Grizabella dance recital costume

Cats Character Guide

Grizabella

Grizabella was once the most beautiful and glamorous of all the Jellicle cats. Now she is old, alone, and shunned by the others. She wanders the edges of the Jellicle Ball hoping to be accepted back. Memory is her plea to be remembered and loved.

Personality for Dance

Grizabella moves as though everything costs her something. Her weight is heavy and grounded. Each step is deliberate. She reaches toward the other cats and they pull away, and that rejection registers in her whole body, a flinch, a held breath, a slow turn back to face forward. She does not collapse under the rejection. She keeps going. That stubbornness is the thing that makes her sympathetic. When Memory begins, something shifts. She stands a little taller. She lifts her face toward the light. The glamour she once had is not gone. It surfaces slowly through the song, like something emerging from deep water. By the final note she is not the broken cat who entered. She is someone who was always magnificent and finally remembers it.

The Outfit

Top

A tattered, faded glamour coat worn over a grey or silver unitard. The coat was once extraordinary, think a sequined jacket or an old fur stole, now worn through and dirty at the edges. Tears, loose threads, and fading should be carefully constructed into the costume rather than left to chance. The remnants of beauty should be visible even through the damage.

Bottom

The grey or silver unitard underneath the coat. Muted and colourless on its own but serving as the canvas that makes the remnants of the coat stand out. Dark smudges or ageing effects on the fabric to reinforce her time on the streets. The unitard needs to allow for full contemporary and lyrical movement, floor work, deep lunges, and reaching arms.

Accessories

One sparkly earring or a single tarnished bracelet, worn as a reminder of her former beauty. A matted grey wig or headpiece that suggests once-glamorous hair now unkempt. The contrast between the one remaining piece of jewellery and the overall decay of the costume is the key detail.

Shoes

Bare feet or flesh-coloured dance socks for the emotional sections. Alternatively, torn or scuffed character shoes that were once elegant. Whatever is chosen should reinforce the sense that she has been walking a long time without anyone to take care of her.

Hair

A matted grey wig or heavily aged and teased dark hair with grey streaks. It should look like hair that was once elaborate and styled and has now been neglected for a long time. Some tangles, some sections sticking out, a loose pin or two still clinging on from an occasion long past.

Special Details

Smudged, blurred cat makeup rather than the sharp lines the other cats wear. Her whiskers are faded. Her eyeshadow has migrated. The makeup tells the story of a cat who used to take great care of her appearance and no longer can. The contrast with the pristine makeup of the other Jellicle cats should be stark.

Movement Tips

  • Memory is one of the most staged songs in musical theatre, which means the audience arrives with expectations. Work with that. Start Grizabella as low as possible, sitting or kneeling at the edge of the stage, turned slightly away from the audience. The opening phrases are almost private. As the song builds, she turns toward the light, then toward the audience, then slowly rises. By the final verse she should be fully upright with arms reaching overhead. The vertical journey is the emotional arc made visible.
  • Choreograph the rejection by the other cats as carefully as the Memory solo. They should see her, register discomfort, and physically move away. Some turn their backs. Some pull other cats away from her reach. Some simply freeze when she gets close. Every Jellicle cat needs to know their specific rejection choreography so it is consistent and readable. The loneliness has to be earned through staging before the audience will feel the release of her acceptance.
  • The transformation when she is chosen for the Heaviside Layer should be the biggest physical shift in the show. She has been heavy and grounded the entire night. Now she rises. A supported lift from Old Deuteronomy or the ensemble, her body finally light, arms spreading wide. If a lift is not possible, have her rise from the floor in the slowest, most extended way possible while the lighting shifts around her.
  • Use levels throughout Grizabella's scenes to track her emotional state. She is on the floor when she is most broken. She is crouching when she is hoping. She is standing when she is reaching. She is lifted when she is saved. Map these levels to the music and stick to them so the audience can read the story spatially.

Age Recommendations

Best for ages 14-18 or an adult dancer. Grizabella needs emotional maturity and the contemporary and lyrical skill to carry Memory without relying on tricks. This is a performance role, not a technical showcase. Cast the dancer who can be genuinely still and genuinely broken on stage. Do not cast someone who has not experienced a real feeling of longing. The audience will know.

Ready to sell tickets for your Cats recital?

Stage Stubs makes it simple to sell tickets online. Create your event, set your prices, and start selling in minutes.