs starting up in the next few days! I'll be working Saturdays doing millinery assistance at the Brooklyn studio of Cha-Cha's House of Ill Repute, helping produce their fall line of hats. I'll also be working at Parsons-Meares, one of the big Broadway shops, on costumes for DreamWorks' Shrek: The Musical, which will premiere in Seattle before moving to Broadway in the fall.
I'm predicting that i won't be allowed to post anything about the Shrek costumes because of confidentiality clauses relating to an as-yet-unpremiered show, but I might be able to do a post or two on what we're doing at Cha-Cha's, maybe an interview with the lead designer or a preview of the line or something.
Today's post though is about The Lion King, which i saw last Saturday at the Minskoff Theatre in Times Square.
Not only is it a tour de force of innovative, fantastic costume and production design, but The Lion King is also commendable for how "open source" a lot of its costuming actually is. Julie Taymor's book, The Lion King: Pride Rock on Broadway contains a wealth of information on how the costumes and macropuppet elements were constructed--not only her design renderings, but drafts and diagrams created by the artisans who built them, materials and technique descriptions, photos of mockups, you name it. After poring over the pages on the construction of the articulated mask mechanism for Scar while developing our Fox in The Little Prince, it was exciting to see the real thing in action. Even more exciting was the lobby display of Scar's costume (among others), which patrons were allowed to photograph!
Parsons-Meares, the shop where i'll be working for the next few weeks, builds the body of Scar's costume. Michael Curry Design builds the head/mask rig. (Remember my post on bidding on jobs? Individual artisans aren't the only people who bid--commercial shops bid on jobs as well.) The big Broadway shows aren't all built by one shop (usually), the costumes are split between shops that win the bids, so you sometimes have a situation like Scar, where part of the costume comes from one place and part comes from another. Michael Curry Design has a lot of Lion King's pieces, particularly the high-engineering stuff like the masks and the mechanized puppets. Parsons-Meares has a few other pieces as well, such as Rafiki's costume and some pampas-grass people. Several other shops have other costumes in the show--i believe Barbara Matera Ltd. does the hyenas, for example.
When a shop wins a bid on something, they usually have an ongoing contract for it, making new replacements if it is damaged or worn out or the role is recast, and replications for tours or premieres in other cities. Parsons-Meares has now made enough repeat versions of Scar's costume that it's shown up in several portfolios of prospective grad students, folks who worked on it in some capacity at some point in the past 10 years worth of the show's run.
Here are my photos of the lobby costume display:

Julie Taymor's design rendering for Scar

Scar's mask is cast from carbon fiber and is incredibly lightweight
(note the integrated lace-front wig and "mud print" hood/support base)

body of the costume, including hand-painted bodysuit,
leather breeches and bamboo armorlike pieces

here you can see some of the hardware where the tail attaches
to the base of the backplate

another view of the mask and upper portion

Scar's "claws" attach at the finger's first joint,
so the actor can still grip his cane easily

side view of the tail arc
(also check out the close-up of leather insets/stitching!)

Simba's beaded "corset" displayed in the lobby

detail of Simba "corset" tail section
I'm so thrilled to have FINALLY gotten to see this show. I've read about it and studied its costumes for years, in print and up close on a backstage tour. Having worked on a remount of an earlier Julie Taymor show (The King Stag at the ART), it was exciting to compare her earlier work with this production. I spent a lot of the show literally weeping with joy over wooby dorky things like the elephants and the giraffes, just observing them in motion and witnessing the artisanship that went into them. Yeah.
Have i mentioned lately that i love my job?
I've got a couple of really exciting gigs starting up in the next few days! I'll be working Saturdays doing millinery assistance at the Brooklyn studio of Cha-Cha's House of Ill Repute, helping produce their fall line of hats. I'll also be working at Parsons-Meares, one of the big Broadway shops, on costumes for DreamWorks' Shrek: The Musical, which will premiere in Seattle before moving to Broadway in the fall.
I'm predicting that i won't be allowed to post anything about the Shrek costumes because of confidentiality clauses relating to an as-yet-unpremiered show, but I might be able to do a post or two on what we're doing at Cha-Cha's, maybe an interview with the lead designer or a preview of the line or something.
Today's post though is about The Lion King, which i saw last Saturday at the Minskoff Theatre in Times Square.
Not only is it a tour de force of innovative, fantastic costume and production design, but The Lion King is also commendable for how "open source" a lot of its costuming actually is. Julie Taymor's book, The Lion King: Pride Rock on Broadway contains a wealth of information on how the costumes and macropuppet elements were constructed--not only her design renderings, but drafts and diagrams created by the artisans who built them, materials and technique descriptions, photos of mockups, you name it. After poring over the pages on the construction of the articulated mask mechanism for Scar while developing our Fox in The Little Prince, it was exciting to see the real thing in action. Even more exciting was the lobby display of Scar's costume (among others), which patrons were allowed to photograph!
Parsons-Meares, the shop where i'll be working for the next few weeks, builds the body of Scar's costume. Michael Curry Design builds the head/mask rig. (Remember my post on bidding on jobs? Individual artisans aren't the only people who bid--commercial shops bid on jobs as well.) The big Broadway shows aren't all built by one shop (usually), the costumes are split between shops that win the bids, so you sometimes have a situation like Scar, where part of the costume comes from one place and part comes from another. Michael Curry Design has a lot of Lion King's pieces, particularly the high-engineering stuff like the masks and the mechanized puppets. Parsons-Meares has a few other pieces as well, such as Rafiki's costume and some pampas-grass people. Several other shops have other costumes in the show--i believe Barbara Matera Ltd. does the hyenas, for example.
When a shop wins a bid on something, they usually have an ongoing contract for it, making new replacements if it is damaged or worn out or the role is recast, and replications for tours or premieres in other cities. Parsons-Meares has now made enough repeat versions of Scar's costume that it's shown up in several portfolios of prospective grad students, folks who worked on it in some capacity at some point in the past 10 years worth of the show's run.
Here are my photos of the lobby costume display:

Julie Taymor's design rendering for Scar

Scar's mask is cast from carbon fiber and is incredibly lightweight
(note the integrated lace-front wig and "mud print" hood/support base)

body of the costume, including hand-painted bodysuit,
leather breeches and bamboo armorlike pieces

here you can see some of the hardware where the tail attaches
to the base of the backplate

another view of the mask and upper portion

Scar's "claws" attach at the finger's first joint,
so the actor can still grip his cane easily

side view of the tail arc
(also check out the close-up of leather insets/stitching!)

Simba's beaded "corset" displayed in the lobby

detail of Simba "corset" tail section
I'm so thrilled to have FINALLY gotten to see this show. I've read about it and studied its costumes for years, in print and up close on a backstage tour. Having worked on a remount of an earlier Julie Taymor show (The King Stag at the ART), it was exciting to compare her earlier work with this production. I spent a lot of the show literally weeping with joy over wooby dorky things like the elephants and the giraffes, just observing them in motion and witnessing the artisanship that went into them. Yeah.
Have i mentioned lately that i love my job?
no subject
Date: 2008-06-12 10:16 pm (UTC)but really i think it's just Julie in general that i love oh so much. *laughs* i've also done another production she designed with Constance Hoffman, The Flying Dutchman. it had a stunning set & costume design as well. if you ever see any opera doing her version you must go see it! sadly we've been told we'll never remount it due to the cost. :(
no subject
Date: 2008-06-12 10:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-13 04:27 am (UTC)Small world, i worked on some of Constance Hoffman's The Grand Duchess of Gerolstein at the LA Opera. Though i was really excited to get the job i have in NC when i got it, it was sad to leave the LA Opera before that show opened, and before they began working on Julie Taymor's Grendel, which looked amazing, what i saw of it in photos.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-14 06:06 pm (UTC)i've done a few shows with Constance and really love her designs. a lot of people think she's difficult to work with but we get along rather well. she's really intense and knows exactly what she wants. personally i like that in a designer......and the fact that she does a lot of really dark designs.
about 5 years ago she did a fabulously dark version of hamlet at the alley theatre. it was stunning!! it was never stated but implied that possibly the entire cast was dead. every costume in that show just made me quiver. but i built the coolest wig ever for it.
. .. .. ... .. .. .
i just put most of them on facebook this morning for someone from the cast. are you on facebook? if so just search for me, serret jensen. they're in my photos, labeled lion king
no subject
Date: 2009-10-05 06:35 pm (UTC)My mom wanted to work in the hair and make-up department for the Las Vegas theaters here in town but she ended up being an assistant instead. I actually work in the Mandaly Bay Theatre backstage and I am an assistant to the costume and props department for the Lion King! It's so fun and really cool! I also love Nala's costume and I can never stop admiring it before I have to hand it over to Ms. Simmons! (Kissy Simmons) LOL
Sarabi's costume and the Cheetah costume are also another one of my favorites. I actually love all the costumes; it's hard to say which one I wish I could keep in my closet!
The only costumes that freak the crap out of me, however, are the widebeast heads and the hyena masks. I can never go backstage alone when those things are sitting on the wall...staring at you...