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Snowflakes in Nutcracker


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A friend has asked me to ask about the "snowflakes" that often fall on the stage during the snow fairies dance in productions of "The Nutcracker." She is especially interested in terms of the Nureyev Covent Garden production (dvd). What are the snowflakes made of? Do they create a problem for the dancers?

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Nowadays, they're mostly expanded styrene plastic beads (Styrofoam). I've seen a lot of different things. They used to be mostly paper, but that was treacherously slippery. For awhile, they went "green" and used compressed starch, but that tended to explode the mouse population in the theater, and not just for Nutcracker. I've even seen detergent suds, made of the same cationic detergent that's in fabric softener sheets, but that mechanism is first, noisy, and second, the suds are actually STICKY! :angel_not:

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It really isn't as bad as one might think. It really isn't all that slippery! You just can't wear brand new pointe shoes; then you're just asking for it! Yes, they get in your eyes, ears, eyelashes... never wear gooey lipstick, because they will stick to your lips.. I've had some fly into my mouth, and I have sure I've swallowed them as well. But it wouldn't be Nutcracker without them! There is something so magical about standing at the end of the the snow scene in Balanchine's Nutcracker in a "v" and seeing all of that snow fall as we bouree offstage. It does kind of worry me that I am ingesting fire-proofed paper though, haha!

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...standard fireproofing for all that stuff was and remains borax or boric acid

Oooh, the old ilussional "imperial white magic" is gone now that i have to relate the lovely snowflakes with borax and boric acid.. :icon8: (never occured to me that kind of question...BTW, BT'rs are really stepping out of the box and being creative, ah? :toot: )

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About ten years back, a small company I know used potatoe flakes, the kind used to make mashed potatoes. It looked fantastic when viewed from the audience, under the lights. I guess eating these would not be as harmful as some substances. They had huge bags of the stuff ready for each night.

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About ten years back, a small company I know used potatoe flakes, the kind used to make mashed potatoes.
My first thought about this was: cockroaches!!! :speechless-smiley-003:

My own favorite is the shiny variety of flake -- looking something like cut-up bits of that soft, stretchy plastic that looks like aluminum foil. Maybe it's just the coating on paper. I can't remember whether it was Miami or Ballet Florida last season, but one of them had a snow storm that really glistened as it swirled!

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Once when my teenage dancer was younger and in the children's cast for the Joffrey's Nuts, I was cleaning out her dance bag and came across what looked like random tiny bits of paper. Just in time she screamed, "Don't throw those out! They're the SNOW!" She and the other kids had collected it from the stage after the curtain fell on Act I.

Bart, I thought of cockroaches too, but in another vein: maybe the boric acid helps control the population?

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My company uses like a shredded plastic (like white plastic garbage bags, shredded into little pieces). They are not too bad to dance on, but have to be careful of "drifts" :yahoo: A funny story: One time during a dress rehearsal all the snow came pounding down about mid-way through. We were covered! White out! I just couldn't take it and bent over in my white tutu, laughing hysterically! It was just too much. I'll never forget that. We keep saying that we should have sent video into "Funniest Home Videos" to raise money for the company!

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