Megara (Meg] dance recital costume

Hercules Character Guide

Megara (Meg]

Megara sold her soul to Hades to save her boyfriend, who promptly left her for someone else. Now she works for the god of death and trusts absolutely nobody. She is sarcastic, cynical, and deeply afraid of being hurt again. When Hercules melts through her defences, she fights it every step of the way.

Personality for Dance

Meg moves like someone who is constantly putting up walls. Her arms cross, her hips shift, her shoulders turn away. She is angular and closed. When she leans, it is against something solid. When she walks, her hips lead and her upper body pulls back as if to say she is not going wherever she is going. She is sexy and she knows it, but she uses it as armour, not invitation. In I Won't Say I'm in Love, the walls start to crack. She reaches, she softens, she catches herself and pulls back. The tug between opening up and slamming shut is the entire performance.

The Outfit

Top

A purple or plum Greek-style dress that wraps and drapes asymmetrically with one shoulder bare. The fabric should flow but the silhouette should remain sharp and controlled. The dress suggests someone who knows exactly what she looks like and has decided to use it. A gold belt at the waist cinches the look and gives her something to grip when she crosses her arms.

Bottom

The dress falls to mid-calf or ankle length with a slit in the skirt for movement. The slit is practical but also fits the character: Meg is always keeping one exit open. Underneath, nude dance shorts for the contemporary and jazz choreography in I Won't Say I'm in Love. The skirt should move with her hip-lead walk and flare on turns.

Accessories

Gold earrings and a simple gold cuff bracelet on one wrist. The jewellery is minimal and elegant, not flashy. Meg does not try this hard. A purple or plum ribbon or band in the hair that matches the dress.

Shoes

Purple or plum character shoes or strappy sandals with a small heel. The shoes need to allow for the sharp, weighted jazz movement in I Won't Say I'm in Love without compromising her ability to do turns and floor work. If heels are not practical for the choreography, purple jazz shoes are a clean alternative.

Hair

Hair in a high ponytail with a purple ribbon, positioned so the ponytail swings when she turns. The style is neat and deliberately severe, pulled back tight to match her guarded personality. By the moment she sacrifices herself for Hercules, the ponytail can come loose and fall around her face, a physical marker of the walls finally coming down.

Special Details

The asymmetrical shoulder is the key design element of Meg's costume. The bare shoulder and the draped fabric should be immediately recognisable from a distance. If the dress is custom-made or adapted, keep the silhouette clean and the colour deep. A muted or washed-out purple reads as tired and defeated rather than sharp and guarded. Use a rich, saturated plum.

Movement Tips

  • I Won't Say I'm in Love is the central solo and it is a constant battle between two impulses. Meg reaches toward love and immediately pulls back. She softens and then snaps shut again. Every musical phrase should have both directions built in. A lyrical arm that extends fully and then folds back in. A turn that opens to the audience and then closes away from them. The Muses physically push her toward her feelings while she physically resists them. The choreography is a tug of war with no clean winner until the final note.
  • The sarcastic walk is Meg's signature and it needs to be rehearsed until it is completely natural. One hip leads with each step, the opposite shoulder pulling back slightly. Arms crossed, head tilted at a mild angle that says she has heard this before and is not impressed. The walk should travel with purpose across the stage even when she is going nowhere in particular.
  • The damsel rescue scene should be played entirely against type. When Hercules saves her, Meg should look annoyed rather than grateful. She did not need saving. She had a plan. The choreography should give her quick, efficient movements that say she is handling it, followed by the reluctant acknowledgement that she has been helped. Never make her passive. Even when she is being rescued, Meg is actively disagreeing with the process.
  • The moment Meg sacrifices herself for Hercules is the only time in the show where the walls completely drop. The sharp, angular, closed movement of her entire character arc should dissolve into pure open contemporary movement for the first time. Arms that were always crossed now extend fully. A body that always turned away from people now faces forward. The contrast between this moment and every other Meg scene is where the emotional payoff lives.

Age Recommendations

Best ages 13-18. Meg needs attitude, sass, and strong contemporary and jazz technique. The role requires a performer who can do sarcasm physically, not just facially, and who is comfortable with the hip-led movement style without it looking forced. Cast someone who naturally commands attention when they walk into a room. A dancer who is too eager to please will not land the character.

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