Food & Drink
PNB’s Wardrobe Mistress knows The Nutcracker inside and out
Sherri Thompson has been mending costumes on set since 1984
By Brandon Taylor December 11, 2014

This article originally appeared in the December 2014 issue of Seattle magazine.
While you sit in the audience watching Pacific Northwest Ballet perform The Nutcracker with flawless grace, the backstage is buzzing with quick costume changes and last-minute fixes. This is the purview of PNB’s Sherri J. Thompson, who waits—needle and thread at the ready—should the Nutcracker lose a button or the Sugarplum Fairy tear her tutu. “Everything I do is to avoid chaos,” says Thompson. She started working for PNB as a part-time stitcher and craftsperson in 1984, and since 1986 has been the full-time wardrobe mistress, ensuring that every outfit arrives at the right dressing room and supervising the repair, maintenance and fitting of costumes for all the PNB dancers—including the 46 company members and 266 students who perform in The Nutcracker. This year marks the last run for the beloved Maurice Sendak–designed set and costumes, which have been in play since 1983. (Next year The Nutcracker will feature a new look designed by children’s book writer/illustrator Ian Falconer, known for the Olivia series.) Understandably, the Sendak costumes are a bit worse for wear—the child-sized soldier outfits are the originals; the snowflake costumes are in their third incarnation. And while their fate is unclear (they may be sold or stored), Thompson says, “It’s going to be sad to see them go.” But the show must go on, and as with all PNB performances, she says, “There is nothing between the dancer’s body and the audience except that costume, and it’s got to be right.”