Cats: The Jellicle Ball
Cats: The Jellicle Ball
For this Harlem ballroom-inspired take on Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Cats, set designer Rachel Hauck did a deep dive. Her research included balls at the Elks Lodge on W. 129th St. in New York City, featured in the 1990 documentary Paris Is Burning.
Hauck, who won a Tony for her Hadestown set, was guided by co-directors Zhailon Levingston and Bill Rauch’s grounding philosophy. “It’s not a show about a ball,” said Hauck. “It is a ball.”
“Foremost on all of our minds,” she added, “was coming up with a space that breaks down the formality of a traditional audience relationship to a Broadway stage.”
Hauck’s key elements include a dynamic runway where the cast poses, prowls, and dances in front of an onstage audience integrated into the performance. You'll also spot eye-catching features like a glitter tile floor and warehouse windows. Hauck’s work incorporates a tinsel curtain for flash and projections for ballroom category titles (like “Pretty Boy Realness”).
The set also includes a wondrous staircase that towers a couple stories tall and arrives late in the show, just in time for the iconic song “Memory.” “It took us a minute before we landed on that,” said Hauck, adding that she “lost just one" of her lives executing the design feat.
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