Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Notes from the Orchestra Pit #2

I’m Tom Dziekonski, a violinist in the PacificNorthwest Ballet Orchestra.  For Nutcracker, I’m the person that decorates the pit with the wacky lights and who writes the orchestral gags for the “nutty” show on Christmas Eve. (That Pink Panther outfit you may have seen during the midnight chime I got from London.)

When I was a kid back in the 1960’s, I was of that adolescent mindset that the best gift to give anybody was stuff you wanted yourself. So I bought my dad an LP of the Nutcracker Suite, and I subsequently wore the record out. I couldn’t have enough of it. Yet in all my subsequent years of playing violin in the Youth Symphony and in college and whatnot, that piece never appeared in the repertoire.

So a friend suggested that I just call the Symphony personnel manager. Playing with the Symphony itself didn’t particularly interest me, but playing the Ballet seemed really ultra cool, probably because I knew nothing about ballet. He knew who I was, and that I was a very good player. “I’d love to do the Nutcracker.” I was hired as an extra, as was my wife on cello. Incredible.

That was over 20 years ago, which means we’ve done at least 400 Nutcracker performances. And the Nutcracker is still ultra cool. The people are great.  But there are new dimensions to it that I never would have imagined back then. Our daughter got to participate in the Act I fight scene for 3 seasons. The children of the dancers I’d enjoyed seeing on stage are starting to show up in recent casts. The Ballet just got a fabulous new music director. It’s the best.

And my wife is glad that I no longer give gifts I would just want for myself.
 

Coming to the show this weekend? Be sure to head down to the orchestra pit at intermission to  check out Tom's lights, and meet some of the PNB musicians! 

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Just How Big is PNB's Nutcracker?

Pacific Northwest Ballet's production is larger than life in many ways. Here a handful of fun facts to help answer this question.

Choreographer Kent Stowell addresses the cast of Nutcracker. Photo © Angela Sterling.
PNB’s Nutcracker debuted on December 13, 1983 at the Seattle Center Opera House (now McCaw Hall); over 1.5 million people have seen PNB’s Nutcracker.

Nutcracker has 187 roles, which are danced in rotation by multiple casts comprised of more than 220 Pacific Northwest Ballet School students, including over 30 professional division students, and 45 Company dancers.

Each season, nearly 300 hours are spent rehearsing children and Company members to perfect the choreography for the performances.

180 costumes, comprised of approximately 700 different pieces, are used in the production.

About 500 pairs of pointe shoes are worn out during a Nutcracker season.

The Mouse King is actually a 27 foot tall puppet with 17 different moving parts.

The majestic Christmas Tree was constructed by Boeing engineers in a Boeing flight hangar and is made of materials used in airplane construction. The tree weighs 950 pounds and grows from 14 to 28 feet in height during the Fight Scene.

Over 115 props are used and approximately 500 light bulbs are lit for every performance of Nutcracker.