Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Sally Renderings

Notes:
1.4, 2.5/7- Sally will get blue corset as opposed to red/purple

Cliff Renderings


Notes:
1.4- Needs mismatched suit, not so much tuxedo like
1.5/9- more casual, no tie
1.11- NAVY suit
2.4/6- NAVY suit, more casual, no jacket, no tie, sweater vest

Schneider Renderings

Schultz Renderings

Notes
Brown suit- Duller green, more hunter green, No St Patricks Day green

Ernst Renderings

Notes:
1.6- needs more casual, no jacket or tie
2.5- add armband on side

Kost Renderings

Ensemble Extra Renderings

Notes
Two Ladies: Add orange corset for Amanda
Sailors: Lower rank keep, find higher rank for other, but not as high as drawn
Janitor: more pale blue

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

NOTES

Any and all notes from meetings pertaining to costumes will be underneath the post they are related to, with the date from the meeting. There are multiple pages, so if you cannot find the post you are looking for, please look under Older Posts, or search for the post title on the right.

Related blog:

Kit Kat Act 1

Kit Kat Act 2



Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Ensemble Renderings


haha just kidding. An idea proposed that is not final. Will keep shapes of outfits, but change the color and pattern scheme. 'Too Nazish'

Too Nazish indeed. I see this now.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Gorilla

The original drafts of Cabaret included the line 'Jewish' and the gorilla with the Emcee. Kander and Ebb wanted to put this in to satire the Nazis, but were unable to due to how shocking it was to the audience. It was taken as anti-Semitic, the line was changed to 'Meeskite', and a song was added with Herr Schultz to explain what the word meant. Bob Fosse restored it after the Nazis no longer had control over the censorship of the show.

Now what does this have to do with the gorilla?

The original line, and the changed line we are doing now, it is reference to the German mindset on Wiemar Germany. Some/many Germans viewed the Jews as sub-citizens, and the whole idea behind the gorilla is that the Jews were essentially 'gorillas' and that loving either one at the time is a ridiculous notion. This reflects the deteriorated relationship between Schultz and Schneider. The gorilla is essentially only a device used to reflect an idea, it does not have to be a gorilla. However, it is an iconic part of the show, and the 1920s were the first time that gorilla impersonators started appearing in films and shows. So this is why it is specified as a gorilla in the script.

Sources:


This one is an article about the issues brought up in Cabaret concerning fascism and the rising Third Reich:
it gets into the gorilla around paragraphs 2-3 of the excerpt

This is an ebook about Kander and Ebb, with an interview about the song. The gorilla is in pages 64-68 where they talked about why they changed the line and how risque it was for the time period, and how happy they were when it got changed back.


This is also an ebook, also about Kander and Ebb. It also explains the song a bit on page 46
I think a gorilla is important because of the reference to Darwinism, which some also used as "scientific" evidence of racial superiority. One of the infamous experiments of the Nazi Doctors was harvesting Jewish skulls for measurement and study of evolutionary supported inferiority.

The Nazi's view of Antisemitism was derived from both Christian views of the Jews as being possessed by the Devil, as well as a twisted version of Darwinism that the Germans were superior evolutionarily to the Jews. Applying this to the 'apes evolved into humans' theory, it would be a conclusion that in Wiemar Germany, the idea that Jews were equivalent to gorillas as far as evolution goes would not be a stretch. This is likely where the idea of having a gorilla, as opposed to anything else, represent a Jewish woman in Cabaret came from.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Kandinsky piece

Kandinsky Black Increasing 1927

ü Add Brown back to palette

ü Burgundy between teal and green

ü Replace yellow with ochre

Additional Research 1






Notes 2/4:

ü Lapel pin- Kellee leaning toward armbands

ü Train station- Agreed with camels, tans and topcoats

ü Margo Lion-Kellee liked jewelry look for Sally

ü No pearls in the Klub

ü General notes

o Fedora for men

o Women in day scenes with seamed hosiery

o Combination of cloche hats and headbands

o Everyone in ensemble is barelegged, not hosed

o Gorilla on top platform

§ Maybe not gorilla

§ Emily- do research for what it is


Additional Research 2





Klub palette

Girls/Boys- Halter, corset, skirt/boyshorts

Notes 2/4

ü Kellee likes Boyshorts in cabaret

ü Kellee- seedy edgy and dangerous

ü Kellee will cast, then decide how much underwear shows in Klub

ü Kellee- may switch gender roles in Klub

ü Put skirt and boyshorts under both for Klub