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Monday, January 20, 2025

How Christopher Scott Choreographed the Movie “Depraved”


Christopher Scott. Photograph by Sophy Holland, courtesy Common Footage.

When Christopher Scott turned the choreographer for the movie Depraved, he wasn’t in a gathering or on a telephone name. He was on the house of his longtime buddy, the movie director Jon M. Chu. Chu merely handed Scott a hat adorned with the Depraved emblem and mentioned, “Are you prepared?” That’s how Scott knew it was actual, he says, “After which the journey started. And it was one of many craziest journeys of my life.”

In line with Scott, the trail to Depraved began 16 years in the past, when he labored with Chu on Step Up 2: The Streets. Since then, the Emmy-nominated choreographer has executed quite a few TV and movie initiatives and labored with celebrities like Miley Cyrus and Selena Gomez. 

On Choreographing for the Film’s Star-Studded Solid

Scott approached the method of making motion for Depraved as a collaborative exploration. First, he sat down with every solid member to debate their model of their character, in order that his choreography may improve, slightly than battle with, their imaginative and prescient. “It was wonderful how a lot info they’d in the beginning, how considerate they have been from the day they got here into the primary rehearsal.” 

Scott recollects adapting a selected side of Elphaba’s choreography with Cynthia Erivo and affiliate choreographer Consolation Fedoke: Though Elphaba is ridiculed for her dancing in a single scene, the three agreed that it’s not about her being a nasty dancer. She is elegant and comes from a rich household. The choreography has to concentrate on the truth that she is totally different. “Elphaba does have a voice by means of motion, nevertheless it’s a really particular voice and it’s totally different,” says Scott. “And that’s who she is, she’s simply totally different.”

Scott working with Cynthia Erivo on set. Photograph by Giles Keyte, courtesy Common Footage.

For Ariana Grande’s Glinda, Scott says that humor, experimentation, and play led to a lot of their breakthroughs, citing Grande’s good comedic timing. He recollects making an attempt concepts that appeared “far out” and watching them come to life superbly on her. “While you’re centered on the authenticity of the characters, it type of helps weed out issues that work and issues that don’t work.”

Scott notes that his expertise choreographing hip hop informs the whole lot he does, together with Depraved. “What I like about hip hop is it’s birthed out of BIPOC communities, and it got here from a spot of oppression, so I feel if you’re coping with representing a world on movie, it’s very highly effective to have the ability to pull from these kinds…it brings a actuality to one thing whilst larger-than-life and surreal as Oz.” For the film, he built-in quite a few dance kinds for the sake of making motion that was relatable. Then, to stop the choreography from feeling overly acquainted, he added small twists to create an “Ozian” feeling.

Photograph by Giles Keyte, courtesy Common Footage.

Making a type of map of motion, Scott thought out every area of Ozcarefully by way of historical past, operate, even socioeconomic class. The Emerald Metropolis, for example, is a real melting pot of kinds—vogue-inspired, popping, and Afro dance—whereas Gillikin nation is lifted, dainty, and balletic. Munchkinland is grounded in ritual and is communal, and Winkie nation is rhythmic, conjuring the picture of shoes stomping the bottom, impressed by the affect of the navy presence from the Winkie tradition.

On Choreographing for the Display vs. the Stage

When requested about his method to engaged on Depraved after having seen the Broadway present seven instances through the years (at the very least), Scott explains: “I wished to create one thing unique for the movie as a result of we had the chance to do plenty of issues that you may’t do onstage. However on the identical time, I wished to pay homage once I may to the unbelievable work that Wayne [Cilento] did.”

Ethan Slater and Marissa Bode. Photograph by Giles Keyte, courtesy Common Footage.

There was one second, says Scott, throughout filming when he was actually in awe. More often than not, he and his assistant and affiliate choreographers have been glued to the monitor, zoned in on what minute modifications may make the subsequent take higher than the final. However after nailing a swirling, sliding shot of parkour performer Ed Scott flipping by means of the air from one platform to a different, he says, he sat again and felt actually proud. 

So far as what Scott hopes viewers members take away from the movie, there are some things. He needs individuals to be moved by the story of Depraved and to really feel seen. He additionally hopes that audiences decide up on the narrative woven all through his choreography. “It’s a craft that’s so tied into storytelling and has so many nuances…it’s not simply getting any person to make up a bunch of dance steps.” Certainly, in Scott’s life and within the movie, dance looks like a language or an emotion, one thing with an innate skill to attach individuals and categorical the inexpressible. “It’s a human factor that we do.” 

Jonathan Bailey as Prince Fiyero. Photograph by Giles Keyte, courtesy Common Footage.

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