Posts Tagged ‘Stage Electrics’

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.

  • Share/Bookmark

Crazy weekend!

August 24th, 2009

So . . . I am now very happily kitted out with much coveted VIP passes for some of the best private bars of the festival! You know those exclusive hideouts where stars hang in the same space as venue staff and everyone rubs along together, full of community spirit, shared experiences and ambitions!

As I am sure you can imagine it’s been a demanding weekend both for my liver and for my brain. I’ve managed keep both filled with copious heady cocktails of booze and culture! If that isn’t enough I’ve also met so many interesting people, I hardly know where to start, what to include and what I must inevitably leave out!

On Friday I popped over to The Musical Theatre@George Square accompanied by Peter Kirkup of Zero 88. There my eyes were opened to exactly how many relatively large productions a theatre can host in a day! I must say the constant stream of theatre audiences that pour through the doors of so many huge venues never ceased to fill me with wonder. Where do they all come from and what happened to the economic recession?

I was lucky enough to catch the frenetic turn around into One Academy Productions performance of Jerry Springer the Opera – see links below – and met up with two very busy lighting techs who’ve not only managed to learn an entirely new console during one of the most relentless and busy festivals in the world, but also have to deal with the day to day crisis of working long hours with lovies, technology and audiences – and we all know the toll that can take!

Musical Theatre @ George Square

One Academy Productions

www.rsamd.ac.uk/oneacademy

So . . . a remarkably sparky and up beat Simon Hayes discusses his experience of the Zero 88 Orb . . .

And an amazingly laid back Jenny Kershaw discusses what it is to do two people’s jobs at the same time across more than one venue!

On Saturday I was over at the Assembly Halls where I met my husband’s favorite drinking partner – Didier Bareau. Responsible for the lighting in the Rainy Venue at the magnificent Assembly Halls, Didier is a man renowned for his ability to party as hard as he can work – apparently he works extremely hard!

At the age of 33 Didier is almost a veteran of the festival circuit and travels from one to another with the ease of a Romany gypsy. From Adelaide to Edinburgh to Glastonbury to Wexford, he is as happy with rock and roll as he is with opera, ballet or circus. We meet his as he prepares for one show of many that day, and talk to him about what he does and why. We also take a look at just one of the crazy turnarounds between shows.

Yesterday – Sunday – I spent the bulk of my late afternoon and evening in the decadently, gorgeous burlesque style, Assembly rooms bar! Here I drank copious amounts of gin and tonic, ate potato wedge chips dipped into dollops of sour cream and sweet chilli sauce – yummy – and listened to the very international tech staff wax lyrical about all the bonkers things they get up to on a daily basis! More to come on that later this week.

  • Share/Bookmark

Pie and Pint with Stage Electrics

August 21st, 2009

It’s amazing how Edinburgh Festival has changed. In my day you had to beg, steal and invent to get a show with no budget up to the festival and operating in a venue. Today it seems, if you are lucky, you can get manufacturers to loan their latest console or piece of kit, train you and your technicians for free and and offer full technical backup. Not only that, at the same time their distributors will furnish you with good quality food and alcohol! The streets of Edinburgh are no longer so full of half starved lovies who sleep on shelves in venue basements and run their lighting off homemade banks of household dimmers! Mind you I have no doubt there are still a few of those around.

Stage Electrics, which seems to have kit in almost every main venue on the Fringe, had their second successful Pie and Pint event up here in Edinburgh. Peter Kirkup from Zero 88 showed visiting tech’s on a break the Orb, the latest console from Zero 88. We will be reporting on its application from the Pleasance venues later this week, so please do watch this space. Paul Roughton of Stage Electrics says: “We have 1470 lighting units on hire up here 113 of which are movers. WE also have 39,672 meters of cable, 1,271.2 meters of truss, 6000sqm of staging and that doesn’t include what we have on Scott Mills the Musical!”

What is also impressive is that some people seem to be involved in more than one show in more than one venue concurrently. One such multi talented person is Zoe Hughes who it seems is acting in two shows and is responsible for the lighting in two others. She discusses her exploits in the film below.

  • Share/Bookmark