NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Here is what you cant see from the rear mezzanine of a theater: the flocked velvet, the rubylike rhinestones, the layered fabrics that shape a lush rosette atop each dance pump. This is the Red Death costume from the Masquerade number in The Phantom of the Opera. A carnival of flocked velvet and gold braid, it integrates art and craft, glamour and kitsch, fantasy and hand-sewn reality.
Red Death awaits you on the lower level of Showstoppers! Spectacular Costumes From Stage and Screen, a pop-up exhibition to benefit the recently formed Costume Industry Coalition, an alliance of over 50 New York City-based small businesses and independent artisans.
On Broadway, even in the best seats, an orchestra pit separates you from the finery. At Showstoppers!, which runs through Sept. 26 in a former Modells branch in Times Square, you can stand close enough to make out individual threads.
When theaters went dark last year because of the pandemic, costume fabricators had to close up shop, too. Designers are the visible faces of this industry they are the ones who collect the Tony Awards, although not during the broadcast portions of the ceremony. But while they dream up the costumes, it is the fabricators the tailors and seamstresses and embroiderers and weavers and beaders and pleaters and painters and milliners and glovers and cobblers who actually build them.
We create the three-dimensional moving piece of art, Brian Blythe, one of the exhibitions organizers, said. Many of the pieces are couture items, built on the bodies of individual performers and retired when those actors leave a show.
Showstoppers! displays 100-odd costumes, as well as a handful of the tools used to make them, like millinery blocks and a 19th-century crewel machine from embroiderers Penn & Fletcher.
The exhibition was put together in 3 1/2 months, and its lighting, sound and design (from Thinc Design) were provided at cost or gratis. So it feels inevitably ad hoc. The Broadway and opera displays put their custom-shod feet forward; the film, television, theme park and dance portions hang back. The selection reflects less a dedication vision, and more what could be begged, borrowed or briskly replicated.
But whats more theatrical than a lets-put-on-a-show ethos?
Not every garment benefits from close study. Some need the alchemy of star power and stage lighting to shine. Still, each testifies to the men and women (mostly women), who have patiently attached every ribbon and rhinestone. A handful of these craftspeople will be on site, plying their spangled trades during opening hours. Here are 10 highlights from the show.
The Cher Show
The Cher Show apportioned its heroines life among three actresses, referred to in the biomusical as Babe, Star and Lady. The exhibition includes the costumes for all three of them in the number If I Could Turn Back Time, a slinky triptych of velvet, rhinestones and boots. When Cher came to see the Broadway show, she reminded designer Bob Mackie that she hadnt actually worn the glamorous bat wings that crown the display. You would have if Id drawn them, he told her.
Six
A few steps away huddle replicas of the outfits for Six, a pop musical about the six wives of Henry VIII that was originally set to open the day Broadway shut down. The Tudor-inspired minidresses are built from plastics, vinyl and the occasional Swarovski crystal. They gesture to the 16th-century the lattice patterning, the corsetry but also the likes of contemporary stars such as Beyoncé, Nicki Minaj and Ariana Grande. Thousands of metal studs, some so sharp they could cut you, adorn the outfits. Each boasts a personalized mic holster.
Aladdin
One of the exhibitions displays pays tribute to Disneys Broadway dominance. (Frozen announced its closure during the pandemic, but Aladdin and The Lion King will soon reopen.) Up close, the Aladdin costumes offer astonishing intricacies, like the beaded birds and flowering vines that meander up and down Aladdins turquoise robe. The delicate embroidery on Jasmines pink skirts may be difficult to discern without a close-up look, but it contrasts with the unapologetic opulence of her top.
The Lion King
Perhaps the most memorable element of The Lion King is its life-size animal heads, designed by director Julie Taymor and mask and puppet designer Michael Curry. (The Victoria and Albert Museum in London has acquired two of them for its theater and performance collection.) But Showstopper! shows the complexity of subtler costumes. Take the grasslands corset: Strands of rope form a skirt below. Above, cloth blades are loomed, by hand, into more rope to create a bodice at once enduring and delicate.
Moulin Rouge! The Musical
Diamonds are forever. Ostrich feather boas are not. In the Sparkling Diamond look from Moulin Rouge! The Musical, the courtesan Satine perches in a swing in a strapless gown, a top hat, high-heeled boots and a necklace that could strain the cervical vertebrae. There are diamanté rhinestones in a firework pattern on the heart-shaped bodice, individual gems sewn to the stockings. Even the boots heels sparkle. In a nod to Satines vulnerability, the skirt made of ostrich feathers and Mylar tinsel softens her looks diamond hardness.
Wicked
During the One Short Day number from Wicked, school-age witches Glinda and Elphaba arrive in the Emerald City, off to see the wizard. The verdant costume for just one townswoman involves 900 yards of ombré-dyed organza ribbon. (It gives the effect of an ordinary day dress overrun with lettuce.) The dress skirt has a kick pleat, and if you glance beneath it, youll find five layers of underskirt, three of them meticulously embroidered, just in case the performer lifts her dancing shoe.
Hamilton
When Paul Tazewell was designing the costumes for Hamilton, the musicals creator and star, Lin-Manuel Miranda, told him that Hamiltons suit ought to be green. Not just any green, but the color of money. (Pity the costume assistant who had to visit the citys fabric stores, clutching a 10-dollar bill.) The final outfit is ultimately more lush than cash, and it yields other surprises, too: like the feminine lace at each cuff, and the waterfall ruff that encircles the neck.
Wing + Weft Gloves
Some of the gloves from Wing + Weft, the last glove-maker in the garment district, have built-in claws. Others are sequined, feathered, fringed, beaded, buttoned, ruched and pearled. The studio designs for theater, film and television, and (along with its immediate predecessor, Lacrasia Gloves) has also gloved a dozen first ladies. But many of the most splendid creations seen here are for drag and burlesque gloves designed to be worn and then, finger by finger, flirtatiously removed.
Phantom of the Opera
The Phantoms Red Death outfit is so top-heavy, its surprising that it hasnt caused actors to fall down the stairs in Masquerade. Theres the feather-bedecked cavalier hat, the skull mask, the beads, rubies, buttons, trim and sofas worth of tassels that pull together the stomacher, a Renaissance-era decorated panel. Turn your back on that outfit, and you will find designs from another archetypical scene Christines white nightgown and the Phantoms black cape from The Music of the Night.
Dragus Maximus
Take one look at Medusa, and youll turn to stone. That wont happen at Showstoppers!, but when you see the mannequin dressed in the Medusa costume from Heartbeat Operas Dragus Maximus, a queer take on the Homeric myths, you might stop cold. The gown is wreathed in vipers, each of them 3D printed at the behest of designer Miodrag Guberinic. Compared with the other looks on view, it has a less artisanal approach, but it is no less intricate or exciting. And it hints at fabrications future.
Exhibit Information:
'Showstoppers! Spectacular Costumes From Stage and Screen'
Through Sept. 26 at 234 W. 42nd St.; showstoppersnyc.com.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.