Odette/Odile dance recital costume

Swan Lake Character Guide

Odette/Odile

Odette is a princess cursed by the sorcerer Von Rothbart to live as a white swan by day. She can only become human at night by the lake. Odile is Von Rothbart's daughter, disguised as Odette in black to trick Prince Siegfried into breaking his vow. This is the most demanding dual role in classical ballet, requiring one dancer to embody both gentle vulnerability and fierce seduction.

Personality for Dance

Odette moves with sustained, liquid port de bras and soft landings. Every line extends as far as possible before dissolving into the next shape. She is fragile but not weak. Her arabesque reaches toward freedom, her développé unfolds slowly because she knows time is running out. There is longing in every held position. Odile is the opposite force in the same body. She attacks each step. Her turns are fast and her eyes lock onto Siegfried like a target. Where Odette floats, Odile strikes. The fouetté sequence in the Black Swan pas de deux is all about controlled aggression. Your dancer must find the switch between these two women and make it physical, not just a costume change.

The Outfit

Top

Odette wears a white classical bodice with a sweetheart or V-neckline, fitted close to the torso. Add delicate feather appliques or white sequin detailing along the neckline and shoulder straps. The bodice should look soft and organic, like feathers growing from the skin. Odile wears a black bodice of the same cut but with sharper embellishment. Black sequins, jet beads, or dark crystal accents. The neckline can be slightly more dramatic. Both bodices must allow full range of motion through the shoulders for port de bras.

Bottom

Classical pancake tutu for both, short and stiff enough to show the full leg line. White tutu for Odette with layers of soft white tulle. Black tutu for Odile, same construction but in black with possible dark shimmer fabric in the layers. The tutu must sit firmly at the waist and not bounce excessively during turns. For younger or less advanced dancers, a romantic length tutu works, but the pancake style is traditional for the principal.

Accessories

Odette wears a white feathered tiara or crown that sits securely for turns and lifts. Small white feather earrings or clips near the face add detail that catches stage light. Odile wears a black tiara, more angular and dramatic in shape. Dark jewelled earrings. Both versions need to be pinned solidly because this role involves serious turning sequences.

Shoes

Pointe shoes for advanced dancers, properly fitted and broken in for the specific choreography. The Black Swan variation demands shoes that can handle sustained relevé and repeated fouettés. Pink satin with matching ribbons for both versions. For younger dancers not yet on pointe, pink ballet slippers with a demi-pointe approach to the choreography.

Hair

Pulled into a clean classical bun at the crown of the head. No flyaways. The bun must be rock solid because of the turning. A centre part for Odette gives a softer frame to the face. Odile can use a sleeker, tighter pull-back with the part eliminated. Pin the tiara directly into the bun structure.

Special Details

The costume change between Odette and Odile is the centrepiece of the production. Plan for a quick change of tutu, bodice, and tiara backstage with two dedicated dressers. The bodice should use hooks or snaps, not zips, for speed. If a full quick change is not possible, consider casting two dancers and making the switch a deliberate reveal, with Odile stepping out of the wings as Odette exits. This also solves the stamina problem, because dancing both roles in full is punishing.

Movement Tips

  • As Odette in the Scene (Act II], build the adagio with long, controlled balances in arabesque and attitude. Every position should feel held a beat longer than comfortable. She does not want to let go of the moment because returning to swan form is coming.
  • The arms tell the whole story. Odette's port de bras should ripple from the shoulder through the fingertips like water. Practice the swan arms in isolation until they look effortless. The wrists lead, the fingers trail.
  • As Odile in the Black Swan pas de deux, attack each turn with sharp preparation and spotting. The famous 32 fouettés do not need to be 32 for a recital. Eight to sixteen clean fouettés with confident preparation will read stronger than wobbly attempts at the full sequence.
  • The moment Odile reveals herself is the dramatic peak. Freeze in a strong pose, drop the sweet Odette mask, and let the audience see the deception land. Hold that moment. Do not rush past it.
  • In the Finale, Odette returns to vulnerability. The port de bras softens again, the tempo pulls back. If your version has Odette dying, the final descent to the floor should be a slow controlled melt, not a sudden drop.

Age Recommendations

Best for ages 14-17 with strong classical training. This dual role demands a dancer with clean technique, solid turning ability, and the maturity to play two contrasting characters. Pointe work is expected for the traditional version. Younger dancers aged 11-13 can perform a simplified Odette without the Black Swan variation, focusing on the lyrical adagio and swan arms. Splitting the role between two dancers is a valid and common solution that also gives two students a principal experience.

Ready to sell tickets for your Swan Lake recital?

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