Grand-Matre was digging for inspiration. Like his earlier Mitchell and John ballets, Fumbling Towards Ecstasy is not a biography, but rather a portrait created using each artist’s passions and perspectives as its brush strokes.
“For Joni, it was how she looked at the world, pollution and war. For Elton, it was about drug addiction, homosexual repression and respect for people with AIDS,” says Grand-Matre. “Fumbling Towards Ecstasy is not about capturing all of Sarah. You cannot capture an artist in a few hours. We have to capture a truth about her that is new for the audience, but also intimate and real.”
To that effect, McLachlan also provided 25 personal ink drawings, which will be layered into video projections. The set is also heavily influenced by McLachlan’s relationship with the ocean as she lives on the West Coast. The overall look for the dancers is the vision of Calgary-based designer Paul Hardy, who was recruited to create the ballet’s 96 different costumes.
Hardy and McLachlan have a friendship that goes back to the 2009 Juno Awards when she received the Allan Waters Humanitarian Award and the designer styled her for the occasion. It was a career milestone for both artists.
“I remember specifically when I did the fittings at Sarah’s house for the Junos. She put on the dress, turned to look at the mirror and her mouth fell open,” says Hardy. “It was like something transcendent happened, as if she had regained an understanding of her beauty after having children. It was a profound experience for me to realize the psychology of putting on a great garment and how it can make you feel.”
With the help of choreography notes from Grand-Matre and McLachlan’s personal thoughts on her own songs, Hardy started the creative process by immersing himself in McLachlan’s music.
“There is a layered and textural quality to her music – not just in the content, but also in sound quality,” says Hardy. “It has an ethereal lyricism.”