Months before the first performance, Branam begins with an idea. “I take my pencil and graph paper and I make different designs of the dancers,” she says. “Then I make sure I can fit them on stage.” Thirty-six dancers take the stage at any one time.
With a computer program, Branam’s team turns her drawings into charts. The charts are used to teach dancers their positions on stage.
Often, the dancers form geometric lines and shapes while performing. “Certain shapes work better than others,” says Branam. For example, diamonds and triangles appear often in the choreography.
Branam keeps the size of the stage in mind as she works to use the available space. In her charts, the 10,000-square-foot stage is represented as a long rectangular grid. Colored lines in red, white, blue, and green help each dancer keep track of where she is and where she needs to go.
“The colors give us precise information,” says dancer Stacy Paydo.