Eponine dance recital costume

Les Miserables Character Guide

Eponine

Eponine is the daughter of the Thenardiers, raised in squalor but sharper and braver than her circumstances suggest. She loves Marius with everything she has, knowing full well he loves Cosette instead. On My Own is one of the most famous solos in musical theatre, a girl walking through rain-soaked streets singing about a love that will never be returned. She dies at the barricade, choosing to be near Marius one last time.

Personality for Dance

Eponine moves like a street kid who learned to survive by being fast and invisible. She is light on her feet, quick to dodge, quick to disappear into a crowd. Her hands are always busy, fidgeting, pulling at her clothes, tucking hair behind her ears. Around Marius, her restless energy softens into something aching and still. She watches him with her whole body turned in his direction, leaning slightly forward, waiting for him to notice. He almost never does. That tension between wanting to be seen and being invisible is what makes her movement so compelling.

The Outfit

Top

A worn linen blouse in faded cream or grey, loose and slightly too big, like it was handed down or scavenged. Layer a dark brown or olive vest over the top, unbuttoned. A tattered shawl wrapped around the shoulders for outdoor scenes. Nothing fits properly because nothing was bought for her.

Bottom

A long skirt in dark brown or grey, patched and fraying at the hem. It should look like she has been wearing it for months. Alternatively, cropped trousers with thick stockings for a more street-urchin look that allows bigger movement.

Accessories

A newsboy cap or beret she can pull low over her eyes. Fingerless gloves in brown or grey. A worn leather satchel or messenger bag slung across her body. These are practical items, not decorative. Eponine does not have the luxury of pretty things.

Shoes

Worn brown boots, scuffed and unlaced. They should look like she has walked miles in them. Soft-soled boots that allow for quick, light movement work best. She needs to be able to run, turn, and fall without restriction.

Hair

Long, dark, and messy. Loose waves that fall in her face. She pushes it back constantly but it never stays. No ribbons, no pins, no effort at neatness. Her hair moves with her and adds to the wild, untamed quality of her character.

Special Details

Rain is central to On My Own. If you cannot use actual water effects, consider a blue lighting wash and a shawl that Eponine wraps and unwraps as though shielding herself from the downpour. A handful of silver or blue fabric streamers dropped from above can suggest rain beautifully. The wetness should feel real in her body language, arms wrapped tight, shoulders hunched, chin tucked.

Movement Tips

  • Eponine should always know where Marius is on stage. Even when she is not looking at him, her body orients toward him. One shoulder turned in his direction, a half-step in his path.
  • On My Own builds from walking to running to standing completely still. Start with slow, deliberate steps through the imaginary streets. Let the movement grow as the emotion builds. At the climax, stop. Plant both feet. Let the stillness hit harder than any leap could.
  • At the barricade during Do You Hear the People Sing, Eponine is there for Marius, not the revolution. While the others face forward with fists raised, her focus drifts to him. She sings the anthem but her body tells a different story.
  • Her death should be intimate in the middle of chaos. While the barricade explodes with movement, Eponine and Marius go still. She reaches for his hand. Everything else falls away.
  • In group scenes, Eponine hovers at the edges. She is part of the world but not quite part of any group. Give her moments of watching from doorways, leaning against walls, always a half-step outside the circle.

Age Recommendations

Best for ages 14-17. Eponine suits dancers with strong lyrical or contemporary training who can convey longing and heartbreak without overplaying it. The subtlety is everything. On My Own is a physically and emotionally exposed solo, so the performer needs confidence and stamina. This is a role that rewards restraint. The dancer who can break the audience's heart with a single glance toward Marius will own this part.

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