Posts Tagged ‘lighting’

Les Mis at 25 and on tour . . .

May 12th, 2010

First published in Lighting and Sound International May 2010

Download a PDF of the article here . . .Les Mis at 25 – L&SI, May 2010

Les Miserables 25th Anniversary Tour

Katie Hall as Cosette, Gareth Gates as Marius, Madalena Alberto as Fantine and John Owen Jones as Jean Valjean - photo credit Michael Le Poer Trench

It’s been a quarter of a century since Les Miserables first opened in London and it’s been playing – in one theatre or another – ever since. To celebrate the shows phenomenal success Cameron Mackintosh has had it re-staged and re-designed and it’s currently out on its 25th Anniversary tour. Sarah Rushton-Read joined the blue rinse brigade for the Thursday afternoon matinee at The Edinburgh Playhouse and wept her way through an entire box of Kleenex!

When theatre really works, when you can truly suspend your disbelief and loose yourself in the story and its characters, it’s a magical encounter. The brand-new 25th Anniversary production of Les Miserables ensures you to do exactly that.

For this production Cameron Mackintosh has bought together a symphony of theatre design talent, technical skill and enthusiasm and it resonates throughout the production. Each element of the show works in harmony with the other and makes Victor Hugo’s epic tale of moral redemption and revolution a delight to watch.

Matt Kinley’s textural and dynamic automated set design gracefully moves around the stage to form a multitude of configurations and locations. These combinations depict everything from the docks and bars of 18C Paris to its quiet suburbs and surrounding countryside. The transitions flow seamlessly into one another and neither stem nor rush the flow of action.

Projection is a fundamental element in the design and has been created to replace much of the heavy scenery and statement pieces of former productions. This makes for a lighter, more tourable version, but it’s certainly no compromise. Kinley has reworked some of Victor Hugo’s dramatic paintings to create a backdrop of vibrant, brooding landscapes and historic street scenes. These have been subtly, yet beautifully, bought to life, through animation, by Leo Warner and his team at 59 Productions.

Many of the scenes are set at dawn, dusk or nighttime. The look is sharp, exciting and atmospheric. Paule Constable’s darkly evocative lighting blends physical set and video while pulling characters out of the background to deliver a strong painterly feel.

Barricades - Photo by Michael Le Poer Trench

Adding further dimension to the experience is Mick Potter’s expansive and enveloping sound design. Somehow it shifts past the constraints of the auditorium walls and opens the room up to the action on stage. It’s atmospheric and three-dimensional; one minute there are cannon balls and bullets hurtling past your head, the next you’re chilled by the drip, drip, drip of the Paris sewers. The re-scored music is alive and the vocals are clear, balanced and natural.

What makes this production such a pleasure to watch is that each of these normally disparate technical elements works in synchronicity with the others. The outcome is cinematic in quality and provides the perfect three-dimensional, ever changing canvas on which Hugo’s epic tale unfolds.

Although the show has been designed and built specifically for touring there’s no skimping in style or production values. The Sunday get in and following Tuesday opening only happens because of precise, thoughtful design, detailed planning and a 24-hour build operation. What takes this productions team three days and two nights to achieve would once have demanded anything up to four weeks to pull off.

Every venue has been thoroughly recc’d by every relevant member of the team. Each receiving house’s staff knows exactly what to expect before the in. As Paule Constable says: “Production manager Gerry Donaldson is a genius; you give him a idea and he will worry it to its natural solution. Every t is crossed and every i dotted, he’s extraordinary. For example, when he realized certain venues were not going to have enough wing storage he came up with an ingenious plan to fly the props and furniture on steeldeck, just upstage of the number 1 LX!”

Nothing about this show is under specified – there are a number of very large automated scenic elements and furniture, the lighting has more than 500 programmed moves and over 400 cues, there’s a huge surround sound and delay system plus a sophisticated foldback built into the stage floor. In addition there is an extensive, Howard Eaton designed and built, smoke distribution system that runs under the stage and 16 Axis of flying. Large-scale projection is a key element of the design and multipart flying and scene transitions add further complexity.

Paule Constable’s lighting is stark, understated and illustrative. It sculpts the dimension, scale and form of the set. Plenty of top, back and sidelight chisel the performers out from their background and yet effortlessly smooth the integration of the rich video content with the set.

There’s an ever-changing conversation between light and projection, with lighting very much keyed into the projected images. She says: “My only concession to the musical theatre genre is that I make it just that little bit more alive than I might normally! Of course that doesn’t mean using pinks, bright blues or gobos but I might use some 205 – steady!”

Choosing not to go down the road of gobos and saturated colour is a brave move, however the starkness allows the story to really shine. Constable continues: “My style for Les Mis takes the approach that our memory and the way we visualize history is based on paintings and films that have depicted the time. I took my inspiration from the Victor Hugo paintings and worked in close association with Matt Kinley and Leo Warner. Between us we pushed the palette of each image to either heighten or knock atmosphere back. I would then reflect that in the mood of the lighting state.”

In terms of cues this is a busy show. Jane Dutton – programmer and re-lighter for the tour has her work cut out just to get it plotted in time for the Tuesday opening. The overhead rig comprised primarily movers and there are 409 cues (excluding parts) and 526 moving light positions!

“We have to work really hard to achieve the Tuesday night opening. I get an hour on Tuesday to focus to furniture and then I don’t get to see anything until the tech run later in the afternoon. For me it’s all about being on the ball and ensuring the lights are in the right place at the right time before the next scene change happens,” says Dutton

Thankfully the company is touring all the overheads on pre-rigged trusses so the relationship between lights and set remain relatively constant. However there’s always room for some tweaks. In contrast the FOH units often change orientation so can take some time to re-plot.

Ian Moulds, production LX continues: “To save time we tour the entire overhead lighting rig on pre-rigged trusses. To speed up get in, set up and out we’ve had bespoke dolly trucks made.”

Unsurprisingly electrics greatest challenge is time, Simon Sherriff, on tour chief LX elaborates: “All overheads and FOH lighting has to be rigged and operational by the lunchtime of day two, or we don’t have enough time to focus on days two and three. We have teams working 24 hours from Sunday morning through to Tuesday afternoon.”

Moulds interjects: “Again for quick set up we’ve designed custom frames and tower sections – built by Howard Eaton Lighting Ltd – for side lighting and downstage followspot platforms. The throw back is we use a lot more truck space!”

There are five mobile set pieces, which come together in various configurations. Each has a city theatrical radio DMX receiver to drive Howard Eaton created fixtures such as LED strobes, which provide gun shot flashes during the barricade scenes. HELL also built a smoke and haze delivery system that covers the upstage

For control, Dutton and Constable favor the ETC EOS. Dutton elaborates: “My background was Strand, but EOS seems to be the way forward now. I like the touch screen feature. I can have all my presets close to hand and its ergonomic and intuitive.”

In the main the rig comprises: Martin TW1s, ETC Revolutions, Clay Paky Alpha Beams and a selection of Vari*lites. For a show that is reliant on precise, visible beams throughout the kit must be kept in tiptop condition. To that end Sherriff and his team does a maintenance day every week.

Gareth Gates as Marius - Photo by Michael Le Poer Trench

Sherriff is also responsible for the video rigging, focus and maintenance. Again the relationship between the projection surface and the fixtures is fairly fixed. He discusses: The projectors are very steeply rigged. Focus is done overnight on the Monday and it can take a couple of hours to get right.”

For each of Kinley’s projected images Leo Warner and his team have added some dynamic. Whether it is subtle wisps of animation or huge, sweeping cinematic statements, each gives spot on perspective creates a dramatic sense of scale both physically and emotionally. Projection is lyrical; helped by the choice of projection surface – a brick wall that spans the full width of the stage. It never feels flat or plastic; it’s textural without being literal, heavy or deadening.

From a design perspective this is a real strength. Warner discusses: “Our brief was to make the imagery work on stage but also within the parameters of touring. There are some tricky issues such as the short throw to the back wall. Projectors are rigged high and steep. People said it wouldn’t work but we’ve proved that you can come in at a harsh angle and still get a seamless image. The advantage is you can stand people hard against the wall without shadows.”

There are some really dramatic moments; one in the Paris sewers where the journey is punctuated by projected imaged panning and zooming in filmic style. Other big moments include a run away cart, where a ‘dolly out’ effect has the background receding fast as the cart rolls downstage. This confers a remarkable sense of speed and changing perspective – everything happening at once. There’s also a rather cunningly staged suicide from a bridge. A combination of lighting, projection, smoke and moving scenery give amazing viewpoint to the action – I would have liked a rewind button for that one!

59 Productions’ Jonathan Lyle programmed the show in catalyst. “It’s pretty straight forward from a programming point of view. We’re only working with two or three layers. This keeps equipment to the minimum. In show mode the Catalyst is triggered by midi show control from the lighting console.”

There’s almost no time when projection is not used. Robust equipment is therefore essential. Warner elaborates: “We use three Panasonic PTD10,000s on the back wall, soft edged together. We also use one on the front circle, which does the show cloth and a couple of effects.”

To get a true blackout 59 Productions fitted gradated neutral density scrollers to the units. Warner explains: “This allows us to achieve a really smooth fade up from total black as opposed to video black. There are moments – especially in act 1 – when the whole stage closes down to nothing except a single spotlight – I Dream a Dream. From this there is a fade up of a factory backdrop which comes out of nothing and is all the more effective for it.”

Continuing the cinematic style is the sound design. Mick Potter has created a transparent, dynamic filmic feel to the production. It’s big without being super loud. Paul Gatehouse – Assistant Sound Designer discusses: “It’s a dream score to work with because it’s all there; the dynamics go all the way from the top to the bottom. The score creates the atmosphere; we simply enhance it in places. There are a lot of keyboard synthesizer sounds and they work well in surround.”

Potter and Gatehouse had the opportunity to work with composer Claude-Michel Schonberg to re-invent the score to suit the current orchestral line up. “It was really exciting, Les Mis is the de facto musical for me and to have that opportunity was fantastic,” says Gatehouse.

There are only 11 band members in the pit. However the feeling is of much larger band than that. It’s a percussion led score. All instruments are both close and ambient mic’d, Gatehouse elaborates: “We have a full set of DPA mics in the pit. 4061 clip on mics on the strings with the 4011 ambient mics. The mics on brass and woodwind are 4022s with 4011 ambients. This gives us the choice to use a closer or bigger sound. All together there are about 60 orchestra lines, plus reverb and returns.”

Console is a Yamaha PM1D. “We store snapshots and balance between close and ambient sound. The console is fully packed– all 112 inputs and 72 output are being used. We have 38 performers RF mic’d – all 4061s and Sennheiser SK5212 beltpacks. Principles are duel mic’d.

“We use two frames of TC M6000 system, – one to do four engines of reverb and the other does four engines of EQ inserts. We use the George Massenburg EQ on the vocal group and multiband dynamics on the orchestra group. The S6000s and the G-Type run sound effects – the battle scenes being the main one – all in surround. Interestingly during the barricade scenes we trigger lighting by midi show control and they in turn trigger video.”

PA is Meyer and delays and surround are d&b. “We have 12 M’elodie a side on the proc, with 600HP subs rigged below them. We also have an advance truss with a cluster of three Meyer UPJs in the centre and some smaller 500 HP subs. On the outer edges there’s a splayed pair of UPJs – just to give some advance high frequency into the circle. The beauty of the system is it’s set up to do any major theatre in the UK. On the road it’s about adjustment of timing, level and delay plus keeping the low end in check.”

Audio kit is supplied by Autograph and the production team includes production engineers Andy Brown from Autograph and freelancer Sean Lawler. With 52 d&b E0s to put up and another 48 d&b E0 delay speakers getting up and running for a Tuesday night opening is challenging!

Lawler explains: “We put all the rigging up ourselves – it’s a long process. There’s a team of three who tour with the show permanently. Nick Gray – FOH engineer, David Darlington and Morgan Rodgers who look after RF but also mix the show.”

It’s worth mentioning the foldback here. There’s a matrix layout of 16 d&b E0 speakers positioned upside down under grills in the show floor, arrayed in four zones. The cast therefore benefits from the same foldback relationship on stage in every venue. Gatehouse explains: “You can really localize the sound. If a cast member wants a bit more keyboard downstage and someone else needs another instrument or dialogue upstage the system is that flexible!”

The latest incarnation of Les Miserables is pure theatre, it makes you laugh, it makes you cry, it stimulates every sense, it’s thought provoking and resonant. It’s absolutely beautiful to look at and a pleasure to listen to.

If Victor Hugo were alive today he would surely be delighted to find his story and indeed his paintings bought to life in this way. After all it was he who said: “Music expresses that which cannot be said and on which it is impossible to be silent.”

Creatives:

Paule Constable – Lighting

Nick Simmons – Associate LD

Mick Potter – Sound Design

Paul Gatehouse – Associate SD

Matt Kinley – Set Designer

Crew Call:

Jane Dutton – programmer and on tour re-lighter

Simon Sherriff – Chief Electrician – on tour

Ian Moulds – Production Electrician

Richard Paterson – No 2 touring LX

Catherine Crick – No 3 touring LX

Oliver Burns – Automation and deputy Carpenter

Tim Follett – Automation

Sean Lawler – Production Engineer – sound

Andy Brown Production Engineer – Autograph

Simon Stone – Head of Rigging, Unusual Rigging

Suppliers:

Creative Technology

Howard Eaton – special effects and under floor smoke distribution

White Light – Lighting

Unusual Rigging – Rigging

Autograph Sound – PA

Silicon Scenery – Automation

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Women in Lighting get WiSE

May 12th, 2010

First published in Lighting and Sound International – May 2010

Download a PDF of the article here – Women in Lighting get WiSE – L&SI, May 2010

Women in Stage Entertainment

Women in Lighting get WISE

UK – Women in Lighting is about to get WISE!

As of the 1st June Women in Lighting will re-launch as Women in Stage Entertainment (WISE). Why? Because women in other areas of the stage and entertainment business have asked to get involved and we say the more the merrier.

You would think that the last thing this forward-thinking industry would need is an organisation for women. Well it does. In just six months, Women in Lighting has attracted well over 100 members worldwide proving that need.

Since Paule Constable and I set up Women In Lighting (WIL) in November 2009 it has built up a large and diverse membership from all areas of the lighting industry. We have designed an interactive website and more recently launched our very popular social networking site. We want to expand that to other technical and backstage disciplines in entertainment.

The Website has been generously funded by sponsorship from a number of industry businesses including Lee Filters, ETC, Northern Light, White Light, Rosco, Howard Eaton Lighting and Red Create Website Design.

Up until now WIL has provided a valuable and diverse discussion platform. Members are at all stages of their careers from students to well-established professionals and hail from all over the world. This means our more experienced members can share their knowledge and experience with those with slightly less keys on their belts! All members have an interest or work in one or more of the sectors of theatre, rock and roll, sales, manufacturing, architecture or education. We are really looking forward to welcoming the opinions of women who work in the disciplines of sound, video, stage engineering, theatre consultancy and other technical disciplines.

Paule Constable says: “The aim of Women in Lighting has always been to address the issues surrounding the obvious under representation of women in the lighting industry. However women are under represented in many other areas of the stage and entertainment industry. WIL’s and now WISE’s aim is to promote career paths for women and offer support, advice and mentorship through a programme of internships and work experience opportunities. The more women we have on board the more we can offer. We hope these programmes will be well supported by the industry and its associations as a whole.”

Paule and I also want to examine how we might stem the huge female brain drain that happens in the industry when women choose to start families. Whilst there are some women who continue to work in lighting and other disciplines after children – Paule and myself included – no one would pretend it’s an easy choice and most have to change the way they approach work in some way or other. For many, if not most, the long, often antisocial hours, the sporadic and unpredictable nature of freelance work and the relatively low pay make it almost impossible to pursue, in any meaningful way, without relying on good support outside of themselves.”

As you can imagine this subject has been the source of considerable discussion on the WIL networking site. Already it’s producing valuable feedback relating to the direct experiences women have had at different venues in the UK. In response to that WIL / WISE is also drawing up a list of helpful and family friendly venues, employers and directors in the UK and beyond.

The main focus now is to spread the word, establish WISE and encourage communication between industry women on the networking site. This will help to highlight and understand the key issue women face in their working careers and enable us to address them in a positive way.

Membership of WIL / WISE is now open to all women working in the stage and entertainment industry, not just those in Lighting. Also much of the website, including the news page, is open to anyone who would care to look. Any woman who applies to be a member of WIL / WISE is automatically invited to join the social networking site.

The organisation is in the process of setting up a steering committee and is looking to recruit a volunteer with experience in grant funding applications. In future, WIL / WISE plans to provide advocacy services to members and build a comprehensive, life-long training programme in association with Vari*Lite trainer Coral Cooper and others.

Constable says: “Our aim is to make the industry a more inclusive and welcoming place for women to work and run businesses in. The best working environment is always one in which there is a healthy balance of men and women. We will therefore continue to encourage more women to consider a career in the back stage disciplines.”

WIL /WISE is open to any advice or help other organisations might wish to offer. We are keen to forge strong links with industry associations such as ABTT, ALD, BECTU, Equity PLASA, SPHINX and STLD, and have initiated dialogues relating to training and career development with venues, higher education and schools.

Whilst we have absolutely no intention of advocating bra-burning rallies, there are some serious issues for us to address here. After all, the industry and its associated businesses invest much in the training and development of its female employees. Why then is it perfectly happy to lose them, rather than address inflexible hours or antisocial working conditions? This seems a little short-sighted! We want to help employers and employees see that there is a better, more flexible way forward. Obviously, there will be some who want to leave for their own personal reasons; we certainly don’t want to bully women into staying in the industry for the sake of it. However, equally there are many who just can’t see any other way.

Of course, the benefits of the work WIL / WISE does will not affect women alone. Let’s face it, for as far back as we can see there have been issues around the long, antisocial hours freelance workers are expected to work. I know there are many in this industry who are still being asked to work overnight and then work the next day or are not getting their eleven hour, overnight break regularly. It’s also not uncommon to find people working six 14-hour days every week, for weeks at a time. For the well being and sake of all those who work in the entertainment industry there has to be a better, more sustainable way to do business.

Sarah Rushton-Read

www.wiseonline.org

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25 Years of Pleasance . . .

September 2nd, 2009

Pleasance Edinburgh opened as part of the 1985 Festival Fringe with just two theatres, which faced onto a deserted courtyard-come-car-park, at the then unfashionable, eastern end of Edinburgh’s old town!

Twenty-five seasons later  and the story is very different. The Pleasance has become one of the biggest and most highly respected venues at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, with an international profile and a network of alumni that reads like a Who’s Who of contemporary comedy, drama and entertainment.

The company has expanded year on year, added up to 23 more venues – large and small – and in the process attracted a large number of faithful supporters and staff who return every season.

One such individual, who has been involved with the Pleasance for 11 years, is freelance sound designer Tom Lishman. Keenly enthusiastic about all the Pleasance Venues have to offer, he discusses his role in the organization, what it takes to plan and manage the sound installation across 25 venues hosting over 200 companies and what keeps him coming back for more. He also talks us through the Pleasance’s long and positive relationship with its audio kit supplier, Orbital Sound.

We also talk to the charming and enigmatic Director of the Pleasance, Anthony Alderson. He’s been involved with Pleasance for an amazing 23 years, having started when it comprised just two venues, in which he swept the floors! He tells us how it all began for him and what makes the Pleasance such a special place to work. He also discusses the benefits of company’s continued investment in its artist and technicians, how he has watched the operation grow and develop and his plans for future training initiatives.

Pleasance Theatre Trust Ltd [Registered Charity number 2013041].

And . . . if further proof were required of the opportunities and development prospects for aspiring theatre professionals, in all disciplines working at the Edinburgh Fringe, then Ellie Morgan has to be the icing on the cake. Now deputy head of lighting for all 26 venues, she started with the Pleasance just three years ago, working in a single Pleasance venue as a stage manager!

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International Bright Young Things

August 27th, 2009

People travel from all over the world to get involved in Edinburgh Festival. Whether they are theatre co’s, actors, directors or the audience, Edinburgh is an international festival on all levels. The scenario is no different when it comes to the production and technical element of producing a show here.

New Zealanders, Australians, Greeks, French and Spanish along with many other nationalities travel to the UK to work alongside English, Welsh, Scottish and Irish. Between them they deliver everything from the PR, marketing, technical and venue management to hitting the go buttons, pushing up faders and building stages all over the city. For one or two months a year Edinburgh becomes a delightful, heaving, dynamic melting pot of ideas, art, cultures and people.

To many Edinburgh Festival is the premier Theatre and performance art Festival in the world. It’s most certainly the largest with over 2000 shows in up to 300 venues – mostly found spaces. Because of this it presents a truly unique way for young aspiring arts professionals to gain access to, and experience of, a diverse range of theatre processes.

On the tech and production side of things the wages may not furnish you with the means to pay for expensive holidays and fast cars. The hours are long and accommodation not always the most salubrious. However to many the opportunities and advantages far outweigh this.

For techs and production staff the benefits are indeed multifarious and regularly include large helpings of on the job training with the latest technologies in lighting, sound and video – even in some of the smallest venues.

For example, at the request of two companies performing at the Assembly Rooms Music Hall – not a small venue by the way – they’re using the GrandMA 2 console with GrandMA version 1 software.

As you can’t be here in person, MA Lighting’s Callum Howie gives us a whistle – stop tour of the grandMA2 . . .

At first it may seem a bit potty to put a brand new piece of hardware into one of the busiest schedules of the theatre calender. Especially given that both venue programmers had never actually laid hands on any MA console before! Nevertheless, as I discovered, whilst it certainly presents some challenges, it’s also hugely rewarding.

MA’s Callum Howie and Steven Sanders – Programmer and operator for the venue explain . . .

Head of lighting for all five venues in the Assembly Rooms is Paul Lim. Again another international bright young thing. Most of the year he can be found in Melbourne Australia, working as a production manager! He discusses what he perceives to be the Fringe Benefits of Edinburgh and what keeps him coming back year after year.

There is no doubt that whatever stage you’re in your career if you haven’t worked at least one season at the Edinburgh Festival you’ve probably missed out. Although in the main it’s manned by those in the earlier stage of their careers, there are also plenty of professional, experienced production folk all too pleased to share their wisdom, knowledge and partying abilities with the younger and less experienced.

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Northern Light adds colour to Edinburgh Festival

August 22nd, 2009

Having been to Stage Electrics Pie and Pint event the other day, I thought it only fair I pop along to Northern Light’s ‘Plug and Play’ jolly at the rather beautiful College Quad in Edinburgh.

On arrival I immediately bumped into Ashley Lewis from Clay Paky, Alex Cowan from Pixel Range and Tom from iPix. This was the second of the two day event and I was pleased to hear that Ashley and Co had been enjoying everything Edinburgh Festival had to offer! They were certainly in very high spirits when I arrived!

This was hardly surprising given Northern Light was providing some delicious Scottish single malts, fabulous locally sourced food including: smoked salmon,  haggis and cheeses plus the usual array of wine, beer and soft drinks. For those interested in the technical side there was also a wide range of lighting and sound products on show.

Ashley Lewis showed the range of Clay Paky 300, 1200 – spot and wash fixtures, Avolites  Stephen Baird Smith demonstrated the new Art 2000 power cube and Alex Cowan of Pixel Range previewed the company’s latest architectural LED fixture – to be launched at PLASA – along with the Pixel Par, PixelLine 1044, 110 amongst others. He was very impressed with the event and said . . .

Also going great guns was Peter Kirkup product manager for Zero 88, who was offering what proved to be very popular demos of the new Orb desk. This product seems to be taking off in a big way across the theatre lighting industry – more about that tomorrow.

Nick Read who took on the role of head of hire and events at Northern Light last October said . . . (coming soon!)

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Broken Bones and Wet Weather

August 14th, 2009

The Fifth Estate blog from Edinburgh has been held up due to a broken knee cap and some very wet weather – my crutches keep slipping. However in a bid to make up for it, below is a link to the latest news, blogs and reviews from the Stage in Edinburgh.

We should be resuming normal service with lots of video, podcast and photos sometime over the weekend – so watch this space. In the meantime many thanks for your patience.

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