S N N 43 IO T IO e C T g E C a J E p O N n R N o P O ts C ar t Road Test: HES Showpix, page 50 JUNE 2008 Frank Pinto A Papal Mass on Sacred Ground Rigger Dies in Mississippi Amphitheatre Fall New Life for Classic Play SOUTHAVEN, MS — An experienced rigger who fell to his death April 24 was wearing a harness, but it was temporarily unsecured, according to the owner of Cole Entertainment Services, the company handling the rigging for a concert at Southaven Springfest in Snowden Grove Park outside of Memphis. The rigger, Charles “Chuck” Houston, died after falling some 40 feet to the amphitheatre’s concrete stage. Cole Entertainment Services owner Chuck Cole said Houston had first worked as a stagehand in 1997 and had been working regularly as a rigger for more than five years. Although the DeSoto County, Miss. Coroner’s continued on page 9 Joan Marcus Vol. 9.5 Tennessee William’s Cat on a Hot Tin Roof is proving to have more than nine lives, and the challenge for set designers like Ray Klausen is to keep the latest Broadway incarnation fresh and interesting. The basic story is as timeless as the Biblical story of Cain and Abel, and the all-star African American cast, with James Earl Jones as the dying Big Daddy, is just the first of a long list of novel touches. By deliberately demolishing expectations for the movie version of Brick, Maggie and the Big Brass Bed, Klausen’s meticulously thought-out designs relieve the audience of the burden of their preconceptions and let the play’s timeless insights emerge anew. For the full story, turn to page 20. Martin Reports Q1 Gains BRONX, NY — The Catholic Church’s Archdiocese of New York had production crews working extra innings to prepare for Pope Benedict XVI’s six day visit to the New York metro area in April. The Pope offered a blessing of Ground Zero at the former World Trade Center, met with disabled children at the Chapel at St. Joseph’s Seminary in Yonkers, N.Y. and celebrated Mass in Yankee Stadium. The legendary baseball venue was transformed into a billboard-free open-air cathedral, with an altar, a performance stage and hundreds of field seats for the Pope’s entourage. Union crews got the massive stadium job done safely in less than 50 hours — and did it without trampling the grass. For the full story, turn to page 28. Alice Cooper to Host the Parnelli Awards Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Alice Cooper LAS VEGAS — The “Oscars” of the live event industry, The Parnelli Awards, will grow in scope and star-power this year. Alice Cooper will be part of the proceedings, which will include emceeing the Awards Show, among other things. “Alice Cooper is not only a respected rock legend, but he’s also a genuinely hilarious guy,” says PLSN and FOH publisher Terry Lowe. “He will be the foundation to which we build our best, most entertaining Parnelli celebration yet.” The Parnelli Board of Advisors also unanimously decided to add an award to the show this year to honor all who make our industry possible. In addition to a Lifetime Achievement Award, the Parnelli Board will now continued on page 7 AARHUS, Denmark — Martin Professional reported revenue for the first quarter of 2008 at $55.7 million, up from $54.9 million in Q1 2007. Profit before tax was $4.6 million in Q1 2008 compared with $1.8 million in Q1 2007. Those results follow much stronger increases in 2007 earnings. Revenue in 2007 grew by 14.1 percent to a record level of $234.5 million from $205.5 million in 2006. Profit before tax increased to $16.2 million in 2007 from $3.8 million in 2006. Despite those 2007 gains, Martin has only moderately increased its profit forecast for 2008, citing concerns with the DKK/USD exchange rate and competitive pricing pressures. The company expects to generate revenue of approximately $250 million in 2008 with a profit before tax of just over $16 million. 32 Road Test 42 PLSN Interview 57 Feeding the Machines Barco takes aim at the lighting market with its DML-1200. LD Diana Kesselschmidt lights the stage with a sharp sense of irony. Multi-part fixtures need a new control paradigm. Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info: www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info JUNE 2008 December www.plsn.com www.plsn.com P R O J E C T I O N , L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S WH HAT AT ’’SSHH OO T T W Production Profile Mary J. Blige and Jay-Z shared the stage for their Heart of the City tour, and Justin Collie led a team effort at Artfag LLC to give each artist’s songs a distinctive look Features Columns 20 Inside Theatre 6 Editor’s Note The Broadway revival for Tennessee Williams’ Cat on a Hot Tin Roof is invigorated with a powerful cast and the well-thought-out look of Ray Klausen’s set design. 24 Installations Brawner & Associates brought a Florida church into the future with LEDs, video projection and broadcast capabilities. 26 Foxy and Fabulous LD Martin Thomas created an atmosphere of classic elegance for Jill Scott’s Live Soul tour stop at the Fabulous Fox Theatre in St. Louis. 28 A Massive Mass Wide Angle WH ’ S’ S HO W HAT AT HTO T CONTENTS 22 18 An all-star team of set and lighting designers made Pope Benedict XVI’s visit to Yankee Stadium a day to remember. 32 Road Test Chad Peters and Leif Dixon had to abandon the live goat idea, but still served up some tasty visual specials for the joint tour for Paramore and Jimmy Eat World. We check out Barco’s double-duty DML-1200. 33 Buyers Guide The media server category is changing each year as manufacturers roll out new features and add-ons. 36 Company 411 All Access is bringing TV set design for American Gladiators and other TV shows to a new level. 40 PLSN Interview Diana Kesselschmidt’s lighting designs match her sharp wit and edgy irony. 50 Road Test We test-drive the Showpix from High End Systems and take its built-in media server for a spin. 18 38 The time and energy invested in rumors can always be better spent. 48 Video World Digital technology requires the re-use of recording media for video footage, and a new workflow to keep it safe. 52 Technopolis Slow and stealthy programming can amplify the benefits of quieter moving lights. 54 The Biz Prognostications about the future of LED and projection technology. 56 Focus on Fundamentals Toward a GFCI standard — and a safer future. 57 Feeding the Machines How to help lighting consoles keep up with the complexity of new lighting gear. 60 LD-at-Large A look at the many uses — and abuses — of BS. Departments 7 News 9 Calendar 10 Letters to the Editor 12 International News 14 On the Move 16 New Products 18 Showtime 43 Projection Connection 44 Projection Connection News 47 Projection Connection New Products Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info: www.plsn.com/instant-info EDITOR’S NOTE P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S By RichardCadena Who’s Zoomin’ Who? L ong, long ago, I used to work for High End Systems. We had to deal with a constant stream of wild rumors about the company. One day I took a call at my desk and the caller got right to the point. “I heard that Ushio bought out High End Systems.” I had to chuckle. The Buzz Back Then… EN Ushio was the exclusive distributor for High End in Japan and they were one of the biggest distributors at the time. If anyone had the cash to buy the company, it was probably them. But this was about the tenth rumor to the same effect that I’d heard that month. Fill in blank… was buying High End Systems. At the time of the call, High End had just begun shipping the Cyberlight. (I was only 11 years old then. <grin>) The warehouse used to be at the back of the same building where sales resided. I had just made a circle through the warehouse to survey the inventory and I noticed that we were very low in Cyberlights. The Japanese, I was told, were just sent a large shipment, very nearly cleaning out the warehouse. So I told the caller that he was right… Ushio had just bought out the entire inventory of High End Systems. It wasn’t far from the truth. …Persists Today EN The more things change…Last March during the first day of USITT in Houston there was a rampant rumor on the floor of the exhibition that Martin bought High All the rumor mongering and speculation in the world hasn’t produced a single widget, filled the belly of a single hungry child, put a roof over one homeless family or delivered an ounce of goodwill. The Publication of Record for the Lighting, Staging and Projection Industries Publisher Terry Lowe tlowe@plsn.com The think man turned to the laugh man and said, “Why not start a rumor?” Editor Richard Cadena rcadena@plsn.com Managing Editor Frank Hammel fhammel@plsn.com Associate Editor Breanne George bg@plsn.com End. The phone calls were fast and furious. I was convinced that the rumors were started by ex-employees of a competing company just to see how far it would go. It was a homerun. It could have cleared the fence at Minute Maid Park five blocks over. If it was a moonshot it would have had plenty to spare. It might have even spread beyond our own solar system. Last week the rumor was that Barco bought High End. Next week, who knows who it will be? The real question is, who’s zoomin’ who? Is the subject of the rumor or the recipient of a false rumor the one who has more to lose? Laughable Thoughts EN Somewhere in the world sits a man whose job it is to make the world laugh. Next to him is another man whose job it is to make the world think. One day the laugh man said to the think man, “I’ve run out of ways to make the world laugh.” The think man turned to the laugh man and said, “Why not start a rumor?” The laugh man said, “How will that make the world laugh?” The think man said, “I don’t know, but I just made you think, didn’t I?” Rumors are not funny, but they do make you think. And here’s what I think about all the rumors about High End Systems and every other company who has been in the crosshairs: Someone has too much time on their hands. Your Time is Precious… EN All the rumor mongering and speculation in the world hasn’t produced a single widget, filled the belly of a single hungry child, put a roof over one homeless family or delivered an ounce of goodwill. With very few exceptions, most of the people starting the rumors and keeping them alive have nothing to gain and nothing to lose by the truth, or lack thereof, of the rumors. The time and energy invested in rumors can always be better spent by reading a book or a magazine, or maybe even by watching television (How How It’s Made, Biography on A&E, or even Gene Simmons Family Jewels). …And So is Mine. EN Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info So call me to talk, call to discuss the latest technology, the industry, your family, but please don’t call me with the latest rumors. When and if (fill in the blank) is bought by (fill in another blank), they will send me a press release and we’ll immediately post it on our Web site, e-mail the news in our weekly newsletter, and print it in these pages. Until then, I’m going to go read a book. This just in: was bought by . To b e continued… Contributing Writers Vickie Claiborne, Phil Gilbert, Rob Ludwig, Kevin M. Mitchell, Bryan Reesman, Brad Schiller, Nook Schoenfeld, Paul J. Duryee Photographer Steve Jennings Art Director Garret Petrov gpetrov@plsn.com Graphic Designers David Alan dalan@plsn.com Crystal Franklin cfranklin@plsn.com Web Master Josh Harris jharris@plsn.com National Advertising Director Gregory Gallardo gregg@plsn.com Account Manager James Leasing jleasing@plsn.com Advertising Sales Associate Leslie Rohrscheib lr@plsn.com Production Manager Linda Evans levans@plsn.com General Manager William Hamilton Vanyo wvanyo@plsn.com Business and Advertising Office 6000 South Eastern Ave. Suite 14J Las Vegas, NV 89119 Ph: 702.932.5585 Fax: 702.932.5584 Toll Free: 800.252.2716 Editorial Office 10305 Salida Dr. Austin, TX 78749 Ph: 512.280.0384 Fax: 512.292.0183 Circulation Stark Services P.O. Box 16147 North Hollywood, CA 91615 Projection, Lights & Staging News (ISSN: 1537-0046) Volume 9, Number 5 Published monthly by Timeless Communications Corp. 6000 South Eastern Ave., Suite 14J, Las Vegas, NV 89119. It is distributed free to qualified individuals in the lighting and staging industries in the United States and Canada. Periodical Postage paid at Las Vegas, NV, office and additional offices. Postmaster please send address changes to: Projection, Lights & Staging News, P.O. Box 16147 North Hollywood, CA 91615. Mailed in Canada under Publications Mail Agreement Number 40033037, 1415 Janette Ave., Windsor, ON N8X 1Z1. Overseas subscriptions are available and can be obtained by calling 702.932.5585. Editorial submissions are encouraged, but must include a self-addressed stamped envelope to be returned.Projection,Lights & Staging News is a Registered Trademark. All Rights Reserved. Duplication, transmission by any method of this publication is strictly prohibited without permission of Projection, Lights & Staging News. ESTA ENTERTAINMENT SERVICES & TECHNOLOGY ASSOCIATION P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Alice Cooper to Host the Parnelli Awards continued from cover present two Innovator awards, the traditional Audio Innovator Award and now a second Innovator award, designed to honor those in our industry who have pushed the boundaries of spectacle in performance in the lighting, staging, scenic or video fields. “As someone who has always valued spectacle in a show,” deadpans Cooper, “I am glad the Parnelli Board has chosen to honor those designers, technicians and engineers who make the shows look amazing.” The Parnelli Awards banquet and award show will be on Oct. 24. Cooper was attracted to participating because of the emphasis the Parnellis place on education through its Parnelli Scholarship for the Entertainment Engineering and Design department at UNLV. With Cooper’s involvement the Parnellis are giving more money to education this year thanks to the Parnelli Celebrity Classic charity golf tournament. Proceeds from the tournament will benefit Cooper’s Solid Rock Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicating to reaching at-risk teens. “The Parnellis are about honoring the legends of the live event industry, and helping educate the next generation of leaders in the field,” adds Lowe. “We couldn’t be more pleased having Alice Cooper on board for such an important mission.” The PLSN/FOH Parnelli Celebrity Classic will take place on Thursday, Oct. 23, at the Siena Golf Club in Las Vegas, Nev., with the Parnelli Awards Banquet taking place the next evening, Friday, Oct. 24, in Las Vegas. NEWS Three Injured at Royal Shakespeare Theatre STRATFORD-UPON-AVON, U.K. — The stage supervisor at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre was airlifted to a hospital after a large piece of acrylic plastic scenery fell during a set change. Two other crew members were less-seriously injured in the mishap. News reports said that while Roger Haymes, the stage supervisor, had been hospitalized with a gash to the head and with a possible fractured skull, he was expected to make a full recovery, and that the two other injured stage hands had minor injuries. The theatre’s production of Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice proceeded without interruption. The crew had just changed the set from a previous production of Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream on the day the accident occurred. Paper and Pencil ETCP Exams Set for October 2008 LAS VEGAS — Riggers and electricians in supervisory positions are encouraged to obtain ETCP Certification this October in Las Vegas, Nev. The entertainment electrician exam is scheduled for Friday, Oct. 24. The arena rigging exam is to be given the morning of Saturday, Oct. 25. The theatre rigging exam is scheduled for that afternoon. Candidates who wish to take multiple exams will receive a discount for the second exam. All candidates must submit their application, along with supporting materials and fee, to the ETCP office no later than Sept. 25, 2008. The testing is scheduled to coincide with LDI 2008. KALAMAZOO, MI — Employees of Miller Auditorium on the campus of Western Michigan University have voted in favor of representation by Grand Rapids-based IATSE Local 26. The vote affects 60 to 80 full-time and part-time stagehands, wardrobe, hair and makeup, and film and video workers. Stasia Savage, business agent for Local 26, said contract negotiations will be announced shortly, with a goal of having a ratified agreement by August for the start of the 2008-2009 season at Miller Auditorium, which runs from October through May. The venue presents Broadway road shows, concerts, dance, opera, seminars, university programs and Kalamazoo Symphony performances. Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info IATSE Organizes WMU Crew NEWS P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S DETROIT — The number 8, a vertical symbol of infinity, is also an emblem of good luck in sports, from Beijing to Detroit. Hence the 08/08/08 start date for the Summer Games, and the tradition among Detroit Red Wings fans for heaving an octopus out onto the ice. (That tradition is so strong that fish mongers in Pittsburgh refused to sell octopi to anyone wearing a Red Wings logo before the Stanley Cup finals began at the Penguins’ home arena on May 24.) The NHL, which also frowns on the tradition of flinging the oversized mollusks into the rink, has threatened the Red Wings’ Zamboni driver with a fine if he persists in swinging octopi over his head when he’s out on the ice. That crackdown, as unpopular in Detroit as former Mayor Rudy Giuliani’s ban on fireworks for Chinese New Year was in New York, is now being observed, but with a workaround solution that helps keep fans stoked. Motor City’s preoccupation with octopi began in Detroit’s run to the Cup in 1952, when a fish merchant created a sensation with the first hurled octopus, signifying the need to win eight more games. Fans are still throwing octopi, and Red Wings crew members scoop them up and bring them back to the Zamboni room. The driver still swings them over his head, but off the rink, and video footage is fed to the score clock. You would expect the off-ice antics to hold only a dim hope of rousing the home crowds. But the Joe Louis Arena doesn’t just have a ho-hum score clock. Sheldon Nueman, the Red Wings’ “Made in New York” Scholarship Fund Established NEW YORK — The “Made in New York” scholarship fund, jointly sponsored by New York City College of Technology/CUNY (City Tech), Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s office and Local 817 of the Teamsters Union, has been established by a $500,000 contribution from Local 817 to the Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York. The endowment will provide five students a year with $5,000 grants. The fund aims to support the growth of New York’s diverse entertainment industries, which together inject an estimated $5 billion annually into the city’s economy. City Tech’s programs give qualified students the skills to master technologies needed for the film, television, music and live entertainment industries. “The scholarship program fits perfectly with the mission of this college. We prepare technologically proficient graduates to strengthen our city, our state and our world,” said Dr. Russell K. Hotzler, City Tech president. “This gift will allow us to better serve the large and growing entertainment sector in New York.” The “Made in New York” initiative, spear- (From left) Russell K. Hotzler, City Tech president, Katherine Oliver, NYC Commissioner of Film, Theater and Broadcasting and David Smith, City Tech entertainment technology department chair. headed by the Mayor’s Office of Film, Theater and Broadcasting, has included tax credits and other financial incentives to support New York as a base of creative filmmaking and the arts, avoiding, among other things, scenarios where movies about New York are filmed in lower-priced locales. director of broadcasting, who is with Olympia Entertainment, worked with Lorenzo Cornacchia, vice president of Pyrotek Special Effects, to install Dragon flame units into the score clock. The pyro team, led by Renato Sulmona and including Garry Bishop and Joe Lucier, conducted thorough safety checks. But you’d never know it.“It looks like we are burning up the entire PA system and everything else nearby,”Lucier said. Combined with the visuals of the octopus-swinging Zamboni driver, the effect ignites the crowd — but only in the metaphorical sense. Maybe the good fortune of the installation has something to do with the fact that each of the four installed Dragon units have a double head, creating eight separate flares. Dave Reginek DRW/nHLi via getty images Dragon Flames Keep Detroit Hockey Fans Stoked The scoreboard shoots fire like an eight-headed Dragon. Xtreme Structures Doubles Manufacturing Capacity By Frank Hammel SULPHUR SPRINGS, TX — Before relocating to its new facility here in March, Xtreme Structures & Fabrications (XSF) was bumping its head and bursting at the seams at its old facility in Emory, Tex. With 40,000 square feet, the new factory has four times the floor space and twice the manufacturing capacity of the previous facility, according to Tim Kruse, XSF vice president of sales. There’s also enough headroom to fully assemble any of the custom structures XSF makes. That can prove to be a real plus, given Texas’ erratic weather. Before, if XSF was test- XSF’s new facility has enough headroom to assemble each of its biggest ing a structure outside and an afternoon custom structures inside. XSF custom-makes aluminum, stainless and thunderstorm rolled in, “we’d have to take everything down and lock it down” until the carbon steel structures for use in the entertainstorm passed, Kruse said. XSF’s ability to fully as- ment, worship, theatrical, manufacturing and semble every custom structure it builds inside trade show industries. Its products include stanhelps the company test-fit all the parts before dard trussing, circular trusses, pre-rigged truss, ground supports, truss hinges, corner blocks, any of its structures go out the door. A key benefit related to XSF’s newly expand- roof systems, rigging accessories and specialty ed productive capacity, Kruse added, is the abil- items. XSF’s custom installations range from smallity to quickly respond to client requests for different products. “Ideally, we like to be able to say scale projects to one of the most massive aswe have it in stock,” Kruse said. The new factory’s semblies of aluminum truss in the world — the multiple loading docks, he added, are another 400-foot-by-160-foot overhead truss system important way XSF’s new facility helps the com- installed within the Tacoma Dome in Tacoma, Wash. pany quickly respond to customer requests. Recovery Fund Established for Bukovinsky NORTH CREEK, NY — Stephen Studnicky, industrial sales manager at Creative Stage Lighting, has established a recovery fund for Wayne “Wayno” Bukovinsky, who was critically injured in a motorcycle accident on April 19 and is now at Albany Medical Center in Albany, N.Y. Bukovinsky has worked with Creative Stage Lighting for over 15 years. He recently was lighting crew chief on Jill Scott’s The Real Thing tour and Meat Loaf’s Bat Out of Hell III tour. Bukovinsky also served as a lighting technician with Maroon 5. He has also served as a volunteer fireman in North River, N.Y. Contributions can be made to: Wayne M. Bukovinsky Benefit Fund c/o Steve Studnicky 287 Bird Pond Rd., North Creek, NY 12853. Checks should be made payable to “Wayne M. Bukovinsky Benefit Fund. Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info OOPS! A news item on Richard Wolpert’s 754-mile bicycle ride in support of ESTA Foundation’s “Behind the Scenes” charity should have stated that Rob Schraft joined Wolpert for the first 72 miles and Jeni Lyn Anderson joined him for the last 274 miles, not the other way around. 8 PLSN JUNE 2008 P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S NEWS New Cognac Bottle Debuts with Splash of Color Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info WEST HOLLYWOOD — Remy Martin wasn’t about to roll out its newest version of V.S.O.P. cognac in boring packaging. And the brightly-colored bottle, with graphics by photographer David LaChapelle, got an equally colorful launch at Smashbox Studios. Leslie Short from K.I.M. Media in New York was the producer, ShoPro supplied the lighting, audio, video and scenic projection services and Matt Levesque of firstcircle was The stark white walls of the sound stage were washed in a colorful countdown to the the LD for the event, which new packaging reveal. changed the stark white sound stage’s mood from cool to hot to frenzied after Panel is a color-mixing LED panel that can run remotely via its own rechargeable battery pack. the new bottle was unveiled. The event started out with a green pal- With 288 10mm red, green and blue LEDs, they ette to complement the canopy of palm trees can produce an unlimited array of colors. Featuring a 40° beam angle, the Event at the jungle-themed entranceway. Then, every hour, the colors changed, shifting to blue, Panel has an output distance of 65 to 85 then to red as a model who resembled the feet. It can run for 10 hours without being woman on the bottle appeared for the new connected to a power source. The panel sits packaging reveal. After that, the sound stage on top of a battery-pack base and comes burst into multicolor jewel tones for an after- with a 12V power supply for recharging. The panel itself measures just 16.7-by-10.3-by-3.2 party. The translucent bar counters changed col- inches and weighs in at 7.7 pounds. The bators as well, lit from beneath with 12 of Elation tery pack base measures 11.7-by-11.6-by-4.6 Professional’s new Event Panels. Each Event inches and weighs 19.5 pounds. Rigger Dies in Mississippi Amphitheatre Fall continued from cover office reported that Houston was not wearing a safety harness and there was no safety net, Cole reportedly said that Houston was “very experienced,” and that he had a safety harness, “but it was not hooked up at the time.” Houston, according to Cole, may have temporarily unhooked the harness to move to a different point above the stage, or may have been on a beam where neither safety line nor safety net was available. IN BRIEF Jeff Ravitz’s lighting design for the Salute to Teachers Awards 2007 program, which aired on NBC Channel 4 San Diego, has been nominated for an Emmy award…AV Concepts has been named A/V Partner by the San Diego Convention Center…The ESTA Foundation is raising funds for its “Behind the Scenes” charity with a new collection of holiday cards designed by lighting designers Bob Bonniol, Scott Pask, Houston was working alone and no one saw him lose his balance, but Cole said he saw him as he fell, and administered CPR in an attempt to revive him. “He was a close friend,” Cole said. Police officials in Southaven have classified the death as accidental. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) is conducting its own investigation into the circumstances surrounding the incident. David Rockwell, Bruce Rodgers and photographer Andrew Hefter… eventEQ said it has the Washington, D.C. area’s first and largest inventory of High End Systems’ DL.3 digital fixtures along with DTek mixing systems…High End Systems has also launched a new on-line training center on its Web site, www.highend. com…Bluefin Events’new name is Bluefin Productions and its new Web site is www.bluefinproductions.com. CALENDAR OF EVENTS Behind the Scenes Tony Awards Party June 15 Cibo Restaurant New York, NY info@estafoundation.org InfoComm ‘08 June 18-20 Las Vegas, NV www.infocomm.org Cine Gear Expo June 20-21 Universal Studios Backlot Universal City, CA www.cinegearexpo.com PLSN University Seminar in the City July 15-17 New York, NY www.plsn.com/university Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Guangzhou International Lighting Exhibition June 8-11 Guangzhou International Convention & Exhibition Centre Guangzhou, China www.light-building.messefrankfurt.com NATEAC Pre-Conference Cruise July 19 Conference July 20-21 New York, NY www.nateac.org 2008 JUNE PLSN 9 NEWS P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S A Multi-Brand Studio for Lighting and Video Designers WOOD DALE, IL — Lighting and video designers don’t get a lot of opportunities to play around with and compare gear from different manufacturers and distributors, all in one spot. But Digital Stage Chicago is working to change that with a commitment to gear that is brandnew without also being brand-specific. The studio owns, operates and trains on AutoCAD, VectorWorks, ESP Vision, Wysiwyg and DL.2/DL.3 fixtures, along with media servers including Axon, Green Hippo and Mbox. These devices are manipulated via grandMA, Hog III and Virtuoso consoles. The studio has no exclusivity agreements with lighting or video vendors and welcomes all suppliers into its studio — which also happens to be open 24/7. Joe West, a designer himself, founded the studio. The basic idea was to provide designers with easy access to different tools. Along with the opportunity to apply a variety of equipment and software to specific design challenges, the studio gives visiting designers a way to push their ability and knowledge further than they’d be able to in a studio with a more narrow range of branded equipment. Digital Stage Chicago provides a variety of tools for designers to play with, 24/7. RS TE E T LE O TH R T ITO ED New Old Stuff I just finished reading your piece in the May, 2008 PLSN, “Looking for Some New Old Stuff.” I probably enjoyed it more than others because it hit home with me. I did not develop a new idea; all I did was take a piece of gear that needed refining and polished it. Ever hear of a reliable kabuki system, one that does the job every single time? Well, I hadn’t, either. So I hunkered down to design and build one that was. I named the product “Chabuki,” a spin on my name “Chuy” and “kabuki.” — Jesus Chuy Fragoso, Fragoso Inc. LED Alternatives Having worked with many historic and religious groups on lighting, I know how difficult it is for them find the money even for essential services. As wonderful as LEDs are (Video Digerati, PLSN, May 2008) clients should be told that after the end of their life (possibly 10 years), the entire lighting system has to be renewed, and there may not be funds again. The structures will then be left in the dark. An even more energy-efficient source/system is glass fibre optics functional architectural lighting, used abroad for decades, but strangely ignored in this country. This completely different source/system is well developed and dependable. Unlike LEDs, these systems last as long as needed, with only a few lamp replacements necessary. — Gersil Kay Stuck at Green? “Getting to Green” (Focus on Fundamentals, PLSN, May 2008) was very interesting. Something you don’t talk about is the maximum lumens per watt possible. It’s not an easy question to answer as you have to integrate under the photopic curve but, very roughly, it’s about 260 lumens per watt for 3200K black-body white light. So the 29.2 lumens per watt of the HPL 750/115 is actually about 11 percent of the theoretical maximum. (Luminous efficiency is usually expressed as a percentage of the theoretical maximum, so for our HPL and white light that is 29.2 / 260 = 11 percent). The absolute best lumens per watt you can have is for monochromatic green light right at the peak of the photopic curve — 555nm, and that has the familiar value of 683 lumens per watt but with that same zero CRI as the low pressure sodium you mention. This all means that the green LED efficacy figure you quote of 58 to 79 lumens per watt is between 8.5 percent and 11 percent of its theoretical maximum — or exactly the same as the incandescent. (I’m ignoring the total lamp efficiency, which takes into effect other losses for the sake of prejudice and emphasis.) — Mike Wood Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Flicking the Switch I enjoyed your article in PLSN on “Getting to Green.” I have for years been following my wife around the house turning off the lights… As technical director for Jones Hall in Houston, I follow the housekeeping staff around turning off the lights they have just turned on. Nobody knows it, but years ago while programming the house lights, I also registered all the dimmers at 95 percent. My eye cannot tell the difference. My second whine has to do with how to measure light. In the old days we used to automatically know that a 1000 watt fixture was brighter than a 500 watt fixture. Now what do we do? I thought for a minute while reading your article that efficacy would work, but no luck. Lumens are good, but how and where and with what meter? — Chip Purchase, Jones Hall, Houston 10 PLSN JUNE 2008 Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info INTERNATIONAL NEWS P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S LEDs Add Light to Flaming Water Feature The flaming water feature at Star City Casino has three concentric circles of Anolis LEDs, controlled via an E:cue controller. SYDNEY — Anolis LED fixtures are illuminating a flaming water feature at the entrance to Sydney’s Star City Casino. The installation is the first of its kind, and the light show is designed to make people stop and look before being enticed up the steps and through the portals onto the gambling floor. The brand’s Australian distributor, ULA, supplied the Anolis products. Con Nomikos oversaw the proj- Steel Guitar Steals Mark Knopfler Show comes into view. As tour AMSTERDAM — For rigger Johnny “Hotpants” two thirds of Mark KnopAshton controls the circle’s fler’s touring show, demovement using one of signed by Simon TutchBandit’s customized moener, a key visual element tor controllers, Tutchener remains hidden from beams the moving lights view. But halfway through onto the screen. Knopfler’s “Speedway at Another 16 Vari*Lite Nazareth,” a giant close-up VL3000 Spots on the rig of a vintage steel guitar, are loaded with custom suspended on circular gobos, six on the floor truss, tips vertically, creatand the 10 others on the ing a new look for the end trusses. In addition, 20 of the set and the encore. MAC 2000 Washes are Drapes specialist on the trusses, which are company Blackout uses a toned by 24 LED PAR 64s. high-resolution photo of the center of the vintage The close-up of a vintage steel guitar, suspended Bandit is also supplying an 18 way motor control National Style 0 Resonator on circular truss, tips vertically, creating a new look for the set. system, an 18 meter by 10 guitar that Knopfler plays when he starts the song, “Romeo and Juliet.” meter LED Starcloth, four Lycian 2K Xenon It’s a steel-body guitar with a very distinctive FOH followspots, a 10-way intercom system sound and appearance, featuring a circular and two DF50s with fans. Tutchener chose a fully moving light rig sounding board and a resonator on the front. Bandit Lites is supplying lighting equip- for two reasons. First, the trussing configument and crew for the U.K., European and ration would have made it difficult to climb U.S. legs of Knopfler’s 2008 world tour, which and focus conventionals. Second, there was kicked off in Amsterdam at the end of March. a need to guard against dimmer buzz picked This is the third time Bandit has worked with up by the ultra-sensitive steel guitars. With a total of 56 moving lights on the Knopfler team. The Bandit crew also worked with Knopfler on his 2005 world tour the rig, each one has several precise functions and tasks. The show was initially proand his 2006 shows with Emmylou Harris. As before, Tutchener’s lighting design em- grammed over the course of two nights at phasizes simplicity in its look, with the eight- Bray Studios before the first show opened meter A-type circular truss as the main focal in Amsterdam. Tutchener runs the show point over the center of the stage, flanked by a from his own grandMA console with an MA 24-foot and 16-foot A-type truss on each side. Lite supplied by Bandit as backup. Bandit’s crew includes crew chief Mike There’s also a 56-foot A-type rear truss. There are 12 Vari*Lite VL3000s hung off Humeniuk, dimmer technician Ewan Camthe underside of the circle and eight Martin eron and lighting technician Tom Crosbie. Professional MAC 2000 washes rigged on top. The tour’s production manager is Pete HilliThey come into play when the guitar close-up er and the tour manager is Tim Hook. ect, the first of a series of water features in and around the Star City complex that will be lit or re-lit with Anolis. The circular shaped fountain encompasses three concentric circles of Anolis LEDs. There is a sphere of 20 cold white ArcSource 3s on the outside and two tiers of ArcSource 12 RGBs in the center, for a total of 12 fixtures. The lights are run via an E:cue controller, triggered, along with flame effects and the fountain jets, via a ShowMagic show control system. “This is our first LED lit work, although we have been considering using the technology for some time, for all the obvious practical reasons — power and energy saving, low maintenance and cost-effectivity,” said the fountain’s designer, Robert Portocarrero. “Additionally, the Anolis colors and the quality of the light are really excellent, so there’s plenty of imaginative scope, and the product is robust and very well made.” The water feature cycles through a sevenminute show accompanied by flames and an audio track. During the show, the jets produce different water shapes and formations, and they shimmer, sparkle and refract the light, creating visual interest with color mixes and surprises. The casino was impressed enough with the fountain lighting to request that Anolis be used to replace the current lighting in all 14 of the complex’s other water features. Uber-Wall Animates German Singing Competition HANOVER, Germany — Who could have predicted, back in 1989, that the fall of the Berlin Wall would give rise to a new one, nearly four times as high? Only this wall, measuring 29 meters across and 14 meters high, is an LED wall that celebrates the reunification of Germany. It was installed by Procon Event Engineering, and it animates performers from each of Germany’s 16 federal states as they vie for bragging rights in Bundesvision Song Contest, an annual music competition. Created by German TV entertainer Stefan Raab, the The backdrop for the Bundesvision Song Contest is an LED wall made from a total 438 event took place at the TUI square meters of LED panels. Arena in Hanover, and it was aired on the ProSieben network in Germany earlier this year. The backdrop out of the OB van. Production company voss | mediaDesign for the 16 finalists added up to 406 square meters of Martin’s LC Series panels, the largest LED GmbH was responsible for the lighting design and playback of the video content. Manfred Voss wall installation for Martin’s LC Series line. The uber-wall, built from more than 200 of voss | mediaDesign worked closely with Flosemi-transparent LC 2140 panels, dominated the rian Wieder, who specified the Martin LC Series set for this year’s show. It had a physical resolu- for the show. Martin’s LC Series is a semi-transparent, tion of 725 x 350 pixels and was joined by another 32 square meters of LC panels used on a moving modular system of lightweight LED panels with catwalk that was seven meters high. That made 40 mm pixel pitch. The panels are usually bright enough to be operated at a fraction of full intenfor a total of 438 square meters of LED panels. The set also featured an LC panel ‘door’ that sity, and they incorporate Genlock, which miniopened up to provide contest presenters with mizes the light-flicker often detected by televia unique way to enter the catwalk and set — sion cameras. The lighting rig on the show consisted of through the LED wall. Set and video designer Florian Wieder cre- over 350 moving lights including 132 MAC 2000 ated visual content for the LED walls and projec- Washes, 68 MAC 2000 Profiles and 28 MAC 700 tions in full HD. The images were fed from FOH Profiles, along with other automateds, convenvia five Catalyst media servers. In addition to tionals and PixelRange PixelLine LED Striplights. stock media server content, live pictures were The gear was supplied by Procon, and Martin presented on the LED wall with a switch over of provided on site technical support headed by the image source occurring via media control Claus Jensen, product and application specialist. DMX, Digital Lighting Update Ancient Festival GUANGZHOU, China — The Spring Lantern Festival, held 15 days after the Chinese New Year, has been celebrated in alternate forms long before it was formalized by the Han dynasty sometime in the two centuries before and after the time of Christ. If the festival itself hasn’t changed a whole lot over more than 2000 years, the way it gets shared with others in China has, with TV cameras broadcasting images enhanced by digital moving lights. The Hunan Provincial TV station spon12 PLSN JUNE 2008 sored this year’s Here Comes the Spring festival, using two W-DMX transmitters and three receivers to control four DL.2 digital moving lights from High End Systems. Zhou Xiaolin was the lighting designer at the event, and the W-DMX products were supplied by Leifull Enterprise, which also supported the lighting design. “What’s amazing is that we can achieve an enormous span of control with just a few W-DMX transmitters and receivers,” said Eric Lee, sales manager for Leifull. TV cameras and moving lights update the look for a spring festival that dates back to ancient times. P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S INTERNATIONAL NEWS LED Panels Brighten Theatre Within the Kremlin MOSCOW — The State Kremlin Palace, a theatre built in 1961, may have pre-dated most of the casinos lining the Las Vegas Strip, but it’s a youngster by Moscow standards. It’s the only part of the vast Kremlin complex to have been built during the 20th Century. The fortified Kremlin complex itself has been occupied continuously for some 4,000 years. Now a venue for music and dance, the 6,000-seat auditorium ranks as the largest concert hall in Russia, and also the temporary home for the Bolshoi Ballet while the Bolshoi Theatre undergoes renovation. For a special event marking 75 years of Russian aviation history, including the Sputnik rockets and MiG planes, it also showed off its new Main Light Soft-LED panels for the first time. Jakob Sagiv, of Silk, the Main Light Industries, Inc. distributor based in Utrecht, Netherlands, handled the sale and installation of 14 Main Light Soft-LED Medium Resolution panels. Each of the panels measures 16 feet, 1 inch by 33 feet, five inches wide, and weighs only .21 lbs per square foot. “The Kremlin Palace was used as the main stage for the Communist conferences during the Soviet times and is still used for all the indoor concerts of major artists,” Sagiv said. “The stage is vast and the sightlines are very good so it is suitable for music and ballet.” Giovanni Ciranni, Soft-LED Manager with Main Light Industries, traveled to Moscow to aid in the installation and to provide training on the use of the Soft-LED panels. “Moscow was a great place to visit and everyone at the State Palace was very eager to add the panels to their inventory,” Ciranni said. Installation was not difficult, but Ciranni, Sagiv and the crew from Silk faced a challenge getting the panels into the theatre due to tight security. “We had to wait nearly five hours until the sniffer dog and its handler arrived to inspect the delivery before we could get into the building and onstage,” Sagiv said. All the security of the Kremlin simply reminded Ciranni of the historic nature of the venue. “It was great to get the opportunity to work in a space that has seen so much history, not just the State Palace but the entire complex. It is cool to think that Main Light will now be part of The panels were also recently used at the Kremlin for an annual concert attended by Russian that going forward.” president Vladimir Putin. Lighting the World’s Tallest Theatre Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info BANGKOK — The stage for the 2,000-seat Ratchada Grand Theatre, at 50 meters by 80 meters, provides elbow room (and martial-arts kicking room) for spectacles such as Siam Niramit, with 150 actors, 500 costumes and 100 set pieces. And at just under 12 meters in height, the Ratchada Grand Theatre was recently listed in the Guinness Book of Records as having the tallest proscenium arch in the world. The dimensions of the performance space, however, posed a challenge for project lighting designer Poon Limpapun. To meet the needs of the mammoth space, he turned to Robert Juliat. “With throwing distances from our front electrics bars of over 30 meters, the 2000W Profiles do their job very well. “ The rig includes more than 100 Robert Juliat 700SX 2kW and Robert Juliat 600SX 1kW profiles with full accessories, along a matching number of Robert Juliat 1kW High Performance (200mm lens) 310HPC fixtures. Together, they provide both general and specific illumination from on-stage and front of house positions. There are also a pair of DMX controlled Robert Juliat Aramis 2500W followspots used as long-throw front of house spots and another pair of Robert Juliat Korrigan 1200W DMX follow spots for side spots. A throw distance of over 80 meters helps the Robert Juliat followspots light the action on the stage. 2008 JUNE PLSN 13 ON THE MOVE Alliant Event Services, a provider of audio, visual, lighting and computer rental and production ser vices, has named Lynn Anazaldua as account executive for Phoenix, Dave Kronberg, PhD., as account executive in Las Ve gas and Chris Bennion as account executive for Salt Lake City. Lynn Anazaldua Arup, a design, engineering and business consulting firm, reported that director Neill Woodger has moved back to the U.K. from the company ’s New York office and will be responsible for acoustics and integrated venue design products in London, while Richard Bunn joins as senior consultant in Arup’s Winchester office. Dave Kronberg P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S City Lights Media Group has named Lou Festa the company’s chief financial officer. He will oversee the company’s business and finance operations and strategic initiatives with television Lou Festa and film projects. Design Par tners Inc. has relocated. The new address, telephone and fax numbers are: 2919 W. Burbank Blvd., Suite B, Burbank, CA 91505, Phone 818.845.9191, Fax 818.845.9258. DWR Distribution, a Johannesburg-based distributor of Robe, MA Lighting, Avolites, ADB, CM Lodestar, Strong and ArKaos, has added Robert Izzett to its sales Robert Izzett team. Neill Woodger Richard Bunn Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Blue Planet Lighting, Inc. is the new name for Koster Design LLC. Kelly Koster, owner, said the name change reflects the company’s expansion, referring to additional designers and an expanded range of products and services. The new Web site is www. blueplanetlighting.com. The company is also moving to: 115 Industrial Park Dr., Hollister, MO 65672, Phone 417.332.1313, Fax 417.332.1343. 14 PLSN JUNE 2008 Inner Circle Distribution (ICD) has announced t h a t J a m e y B ro c k will manage the c o m p a ny ’s M i d w e s t a n d We s t ern territories in t h e U. S . Lightronics has announced that Dan Phelps has joined the company as its new inside salesman, responsible for bringing in new business and maintaining current customer accounts. Dan Phelps Opus Lighting, Inc. is the name of a theatrical lighting start-up company launched by Brandon James. The Web site is www. opuslightinginc. com. The address, telephone and Brandon James fax numbers are: 3105 N. Cascade Ave., #206, Colorado Springs, CO 80907, Phone 719.434.7354, Fax 719.434.7356 Rosco, which makes fog machines, gobos and other products, has named Ed Donohue national director of sales. Donohue was formerly vice president of sales for Chef’s Planet. Rose Brand has added Steven Schweitzer as manager of the company’s West Coast rental operations. Schweitzer moves to Rose Brand from Angstrom Lighting, where he served as managing director. Jamey Brock LA ProPoint, which designs, engineers, fabricates and installs stage and show systems, has hired Stephen Rowe as senior engineer. Rowe will handle design and engineering duties for theme park , theatre and museum clients. Rowe’s first projec t for LA ProPoint will be the company ’s Universal Studios commission in Singapore. Zenith Lighting has relocated to larger facilities. The new address, telephone and fax numbers are: 6557 Hazeltine National Drive, Suite 7, Orlando, FL 32822, Phone 407.855.0088, Fax 407.855.0069 Zenith Lighting’s new home Philips Names Tom Folsom GM for Strand Lighting Philips Lighting Controls, which manages Vari-Lite, Lightolier Controls, Entertainment Technology and Strand Lighting, named Tom Folsom general manager of the Strand Lighting division, worldwide. This in- Tom Folsom cludes the Strand Lighting operations in Cypress Calif., London and Hong Kong. “We have been working quickly since our acquisition of Strand to create the right mix of products and services for the market the past two years,” said Steve Carson, general manager of Philips Lighting Controls. “Strand is now positioned to move and establish its position as a world leader in lighting controls.” “I began my career after graduate school 30 years ago working for Strand Century,” Folsom said. “The company is in great shape and ready to move forward. I look forward to working with the staff and our agents all over the world as we strive to bring Strand Lighting’s technology and services to the industry.” A.C.T Lighting Announces Staff Changes LOS ANGELES — A.C.T Lighting, an impor ter and distributor of lighting products in Nor th America, has reorganized in response to growth and the addition of an East Coast office based in Hackensack, N.J. last year, according to Bob Gordon, CEO and president. “Now that we’re operating multiple locations with a much larger staff, we have decided to reorganize our company hierarchy to provide us with an active management layer,” Gordon said. “ This move is expected to improve communications within the company as well as allow us to expedite impor tant decisions and work more effectively.” Gordon and Ben Saltzman, executive vice president, jointly announced the promotions: Mario Collazo was named vice president of technical ser vices, Brian Dowd is now vice president of sales and Joe Cabrera was named director of software suppor t and development. “ We’re excited about the team we’ve built and the oppor tunities in the marketplace and be lieve that our reorganization will fur ther our goal of delivering the best in products and ser vices to our customers,” Gordon said. Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info NEW PRODUCTS American DJ Accu Series Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info American DJ’s Accu Series now has two new LED-powered moving heads — the Accu Spot 250 Hybrid, shown here on top, and the Accu LED MH. The Accu Spot 250 Hybrid combines a 250W discharge lamp with nine 1-watt LEDs (3 red, 3 green, 3 blue). Features include seven replaceable rotating gobos plus spot (two dichroic glass gobos), nine colors plus white, sound active mode with built-in programs, RDMX remote DMX addressing, auto X-Y repositioning, 360° pan/ 265° tilt and a four-button menu system. It has a beam angle of 15° with an optional 18° beam angle (sold separately). The MSRP is $1,399.95. The nine-DMX channel Accu LED MH is a moving head with 69 red, green and blue LED beams that produce an output similar to a 250W halogen lamp, while consuming less power. Its MSRP is $999.95. American DJ • 800.322.6337 • www.americandj.com Elation ELED Tri-64B Par Can Elation’s new ELED Tri-64B PAR Can is a DMXcompatible tri-color RGB LED color mixing fixture. It features 18 tri-color LEDs, each with three differentcolored 1-watt LEDs — red, green and blue — which eliminate multi-color shadows. It draws 70 watts and the LEDs are rated at 50,000 hours. The fixture provides flicker-free operation and six built-in programs plus 35 color macros, which can be run in one of six DMX modes: 1-channel mode, 2-channel mode, 3-channel mode, 4-channel mode, 6-channel mode or 7-channel mode. It can also be operated without a controller in three additional modes: Sound Active Mode, Macro Mode, or Auto Mode. Elation Professional • 866.245.6726 • www.elationlighting.com ETC Congo v5 Software Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info ETC has released a new software version for their Congo and Congo jr lighting control consoles: Congo v5. Version 5.0 introduces a new effects package, new graphics and handling, better editing tools and more functions and accessories. New v5 functions create effects like the new chase effect for intensity effects, dynamic effect, and content effect for complex effects using groups, palettes, and presets. The new effects playbacks handle all of these effects, and the new version also updates the underlying graphics handling for improved speed in channel layout views and better display within tables. ETC • 800.688.4116 • www.etcconnect.com/congov5 Eye Lighting Cera Arc Natural Red Ceramic Metal Halide Lamp Eye Lighting’s new Cera Arc Natural Red ceramic metal halide lamp is a High Intensity Discharge (HID) lamp with a 92 color rendering index (CRI) and R9 red rendition value up to 90. It represents the color red and other hues, such as greens, blues and whites, with greater accuracy. It is available in tubular, compact 70-watt or 150-watt models, and it provides up to 90 lumens per watt with light output at the end-of-lamp-life up to 70 percent of initial lumens. Eye Lighting International of North America, Inc. • 888.665.2677 • www.eyelighting.com Gerriets “The Wall” Decorative Wall Covering Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Gerriets, the theatrical systems and event equipment specialist, introduces its decorative wall covering, “The Wall.” The decorative applications are available in Brick or Rock versions. Brick has a realistic brick wall look, while Rock imitates a quarry stone wall. The decorative wall covering is made from Neopor, a lightweight, newly developed Styrofoam. Customized painting of all panels is done on site with standard scenic paint. The Wall is made from flame retardant material (DIN 4102 B1), can be mounted quickly and easily and can be reused several times. It has been used for many TV and stage productions. Gerriets International • 800-369-3695 • www.gi-info.com 16 PLSN JUNE 2008 P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Light Converse Visualization Software Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Light Converse, a real-time, photo-realistic, 3D visualization software with optional on-board controller has been updated with a quality rendering engine with up to a 200 percent performance boost for light and camera movements, transparent surfaces lighting, high-resolution Showgun visualization, 3D visualization of Pangolin Laser’s Ethernet stream and a speed boost for rendering large quantities of same-type objects. Further improvements include a wide screen optimized GUI with increased 3D window size, the ability to work in imperial or metric measurements, additional fixtures, trusses and people for database libraries and ArtNet-II compatibility. AtFull Lighting • 866.922.9088 • www.atfull.com LightFactory Version 1.3.2 Dream Solutions is now shipping version 1.3.2 LightFactory, a PC-based lighting control system. Enhancements include full tracking backup function, ability for one LightFactory system to control others, ability to set a master fade override for channel groups, magic update automatic updates of palettes when updating a cue, property/attribute effects which can now support out-of-order fixtures, media effects which can now play more than one audio file at simultaneously, the addition of generic color palettes, the addition of auto creation of CYM and Color Wheel chases, enhanced effects playbacks, a new “copy” button in the channel display, bi-directional communication with Light Converse visualizer and full capture (CITP) auto focus features. Stage Research • 650.488.4864 • www.stageresearch.com Renaissance Lighting Solid-State LED Downlight Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Renaissance Lighting’s solid-state LED downlight incorporates a circular array of LEDs at the perimeter of an integrating dome inside each fixture. The lights are available in RGB or white LEDs with a correlated color temperature of 3000K or 4100K. The optical design combines light uniformly before exiting the luminaire in glare-free fashion. A light-sensing feedback system continually monitors and adjusts each luminaire to factory-calibrated color standards to ensure fixture-to-fixture consistency and light quality throughout the 50,000- to 70,000-hour life of the product. The RGB and white LED downlights are available in 4-inch and 6-inch aperture formats. Renaissance Lighting • 703.707.2407 • www.renaissancelighting.com Ocean Optics SeaChanger Studio Dichroics Ocean Optics has added the new Studio Dichroics Series CYMG hexachromic color changer to their of SeaChanger line. The four-filter CYMG color engine attaches to the reflector housing of any ETC Source Four Ellipsoidal and uses dichroic filter technology to create a wide variety of color-stable, reproducible hues. Color transitions from clear to 100 percent saturation are possible in less than one second. The SeaChanger Studio puts an emphasis on deeper blues and truer reds for in-studio and broadcast applications. The self-contained unit has an internal power supply and is controlled via 4-channels of DMX or from its threedigit LCD front panel display. Ocean Optics • 727.545.0741 • www.SeaChangerOnline.com Wysiwyg R22 Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Cast Software’s Wysiwyg version R22, a free download for WYSIWYG members, features new 3D beams and other upgrades. Replacing each part of the live beam simulation over two releases, R22 also features softer beams, enhanced flares, color mixing and animated smoke. Look for the enhanced 3D primitives, new cones on the draw menu, improvements to cylinders and spheres and changes to the user interface. More under-the-hood architectural upgrades and advancements to the user interface are due later this year. Cast Software • 877-989-2278 • www.cast-soft.com 2008 JUNE PLSN 17 SHOWTIME ST P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Bon Jovi Lost Highway Tour Venue: Crew Promoter/Producer: AEG Live Lighting Company: Ed & Ted’s Excellent Lighting Production Manager: John “Bugzee” Hougdahl Lighting Designer: ArtFag LLC Lighting/Visual Interface and Programming: Control Freak Systems Lighting Director: Pat Brannon Automated Lighting Operator: Pat Brannon Lighting Technicians: Storm Sollars (crew chief ), Steve Schwind, Jason Bridges, Chris Keene, Trevit Cromwell, Greg Walker Set Design & Construction: Tait Towers Staging Company: Tait Towers Staging Carpenter: Greg Gish Rigging Equipment: Stage Rigging Rigger: Mike Farese Video Director: Tony Bongiove Video Company: Nocturne Gear Lighting Console: grandMA (MA Lighting) 27 Elation Impesession LEDs 20 High End Systems Showguns 34 Lloyd Lights 64 Martin LC1140 panels 44 Vari*Lite VL3000s 53 Vari*Lite VL500Ds Steve JenningS HP Pavilion, San Jose, Calif. IBM Impact 2008 Venue: MGM Arena, Las Vegas, Nev. Crew Promoter/Producer: Rebecca Viet / Encore Productions Lighting Company: Encore Productions/ PRG Production Manager: Darryn Cray Lighting Designer: Cue2Cue, Inc. / Greg Cunningham Lighting Director: Greg Cunningham Automated Lighting Operator: Warwick Price Lighting Technicians: Geoff Huey, JJ Wulf, Russ Skelton Set Design: De Pass Studios Set Construction: Just For Show Rigger: MGM Hotel Staging Company: MGM Hotel Staging Carpenter: Scott Christsen Staging Products: none Pyrotechnics: Pyrityz Video Director: Dave “Tex” Northem Video Company: Encore Productions Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info 18 PLSN JUNE 2008 Gear ST Lighting Consoles: 2 Martin Maxxyz consoles, 1 Martin Maxedia video control system 24 Atomic 3000 Colors 24 Atomic 3000 Strobes 71 box truss sections (10’ sections of 20.5” truss) 4 box truss sections (5’ sections of 20.5” truss) 35 chain hoists (1-ton) 4 Reel EFX DF-50 Diffusers with RE-Fans 20 dimmers (5K) 2 ETC Expression 2X consoles 12 ETC Sensor (2K) dimmers 12 ETC Source Fours (10°, 750-watt) 12 ETC Source Fours (5°, 750-watt) 4 followspots (supplied by MGM) 20 Fresnels (5K, compact type with barn doors) 36 Martin MAC 2000 Performances 36 Martin MAC 2000 Washes 6 moving light Ts (2x2x60”) 147 VersaTube Panels (1x1 meter, 5 tubes) Enterprise 2008 Rental Meeting Venue: Marriott World Center, Orlando, Fla. Crew Promoter/Producer: Swank Event Services Production Managers: Ryan Falline and Rick Ridpath Lighting Designer/Director: Tim Edwards Lighting Programmer/Operator: Jon Robinson Master Electrician: Scott Hosford Staging Design: Swank Event Services Video and Projection: Swank Event Services Rigging: NPS Gear 17 Barco SLM R12s 86 CM Lodestar ½ Ton Motors 8 Reel EFX DF-50 Hazers 2 DPSS-Pro Lasers (5-watt) 12 ETC Source Four Lekos 96 ETC Source Four PARs 1 Folsom Encore Switching 2 High End Systems DL.2s 102 PixelRange PixelLine Micro Ws 9 screens (10.5’ x 14’) 4 screens (15’ x 20’) 2 ETC Sensor 48x2.4K dimmer racks 1410Thomas 12” x 18” Super Truss, Black 12 Thomas Nine Lights 56 Vari*Lite VL3000 Spots 26 Vari*Lite VL3500 Wash Chris Brown Up Close and Personal Tour VENUE GEAR Madison Square Garden New York, N.Y. Lighting Console: Avolites Diamond D4 Lighting Company: Performance Lighting, Inc. Promoter Rep/Production Manager: Alan Thompson, Al Haymon Productions Lighting Designer: Daunte Kenner Automated Techs: Craig Kreider, Mike Howe Dimmer Tech: Al Lipper Tech: Nate Davis 18 High End Systems Showguns 36 High End Systems Studio Beams 34 High End Systems x.Spots 16 Martin Atomic 3k Strobes 28 Pixel Range PixelLine 1044 LED Battens 24 Pixel Range PixelArc Rs 31 1-ton chain hoists 1 circle truss (18’) 390’ truss (12”x12”) 140’ truss (30”x30”) University of Montana Gala Venue: Adams Center, University of Montana, Missoula, Mont. Crew Promoter/Producer: Sean Jackson/Penny Kauth Lighting Company/Set Design: Shie Production Manager/Lighting Designer: Sean Jackson Lighting Director: Gerald Werner Automated Lighting Operator: Chris Good Lighting Technicians: Mark Michel, Francis Ruiz, Mike Seavey, Dominic Adame Rigger: Rocky Mountain Rigging Staging Company: Adams Center Video Director: Chris Caines Video Company: Shine/APS/VER Gear Lighting Consoles: 2 Flying Pig Systems Hog iPCs w/ playback wings 1 Barco Encore system 100’ box truss (12”x12”) 4 CM ½-ton Chain Motors 12 CM 1-ton Chain Motors 54 Coemar PARlite LEDs 45 Color Kinetics ColorBlast 12TRs 2 Da-Lite projection screens (9’x12’) 1 ETC 48-channel Sensor Dimmer Rack 30 ETC Source Four Lekos 140 ETC Source Four PARs 12 High End Systems Studio Color 575s ST 1 jib (26’) 1 Leprecon 48-ch VX Dimmer Rack 2 Lycian Stark Lite II followspots 24 Martin MAC 2000s 5 Panasonic 7700 Projectors 60 PAR 36 Pinspots 126 PAR 38s 1 PRT roof (33’x46’ w/ two 8’ sound wings) 2 Reel-EFX DF-50 Hazers 3 Skjonberg Controllers 3 Sony D30 cameras 1 Stumpfl projection screen (7.5’x10’) 2 Stumpfl projection screens (10.5’x14’) 1 TMB ProPower Distro Rack 32 Wybron Forerunner Color Scrollers Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info CREW Daunte Kenner ST ST 2008 JUNE PLSN 19 Joan Marcus INSIDE THEATRE Infusing Cat with New Life Updated aspects for the Broadway production of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof range from the Asian bamboo print wallpaper to an all-African American cast. By BryanReesman Putting the Dollars on Stage FTM When they reunited for Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Klausen and Allen had to deal with him being in New York and her situated in California, and to cope with time constraints. “It takes a long time to evolve a design and get it executed if you’re going to do right,” says Klausen. “Yes, you can do it very quickly and waste a lot of the producers’ money, but that’s not what I’m about. I’m about getting every dollar up there on the stage.” During an hour-long meeting prefaced by plenty of research, Klausen and Allen laid 20 PLSN JUNE 2008 out the ground plans, and he immediately set to work on them. “She went off to do other things like auditions, and my assistant and I put together a white model and came into the theatre for a survey the next morning with essentially the whole thing designed,” Klausen says. “But I knew what I wanted. I had very clear in my head the architectural style, and I knew how I wanted it to feel. I really moved quickly and had something concrete to show her and the producer, Stephen Byrd. This was his first pass at producing, so a lot of explaining of what the process is and so forth needed to be done. This man is incredible, by the way. How he pulled off this quality production as a first-time producer, I don’t know, but my hat is off to him. He’s remarkable.” Sightlines were an issue, as the bar was all the way stage left while the dressing table was on the opposite side. They both were going to cause problems. “I got her to move the bar upstage, which freed a lot of the action, but I couldn’t talk her out of the dressing table,” recalls Klausen. “So at about 3 a.m., I thought, ‘I have the solution. I’ll make it out of Plexiglas, so people can see through this piece of furniture.’” Early Humdinger Furniture including the sofa, ottoman, large arm chair, and dressing table chair, all of which were different from each other, reflecting Big Mama’s tendency to buy, buy, buy,” Klausen notes. “Interestingly enough, the wallpaper pattern took quite a lot of work to get nailed down,” he reveals. “I looked around town for a lace that would work, and I found a very romantic floral lace that was perfect, and I knew that I wanted a photographic impression onto scrim. So I bought quite a bit of yardage of this lace, then in my studio made a series of samples in various colors. Some of them were stencils, and some of them were the actual lace, in a wide variety of colors.” After going to Los Angeles to show Allen what he had, they settled on a specific color with more of an Asian feel to it. “I have a fairly good resource library in my studio and found some wallpaper patterns, but really stencil patterns, that were Japanese and not copyrighted and we were allowed to use. It ended up being this stylized bamboo pattern. We got what we wanted. I think it took about five passes to get the color right.” Bruise-free Design FTM The set designer credits his “phenomenal prop man,” Emiliano Pares, for helping him locate certain pieces of furniture, including the four-poster bed that looms over the whole set. And when it came to the props, Klausen was adamant that every prop that an actor touched be present in rehearsal from day one. That way they could learn if there were any problems. The sofa at center stage had to be remade so that the cushions were firm enough for James Earl Jones to get in and out of carefully, but not so hard that Anika Noni Rose would bruise herself when climbing all over it. “You try to find out all the problems with the props while you’re in rehearsal,” explains Klausen. “You do not one want to be dealing with those when you’re on stage. It’s just not fair to the actors. When they get onstage they’re dealing with so much adjustment that you want to have as much support there for them as possible.” Another proven tactic that Klausen implemented was having the scenic shop Joan Marcus B roadway revivals have become so commonplace that a creative theatre team must think outside of the box and indulge in new ideas to make an old chestnut both exciting and refreshing for modern audiences. Debbie Allen’s interpretation of Tennessee Williams’ Pulitzer Prize-winning drama Cat on a Hot Tin Roof — starring Terrence Howard, Anika Noni Rose, James Earl Jones and Phylicia Rashad — faced such a scenario. Beyond its powerhouse casting and acting and the overstated aspect of having an all-black cast, the show is a rarity these days: a three-act, three-hour show with one main set that does not change. Set designer Ray Klausen was up to the task of invigorating the look of the show to fit Williams’ cynical tale of a family whose sibling brothers — one an injured alcoholic and former athletic hero, the other a corporate lawyer — and their spouses are tussling over the inheritance of Big Daddy’s massive Southern plantation. Originally a television set designer, twotime Emmy winner Klausen worked on seven Academy Awards shows, created the “Kennedy Center Honors look,” and also worked on a number of series before jumping into Broadway work. Along the way to the Great White Way he did a large musical number with Debbie Allen, then teamed up with her on a series of children’s musicals at the Kennedy Center. “Debbie’s really great at collaborative work,” states Klausen. “She’s a strong, strong lady. I have incredible respect for her.” FTM Klausen had free reign with the furniture because the character of Big Mama had no taste and had gone on a shopping spree. “I could just mix up styles with whatever pleased me. I picked out a couple of humdinger pieces. Chase Mishkin, who is a producer I have worked with quite a bit, went to see the show and said, ‘Ray, that is the ugliest chandelier I’ve ever seen.’ I said, ‘Yes, but it’s a Venetian glass chandelier, and it screams that they’ve been on the grand tour,’” he says. Knowing that the famous film version with the image of Elizabeth Taylor leaning against a brass bed was ingrained into the public consciousness, he knew he had to go a different route. The bed and furniture were made of wood, and the dressing table of Plexiglas. “The only patterns on the furniture are the fabrics used on the upholstery, Anika Noni Rose and Terrence Howard in another moment from Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. Ray Klausen, scenic designer, opted against a brass bed to give the Broadway production a different look than the movie version with Paul Newman and Elizabeth Taylor. Joan Marcus P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S design is a key element in a show. “When you look at that set, you have to feel that this is a grand old house that’s been around much longer than the characters who are currently living in it, and what that brings to the story.” Nag-free Direction Ray Klausen, set designer for Broadway’s Cat on a Hot Tin Roof FTM When it came to the architectural style of the plantation and house, Klausen went through all his research and picked out the elements he liked. He made sure the doorknobs were correct. He and Allen brought in French doors. The ones facing the patio had folding shutters to cover them. The only unsolvable problem that they had was the inability to slam two French doors at the same time without them possibly bouncing back, so Allen accepted that fact, and the actors had to avoid this action. “Bless her, if you explain something to her clearly, with logic and with honesty, she “It takes a long time to evolve a design and get it executed if you’re going to do right.” — Ray Klausen, scenic designer gets it and moves on,” Klausen reports of Allen. “She’s not one of these people who nags you and drives you crazy, because some directors can do that. As much as I loved working with her at the Kennedy Center, I adore her now. I would do anything that she does now because I gained so much respect for her as a director and her abilities. And because she’s a choreographer, she used every square inch of that set. There’s not a part that isn’t used, whereas a regular director might not take advantage of a certain space. She has people bouncing all over that set, and I love her for it.” Ultimately Klausen created a set that he loved and which fit the show and its story. But it certainly took a lot of time and toil to get right. “You don’t get a designer much more fussy than I am,” asserts Klausen. “One of my big problems is that because I’m so meticulous, when I get through with a production, I usually have this gut feeling that I could’ve done it better. This is one of those rare instances where there’s not a thing I would change about it. I am really, really pleased with how it turned out and proud of the end result.” set up the entire set, bring in all the major props, then walk the actors and the director through the set. This allowed the cast and director to familiarize themselves with the set, props and distances between things. “It was a tremendous help that everyone went to see the set, because when they came onstage, it was something that they had already seen and had in their mind,” Klausen says. “I can’t recall a single problem we had with the actors once we got on stage. They happen to be a very cooperative, nice group of people, so that helps tremendously. But it was a fascinating experience, and ultimately very, very rewarding for me. I am immensely proud of the production, both from an aesthetic standpoint and a technical standpoint because one of the problems that Debbie and I had was we wanted the walls to be made of scrim. When you light them from the front they look solid, but when you light anything behind them you can see through the walls.” The scrim walls did present a challenge for a set that has eight doors. Any time someone slams a door with a fabric wall, it will shake or ripple. “Fortunately I had Hudson Scenic building the set, and they were able to make every door and door frame independent of the walls,” says Klausen. “They look like they’re all attached, but in fact there’s about a quarter of an inch space between the two objects. If you slam a door, even though the doorframe moves a little bit, it doesn’t affect the walls.” Fire in the Sky FTM Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Another challenge that Klausen and Allen faced was when the drop had to be redone. Originally encompassing sky and many trees, Allen decided she wanted it to show more sky and fewer trees, which also would allow the fireworks sequence, which was done by slides, to have more space. “Drops like this are painted on the floor, and what they had to do was scrub all the paint off, then mask off all the trees and repaint the sky,” remarks Klausen. “The frightening thing was that they couldn’t guarantee me that it would work. They were 90 to 95 percent sure it would work, but there’s that 5 to 10 percent that really eats into your sleeping hours. Fortunately it worked great, and we were able to see more of the fireworks and not have them go off in the trees.” Klausen ultimately took it all in stride. “It’s really important that a designer be supportive of the rest of the creative team because you don’t always nail it right the first time. You think you have, but then someone comes up with an idea that makes it better.” The designer recalls being in the masters program for set design at Yale and having a fellow student tell him, “It’s all about scale.” That stuck with him, and he believes good 2008 JUNE PLSN 21 PRODUCTION PROFILE P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Photos & text by SteveJennings Mary J. Blige and Jay-Z share the stage — but not all of the looks — for their Heart of the City tour. The aesthetic for both artists had to be strong, but Mary J. Blige’s songs needed a softer, more feminine feel. W hen Mary J. Blige decided to embark upon a solo tour, her production manager wanted Justin Collie of Artfag, LLC to be the designer. Over the course of several weeks the tour evolved into a joint collaboration with Jay-Z. But rather than sharing design duty with someone of JayZ’s choosing, Collie was asked to handle the design of the entire tour. The result was their Heart of the City tour. Patrick Dierson, who has worked with Collie on many occasions, was asked to take on lighting director duties in addition to maintaining the integrity of the design for the run of the tour. Collie had the role of “Performance Environment Designer,” and he handled every aspect of the design including scenic elements, lighting and video layout. A Team Approach pp But it was a joint collaboration, with Collie taking the lead. “Spike Brant, Kristin Costa, Zack Guthimiller, Michael Goodwin and myself were all involved throughout the process,” Dierson explained. “This is a formula that we have honed over the years and one that works to the extreme advantage of the client. From the performing artist’s point of view, they know that that there is a team of people handling the technically creative portions of their show to make it the best that it can possibly be and minimize the surprises that sometimes pop up in the technical rehearsal process. And it gives them the convenience of having a single go-to guy.” Collie, Dierson, and Brandt started by creating several concepts in the early stages of their involvement. They were ultimately rendered in a VectorWorks file that was passed between them until they arrived at the final design. “Justin passed down an edict and we were all in agreement — there needs to be a definitive aesthetic difference between the two artist’s looks. Both of them needed to be incredibly strong but Mary’s needed to have a softer, more feminine feel. Jay’s needed to command strength. “Having that direction is always key, because it keeps you grounded from start to finish. In this case we knew that we would end up with a lot of hard edges on the stage and Pyrotek handled “all things that go boom,” and did it safely, said Artfag, LLC’s Patrick Dierson. The images appearing on a solid LED curved wall reach down toward the stage via Barco MiPix band risers. that they would need to be softened for Mary’s portion of the show.” Still Edgy, but Softer pp The “softness” ultimately came in the form of swaths of soft goods framing a massive curved video screen. Three sparkling crystal chandeliers were hidden in the lighting rig and lowered into position at just the right time for several of Blige’s songs. Video plays an important part in the presentation of the show.“From the beginning,” said Drew Findley, the video screen director and PRG M-Box Extreme media server operator, “the plan was to have a large video element that wrapped the stage.” They tossed around ideas and came up with several different ways to accomplish that from projection to segmented LED panels. In the end, they settled on a solid LED curved wall. “The idea was that it would give the most versatility to accomplish different looks for each artist. When Justin Collie got involved in the project he helped to refine the concept even more by adding the Barco MiPix band risers that helped to bring the video look down onto the stage.” Getting it Done pp Once the design was finalized, they went to Prelite, LLC studios in Manhattan to preprogram some of the show with a visualizer and get their presets ready for the rehearsals. They used the ESP Vision software for that process. “Prelite provided the typically enjoyable experience that we’ve come to expect from them,” Dierson said. “It’s comfortable, quiet and productive. You can just get things done while being there with no distractions.” Dierson programmed the lighting on an MA Lighting grandMA control system. For the first time, he used a PRG Series 400 power and data distribution system, which lived at the front of house control area. “We simply sent ArtNet from the console directly into the Series 400 rack,” Dierson said. “It was a very simplified system in terms of cabling and it proved to be extremely reliable.” Command and Control pp “The video control system for this show Despite the networking capabilities of all the lighting and video gear, the crew chose to operate them independently for the two artists. is probably one the coolest I have ever used,” Findley said. His grandMA console at the front of house connects to video world backstage through the Series 400 system via ArtNet. It, in turn, controls four PRG M-Box Extreme media servers and an Encore-DMX Bridge from Control Freak Systems. “The Encore-DMX Bridge is the heart of the video system,” Findley said. “It gives me access to 12 layers of video on the main screen, six layers for the side screens and access to the router. The router inputs include all seven cameras on the show, a line cut of these cameras, four M-Box Extremes for Jay-Z’s video content and two Green Servers from Media Evolutions for Mary J Blige’s video content — created by Mark Argenti and Ian McDaniel of Media Evolutions. The EncoreDMX bridge allows me to route any source, whether it be a standard-def camera or a highdef M-Box, to any Encore layer. Each layer can then be sized, positioned, colored and keyed. All this can happen as a cued event or on the fly during the show. “The advantage to this system is that we can blend cameras with only a field of delay with media server content on the same control surface. It allows me to select individual cameras during the show and also to show camera director Mark Stutsman’s line cut on multiple layers and have it integrated with M-Box cues that are running content.” pp An Evolving Video Mix The video content was supplied by William Hines of Smash Studios, Hype Williams and Media Evolutions. But according to Findley, it is “constantly evolving — management for both artists are very interested in the imagery that their artist stands in front of,” he said. “With the use of media servers like the M-Box Extreme, we’re able change around elements on a daily basis to find the best mix of imagery and IMAG to support the song and the action on stage. Working with media servers also allows content designers to supply us with different elements that we can use to layer live during the show.” Despite the networking capabilities of all the lighting and video gear, they chose to operate them independently. “We made the decision at the inception of our involvement From the beginning, the plan was to have a large video element that wrapped the stage. that we would roll old-school and not network the grandMA control consoles to run in tandem,” Dierson said. “Since we were running things completely independently of each other we could deal with any wild on-the-fly changes that might come our way, and that happened on a nightly basis. Whereas Mary J’s show is very structured, Jay’s is very loose. We never knew when a guest artist might pop out from the side of the stage and start into a song that we weren’t planning on performing. In theory, having two grandMA consoles networked together would offer the same flexibility but that requires some planning that, in the fast pace world of on-the-fly hip-hop, just wouldn’t be comfortable for us.” Dierson attributed the success of the approach to the skill of his colleague. “Drew is a consummate professional,” Dierson said. “He has years of live production experience in both the lighting and video disciplines. Not only is he technically proficient but he has taste and timing; two things that are increasingly hard to find these days.” Balancing Lighting and Video pp Striking a balance between the lighting elements and video elements in the visual presentation can be challenging. With so many LED sources, it’s easy for them to overpower the lighting. No so here, said Dierson. “There was very little issue with either one of us overpowering the other on this project,”he said. “I say very little issue, but there was definitely great concern. The video wall that Drew was controlling was fairly massive and had the ability to make an entire rig of VL 3500s and Syncrolites disappear if it was used improperly. Once again, with Drew’s experience, I didn’t have to worry about it, because he’s right on track with making the show look its best.” Combining all of these elements during rehearsals and during the show let them refine the look live and on the screen, instead of in a video-editing suite. Having both lighting and video control at the front of house allowed them to more closely communicate with each other. “This project has been a prime example of how it should be,” Findley said. “During rehearsals and during the show we could change things up and adapt to things 22 PLSN JUNE 2008 100.0806.22-23.indd 22 6/2/08 11:39:51 AM happening on stage — not to mention we have a good time.” pp A Hand for the Helpers Dierson gave ample kudos to his support team. “PRG did a fantastic job in handling the lighting rig and provided a top notch crew starting with Jason ‘Attaboy’ Stalter as lighting crew chief. XL Video handled every aspect of the LED screen, Mi-Pix, projectors, and camera package along with some help from Control Freak Systems who provided their Encore-DMX Bridge touring package to interface the Encore video processors with the GrandMA control desks. All Access provided us with a rather massive stage, catwalk, and several elevator lifts while Pyrotek handled all things that go boom with the typical safety standards that one would expect from them. Kevin Hughes and Adam Biscow handled the ‘high-explosives’ on a daily basis. Atomic Design created the curtains and chandeliers that were used for Mary J. Blige’s performance, and last but certainly not least was Five Points Production Services, which handled the rigging for the tour under the direction of head rigger Gabe Wood.” Findley is no less appreciative. “Working with both Patrick and Justin on this project has been terrific. And the vendors played a large part in the flexibility of the system. Matt Corke and Mark Hunt at PRG provided M-Box Extreme support and updates that enabled us to push it to the limit. I would also like to thank Stuart White and Dirk Sanders at Control Freak Systems for helping me configure an extremely diverse video system. I honestly don’t know how I did shows without the Encore-DMX Bridge. And although it sounds like the whole video system is automated, I relied very much on my incredible XL video crew, from camera work and camera direction to high pressure troubleshooting. This show would not have been what it is without those guys.” Yeomen Showmen pp “It’s always fun and challenging,” Dierson said, of his experience working with Collie. “In this particular instance it was much more challenging than fun for the both of us.” That’s no diss, just a reflection of that fact that both Collie and Dierson contracted pneumonia before the tour started. The two of them were oh-so-close to being hospitalized on opening night. But, as they say, the show must go on, and indeed it did. “Cory Fitzgerald dropped what he was doing to come help me program the first week of the tour. I was in shambles with the pneumonia. I couldn’t walk straight much less be creative, call follow spots, or execute cues on time. Cory came out and saved my bacon. It also proved once again that the Artfag machine works well. The team saw how the physical health of both Justin and myself was rapidly deteriorating in rehearsals and had already put plans in motion to get us support.” Jay-Z Production Manager: Bryon “Hot Dog” Tate Production Manager (MJB): Harold Behrens Performance Environment Designer: Justin Collie, Artfag, LLC Lighting Director: Patrick Dierson, Artfag, LLC Video Screen Director/MBOX Operator: Drew Findley Tour Manager (Jay-Z): Randy Buzzelli Tour Manager (MJB): Mike “Huggy” Carter Stage Manager: Art Freund Lighting Crew Chief: Jason “Attaboy” Stalter Lighting Crew: Matt Schneider, Drew Johnston, Robert Simoneaux, Ryan Textor Video Director/Video Crew Chief: Mark Stutsman Video Crew: Damion Gamlin, Johnny Jordan, Seth Sharpless, Mark Inscoe, Kyle Brinkman, Wayne Matlock, Jeff Gainer Video Content: William Hanes of Smash Studios; Mark Argenti and Ian McDaniel of Media Evolutions, Hype Williams Jib Operator: Vance Kaopuiki Pyro Shooter: Kevin Hughes Pyro Tech: Adam Biscow Head Rigger: Gabe Wood Rigger: Charles “Chuck” Anderson Rigger/Fly Carpenter: Kenny Ackerman Show Rigging/Carpenter: John Purciful Lighting Company: PRG Lighting Video Company: XL Video MBox Extreme Media Servers: PRG Green Servers: Media Evolutions Staging Company: All Access Staging & Production Pyro Company: Pryotek Rigging: Five Points Production Services 12 Syncrolite MX-3000s 24 Elation Impression 43 Vari*Lite VL-3000 35 Vari*Lite VL-3500 12 9-Lites with Morpheus color faders 31 Martin Stagebar 54s 15 Martin Atomic 3000 strobes with color scrollers 3 Lycian M2 Short Throw truss spots 6 MA Lighting grandMA consoles 1 MA Lighting NSPs 4 PRG M-Box Extreme Media Servers 2 Media Evolutions Green Servers 1 Control Freak Systems Encore-DMX Bridge 1 Barco Encore Video Processor 480 Barco I-Lite 12 LED Tiles 5000 Barco MiPix Units, 1/4 populated 5 Sony DXC-D35WSL camera 2 Sony Dome Cam BRC-300 3CCD 1 Ross Synergy 2 console 2 Barco SLM R12 projector 1/2 JR. VERTICAL AD Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info 2008 JUNE PLSN 23 100.0806.22-23.indd 23 6/2/08 11:40:55 AM INSTALLATIONS On a Mission How a Florida church embraced new technology to spread its message The $10 million upgrade expanded the sanctuary into a 420-seat facility equipped with LED lighting, video projection and broadcast capabilities. By JenniferWillis T he First Baptist Church of Marco Island, Florida, had a problem: They’d outgrown both the size and technology of their 30-year-old facility. But on a small, conservative island populated mainly by senior adults, how could the church keep to its core while also reaching out to a younger, hipper generation — at home and around the world? “We live on an island with a lot of older people on it,” says Senior Pastor Tim Neptune. “We couldn’t ostracize them by going with this extremely new contemporary facility, but media, lighting and technical elements are crucial to delivering our message.” Neptune knew his facility needed some serious technology. A New-Tech Vision INST He met with Donnie Brawner, president and principal designer of Brawner & Associates (Springfield, Mo.) and explained his vision: to use new technology to blend traditional values with a contemporary feel for the benefit of his own congregation and the faithful across the globe. “What they came back to us with was approved immediately,” Neptune says. “We turned the design of the whole sanctuary over to them, and they exceeded our expectations.” The result is a new facility that marries the conventional to the modern, without hitting extremes on either end. In just 11 months, the First Baptist Church went from a 210-seat sanctuary with a single screen and projector and a basic audio system to a $10-million, state-of-the art, 420-seat sanctuary with LED lighting, video projection and broadcast capabilities, digital signage and more. Brawner says people feel comfortable in a sanctuary that uses much of the same technology that they see on TV and use in their daily lives, and when people feel comfortable, they are more eager to listen and learn. “The technology gives the pastor a vehicle to spread his message,” Brawner explains. “The church has to stay up-to-date to reach its audience and teach people in the environment they live in or it will lose the undecided. Our job is not just about video and lighting, but it’s about creating an environment.” 24 PLSN JUNE 2008 Adapting to Changes INST Brawner & Associates had five months to complete the main design elements, including ceiling, acoustics, video, lighting and scenic. Most elements came together in just a few weeks, but there were two major changes to the lighting system and three different plans for the auditorium ceiling and stage set and ceiling. “AutoCAD was used to build almost all of our drawing set, and we did multiple renderings in 3D Studio Max,” he says. “We spend a lot of time looking at how all of this works together as a cohesive unit and the best way to produce it. Each project is very unique and requires its own study.” The installation was completed in a oneweek rigging install and a three-week lighting, video and set install, with an additional week for training and opening. “The backlit stage ceiling was a very tricky piece,” says Brawner. “The ceiling — consisting of trussing with stretched fabric that is lit from above with color changing LED units — was a great element of the design. But getting it all rigged and keeping all of the trades (e.g., electrical, structural and HVAC) clear of the light projection so we did not have shadowing issues was a challenge.” The rear stage wall is itself a set piece. The three-dimensional wall unit was designed as a broadcast-quality background and extends to the soft set ceiling panels. Cool New LEDs INST The initial lighting design for the sanctuary called for tungsten color-mixing fixtures for the set elements and stage ceiling lighting, but as the project moved forward and technology matured, the set lighting was switched to all LED units — more of a green solution — and also saving dimming, conduit and wire on the front end. The LED fixtures require less energy and produce less heat, reducing the demand on the church’s HVAC system. That’s particularly significant on an island off the Southwest Florida coast, where cooling systems run 12 months out of the year. “There’s a tremendous upside to going with the LED lighting,” says Shawn Hurtley, technology and facilities director at the church. “They’ll last for years and years and years. We won’t have to change bulbs in them as we would have to in a standard light fixture.” Conventional lighting fixtures include 75 ETC Source Four Ellipsoidals and 40 Source Four PARs. Moving lights include ten High End Systems Studio Commands and four X-Spots. There are 42 Chauvet Colorado One units lighting the set wall and the stage ceiling. The house lighting is done with an additional 32 ETC Source Four PARs. The lighting control system consists of Pathport nodes and patch panels. ETC provides all of the dimming, and there is a Union system and an emergency lighting transfer system. The system allows control over all stage lights, house lighting and architectural lighting through an Ethernet network. Circuits are distributed throughout the space in a series of custom distribution boxes with 208V and 110V convenience power. The Power of Color INST “The thing that really makes this sanctuary stand out,” says Hurtley, “is the flexibility we have in terms of lighting. Brawner created a system that allows us to take the entire stage area and create any color scheme we want to.” Using a Jands Vista console with an HP touch-smart IQ/PC Display, Hurtley says he has an unprecedented level of control. “The whole stage becomes an element in the set,” Hurtley explains. “At the flick of a switch, you have this ability to paint the whole stage area like you were a painter with a palette.” Pastor Neptune is especially enthusiastic about the ability to set tone and mood through color. “On Sunday morning when the screens are down and the LEDs are on, we can put up a PowerPoint slide — let’s say a picture of a prairie with a blue sky behind it,” Neptune describes. “We can set our entire stage up so the top half of the stage is lit blue to match the sky, and the bottom is lit green to match the grass. It’s really dramatic. It’s awesome.” The Push of a Button INST The lighting, video and rigging systems were built with future-proofing in mind so that the facility can grow with the needs of the church. Brawner’s design offers flexibility through multiple lighting positions as well as accommodations — such as added power for road show tie-ins and rigging positions for touring groups. The rigging solution consists of five motorized drum and block batten systems from Texas Scenic, some of which contain flat wire pantographs for cable management. It offers additional versatility in changing the backdrop for holidays and weekly sermons. A stage curtain makes full-scale theatrical presentations possible, and a 16-foot-by-9-foot video screen with custom-built surround and an internally lit cross can be lowered into the scene. “The way the system has been designed allows us to very easily maintain it,” says Hurtley. “The most significant part of the rigging is that the light bars can be brought down to us to work on them and then raised back up, and that’s all done through motorized winches. They’re basically just push-button control.” Extended Reach INST A high-definition video system feeds live and pre-produced content to three IMAG screens and digitally records material for post production. All told there is one operator controlled camera, two remote controlled cameras and a full video edit suite running on Apple computers and Sony cameras and mixing systems. Multiple 50-inch digital plasma displays installed throughout the facility are driven by a matrixed high-definition content server, and electronic media systems that interface with the edit suite were also incorporated into the children’s areas, youth rooms and fellowship halls. First Baptist Church’s ministry ambitions extend far beyond its 420-seat capacity, and an important design requirement was the ability to use the church’s sanctuary for both live sermons and video production. “The pastor had a vision for trying to incorporate as much technology as we could, to give us the ability to not just reach those people in the building but to create media we could put out on the web or broadcast to other locations,” Hurtley says. P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S A “Swiss Army Knife” INST The most challenging part of a live/ video design is structuring the space to produce both simultaneously, with an emphasis on getting the correct contrast ratio for video while keeping the proper balance for the live audience. “Everything has to be taken into consideration from the control room to the camera, lighting and background,” Brawner says. “The end result is that they can now stream their services for their nationwide congregation, go to broadcast and create powerful and inspirational moments in a live service. They are set up for theatrical pageantry, concerts, television and live services.” “We look at the building as kind of a Swiss Army knife in the sense that we can reconfigure it to do what we need to do,” Hurtley says. Flexibility to Expand INST With so much new technology installed, Hurtley — who has worked as a volunteer sound engineer at other churches for the last 20 years — says the main challenge is getting up to speed on the new systems. He’s excited about the new ability to create content that can be shared across the island and across the globe. For ex- ample, the radio program, Classic Christian Countdown, is produced at the First Baptist Church and distributed to more than 150 outlets worldwide. “The whole vision is to really just reach out to as many people as we can,” says Hurtley, who believes the new facility allows the First Baptist Church to do that in ways that, just a few years ago, the congregation could only imagine. For Brawner, the facility had to meet three important criteria: intimacy, flexibility and expandability. All agree the end result easily surpasses these requirements. “It’s about developing an early vision, transforming that to a cohesive plan and steadfastly working through the logistics to transcend vision into reality,” Brawner says. “The church has the ability to do television broadcast, stage productions, concerts or intimate live services in the feel of a small space, but with the technology of the largest space.” “You won’t find another church quite like this,” Neptune says. “We are unique. When people visit our church for the first time, they are blown away by the feel of the space. It helps create a mood in the sanctuary and enhance the total worship experience. It’s just a complete transformation. People love it. It’s stunning.” Brawner & Associates handled the ceiling, acoustics, video, lighting and scenic design. The upgrade was sensitive to the preferences of the congregation, a mix of longtime residents and newcomers. Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info 2008 JUNE PLSN 25 100.0806.24-25.indd 25 5/30/08 5:37:01 PM FEATURE P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Jill Scott at the Fabulous Fox By Kevin M.Mitchell The lighting design for Jill Scott’s tour, shown here at the Fabulous Fox in St. Louis, was all about creating an elegant atmosphere. J ill Scott wanted elegance. LD Martin Thomas, as set designer, lighting designer, and lighting programming, delivered. Scott’s Live Soul tour had a lot of elegance, plus a lot of heart and class, when it rolled into St. Louis river city one recent rainy night. The sold-out show was well worth trudging through the wet weather, as the R&B singer provided a powerhouse of great music and showmanship. Scott is far from what all too often passes for a pop star these days: she’s a woman of experience and talent, and effectively and sincerely connects with the audience. The Fabulous Fox PLSN Here in St. Louis, Thomas found himself at the 4,200-seat Fox, which was built as a movie house in 1929. It had glory days in the 1930s and 1940s, but by the 1970s it was severely neglected and had become home to the rowdier rock acts (e.g., Grateful Dead and Frank Zappa). It was finally shut down and abandoned. In 1981 the venue’s owners started restoring it to its original 1929 splendor — which makes for a great-looking place that is good for theatre, but a bit challenging for modern music acts like Scott. Thomas’ approach was an apt one for the stately theatre. Our sources were unable to confirm whether or not the traditional “kick me” sign was ever taped to his back, but Thomas began his career as “one of those kids who were part of the A.V. club in high school.” But it was not just any high school — it was the prestigious High School of Art & Design in Manhattan. “I was the guy who knew how to make the projector work,” he 26 PLSN JUNE 2008 A Special Kind of Elegance smiles. “Then from there, you get drafted to work in the auditorium.” But Thomas is quick to add that he’s grateful to the school and for the opportunities it brought. After high school he was out on the road with bands, and he’s been on the road almost 30 years since. “It’s been good. Obviously, there are moments when you go, ‘Crap, why am I doing this?!?’ But I’ve met some great people here, learned a lot about the business and technology. I’ve learned people skills in general are especially important.” In 2005, Thomas was part of the Sugar Water Tour, which included Scott, Queen Latifah and Erykah Badu. He had run lights for Badu and that’s when Scott and her team for noticed him. They turned to him for a European tour that had him flying by the seat of his pants. Scott told him she didn’t like followspots, didn’t like lights in her eyes, and he basically had to reproduce the show in whatever venue he was in, whether it had 60 PAR cans and no automated lights, or 48 automated lights and no PAR cans. “But this show was our show,” he says, of Live Soul. Prior to the tour, Scott flew Thomas into her hometown of Philadelphia to talk. The key word, he was told, was “elegant.” Thomas says he came away knowing it was going to be pretty show. “I knew she liked atmosphere, and I had no problem with haze.” But he quickly ascertained that the reality was that the rooms they would be playing in weren’t conducive to a complex design, and he says he wasn’t about to design something with a lot of circle trussing. “I knew I’d never get the rigging points, so why bother?” For pre-production he had just one day of rehearsals. Then it was out for a twomonth tour. Martin Likes Martin PLSN Being familiar with her music helped him come up with a design for the show. Soft goods played a major role, and even led him to give a hand to his audio brethren. “I designed all the soft goods to help the sound guys deaden out that stage. What little I know about audio, I know some correctly placed curtains really help!” To achieve the signature smooth and coordinated look, he turned to a lot of Martin gear. The show featured 21 MAC 700s, five in a half-circle above Scott, and some others upstage. The downstage truss featured MAC 2000s that he uses for texture. Thomas also used Martin Stagebar 54 LED strips, which he describes as “awesome.” It allowed him to mix warmer colors, something Scott very much wanted on this tour. All the Martin gear he said performed well “right out of the box,” and he’ll return to that box, apparently, as they “worked all the time, which is critical!” he laughs. “I’ve worked with a lot of other great companies, but when their lights work only 80 percent of the time; I’m spending time in the trusses trying to fix them.” For washes he unboxed some Vari*Lite VL 3500s which he proclaims as “great lights!” “The first time I saw them,” he said, “I thought, ‘Wow, they are big.’ But their color saturation is really good. Everything about them is absolutely perfect. I didn’t have to move them much and that helped. I just had to get them in focus.” Driving it all is an Avolites Diamond 4 Vision console. The variety of halls — from the old Fox Theatre to much bigger and smaller venues — needed an intimate feel, and the theatrical nature of the show demanded a lot of flexibility, which he says he got with the Avo. “In a bigger theatre, if I need an extra five points, I just push the fader up five points and get what I needed. It’s a very cool desk.” Simple, Basic Stuff PLSN It all provided the tools he needed to subtly enhance the mood through the big brassy numbers down to whisper-quiet ballads. “It was all simple, basic stuff,” he says. “This was not a show that needed a lot a lot of spinning, flashing, and wiggling. It was architecturally clean.” The show was also impressive for what it didn’t have. “You’ll notice there is no video in this show. I’ve seen so much of it lately it seemed like overkill, especially for this music. Instead we went with soft goods, creating texture with the drapes,” which were supplied by Rose Brand. The limitations of the Fox didn’t allow for the kabuki drop. On most of the shows in the tour, Scott is revealed with a fly away kabuki. “Fragoso Inc. provided a ‘Chabuki’ for this show, and it made for a very dramatic beginning. It would pyramid down, and disappear up and Jill would appear out of the darkness. It was a great reveal.” Recalling an Elegant Era PLSN Creative Stage Lighting supplied all of the lighting and soft goods for the tour. Thomas says the tour has been a great experience, and he loved that Scott wanted something appropriate for her more sophisticated, mature audience. He says that Jill Scott liked atmosphere, and LD Martin Thomas had no problem with haze, but both opted against video. The venues would not allow for complexities like circle trussing, so Thomas went with a simpler design. Scott was all about creating an elegant atmosphere, which he did brilliantly. As almost a throwback to another era, it was reminiscent of the Rat Pack. He says he was influenced by the look of clubs out of places like New York, Philadelphia, and Chicago during the 1940s and 1950s. “I’ve been influenced by Roy Bennett (Madonna, Dixie Chicks, et al) and Howard Ungerleider (Rush, et al). Howard is the master of the long light, the one that comes from heaven and strikes the stage. Another thing I’ve learned from Howard that I did with this show is never repeating a look from song to song. There were no giant moves in this show, just the careful placement of lights and making subtle color choices from there. During the entire two-and-a-half hour show, I rarely repeat a look. That’s the greatest part of this show: I could paint all day with these lights!” And he did. GEAR 6 9 6 1 18 10 2 1 1 2 15 4 21 8 4 1 1 4 2 15 1 2 4 Active ¼-ton motors Active ½-ton motors Active 1-ton motors box truss (10’x12”) box truss (10’x18”) Chabuki, Inc kabuki release systems curved truss sections (12”x6’ 90°) custom scrim (50’x 25’) dimmer rack (24x2.4K) DMX Opto-Splitters ETC Source Four 19 Degree 750w ellipsoidals Martin MAC 2000 Profile Spots Martin MAC 700 Profile Spots Martin Stagebar 54 LED strips MR-16 Striplights (6’) opening act black (50’x 25’) Reel EFX DF-50 hazer w/ fans Stations Headset communications tab track (single pull, 50’) Vari*Lite VL3500 Wash velour curtain (50’w x 25’ deep violet) velour curtains (10’ x 25’ grey) velour curtains (8’ x 25’ grey) Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Lighting Console: Avolites Diamond 4 Vision FEATURE ERIN SIEGAL P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S The set design covered the bases with an altar, a performance stage, a throne for the Pope and more than 500 field seats for the Pope’s entourage. Pope Benedict XVI at Yankee Stadium — The Sacred Ceremony on Sacred Turf By KevinM.Mitchell First Call PLSN Executive producer Stig Edgren, of SEG Events, had handled Pope John Paul II’s visits to New York in 1995 and Los Angeles in 1987. To begin preparations for the April 16 Mass, he got the call from the New York Archdiocese last September. “The beginning conversations are about the Pope’s movement, when he’s planning on celebrating Mass and security,” Edgren explained. “The Archdiocese is hosting the event, so it mostly involves them, although obviously the 28 PLSN JUNE 2008 DOUG POPE S ome baseball fans might say Yankee Stadium is already a place befitting worship. But as one of the highlights for Pope Benedict XVI’s six-day visit to the New York area in April, the hallowed baseball grounds needed to be transformed into an open-air cathedral including an altar, a performance stage and no billboards or other advertising in sight. Along with the need to be prepared for inclement weather and to operate under strict security measures, those involved needed to coordinate the efforts of hundreds of crew members, set everything up within a two-day time frame between ball games, and take extraordinary measures to avoid trampling on the grass. “The most astonishing thing about the keynote project was that Yankee Stadium didn’t open the doors for us until 12:01 a.m. Friday morning, and by 1:00 a.m. Sunday, Secret Service locked it all down for a security sweep,” said Patrick Stansfield, co-producer of the papal Mass staged by the Archdiocese of New York. “We’re talking about a total of 49 hours to pull this off.” From left, Patrick Stansfield, co-producer, René Lagler, scenic designer and Doug Pope, production supervisor. Vatican is very concerned about the Mass itself.” Edgren quickly got on the phone with offices of New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, police, fire and others to coordinate these important issues. “We had the right team to do this from the very beginning — no question,” Edgren said. “Having Stansfield and production supervisor Doug Pope in place early, managing the labor overseeing everything allowed me to run around working with the Archdiocese.” Many of these people had worked with Edgren during the papal visit of 1995, including Stansfield and Pope. “The Archdiocese had complete trust me as far as bringing people on board,” he said. “They didn’t question my choices of vendors because they knew I was picking the best people in the business.” Papal visit newbies included Ken Ashby, who produced the pre-Mass show, and Danny Ezralow, who directed it. Called “The Concert of Hope,” the pre-Mass concert featured Harry Connick Jr., Jose Feliciano and other performers. Paul Chavarria handled the exterior décor, which was extensive. “He made it look like a cathedral,” Edgren said. Lighting consultant Imero Fiorentino was also called in. Peter Daniel of Pete’s Big T.V. supplied the video. A total of six screens with three aspect ratios were used. Keep Off the Grass PLSN “What was fun about the progression was how quickly it came together,” said scenic designer René Lagler. “Stig called me and needed a quick sketch, the caveat being we had to keep off the grass. This led me to something where the Pope’s part of the stage was hanging over the grass.” Lagler is an Emmy Award-winning scenic production designer, and a veteran of the crew that staged the previous papal visit to the U.S. He got the call for the April visit on a Thursday early in October. That weekend he created some preliminary sketches. The New York diocese’s Monsignor in charge of approving the design was enthused by Lagler’s vision early on. “The only change from the original sketches was that the Monsignor wanted ramps instead of stairs going up to the main stage,” Lagler said. “At first I resisted it, because I was concerned it took away from the overall shape. But it ended up working out well because the procession of clergy was so dramatic, and the ramps allowed that to be a smooth affair. And, adding the ramps allowed me to design in the subtle shape of a cross — it was very subtle,” Lagler said, laughing. “Sometimes you have to design a little bit just for yourself, even if it’s just for your own satisfaction.” Yet like a chef who prepares a painstaking dish only to set it down on the table and see a fly land on it, his set had its own unforeseen blemish. “At the last minute, a camera guy who is up center stage brought a black pallet to stand on — just a wooden black pallet on a pure white floor!” he said. “And the camera people weren’t even dressed for a Mass — one was wearing a Safari hat! It was a terrible smudge.” Otherwise, he was From Concept to Reality PLSN Pierce, the event’s scenic designer, was brought in to realize Lagler’s vision. “There weren’t a lot of changes from concept to reality,” Pierce said. “It was more about preserving that initial concept to the best of our ability.” Pierce said they worked closely with Hudson Theatrical Associates, which built the décor, and Mountain Productions, Inc., which handled the understructure for the stage. “There was a lot of AutoCAD work, and every aspect had to be considered in every different way.” On the pitchers mound, an 18-foot diameter platform featuring the Vatican’s coat of arms was suspended in the air. Radiating from the platform was an array of gold and white fabric provided by Rose Brand. Then there were “a lot of chairs,” Pierce said, for the Pope’s huge entourage. “There were 800 field seats — 300 chairs for priests, 200 for bishops, 14 for Cardinals and one Pope throne.” The chairs for each group were colored according to hierarchy. Pierce added that with a positive mental attitude and good planning, they were able to get everything done in time…almost. “The last remaining thing was the fluffing of the flowers, and that was the only thing that really didn’t get done.” Otherwise, “It was a beautiful, technically impressive achievement and one that was very safe in every respect.” Look for the Union Label PLSN LYN PARKER Hudson Theatrical Associates had the daunting task of putting together the labor force. Hudson’s Sam Ellis was the labor supervisor and he said it was a long process to figure out how many hands were needed. “At any given time during the load-in and set up, there were 200 or 250 Local 1 hands working on this. But the total number of people involved was closer to 490.” Everyone involved emphasized that the planning was critical. “First we had to sit down with all the people in charge of the individual elements — the video people, the lighting, the staging — and figure out how many people they each needed,” Ellis said. “Then we assimilated all that into a gigantic schedule.” For example, they figured they needed a dozen electricians at a certain point, and they needed a certain amount of time to make it happen. “The first five hours was just laying the flooring, so we had to figure out what we could do while that was happening. In this case, start putting the chairs in and hanging lighting trusses off of the front of house balcony rails.” But more important was choosing the right people. “First of all, you pick the captains, the heads of the departments, and that was very important to us,” Ellis said. “It was important to us that they be the best, because they had to go reach out to their best workers.” Ellis stressed that the best were found in the unions. “There are critics of union labor, but in our instance, only by using union workers were we able to accomplish what we needed to do. So in addition to union stagehands and technicians, we also used teamsters to load and unload the trucks. We had 70 or 80 trucks to unload, and we were very happy with their professionalism.” “It was an amazing team of union workers,” echoed Doug Pope. “IATSE Local 1 especially and also IBEW Local 3 did an amazing job. They knew their crafts and they didn’t mess around.” Production crew members weren’t expected to walk on water, but they couldn’t walk on the grass, either. To protect the sacred turf, the crew used Terraplas, a patented system of breathable sheeting capable of handling light-duty loads. For vehicles, there was Bravomat. “The entire warning track was covered by 1,400 pieces of 4-foot-by-8foot Bravomat, five inches thick, heavy-duty, capable of supporting loaded forklifts,” said Stansfield. “The first 4-1/2 hours of the load in was just laying that track. So we really only had 45 hours to build the performance and altar stage and decorate the stadium.” Competing with the Sun PLSN The lighting designer for the Pope’s visit to Yankee Stadium was Alan Adelman, who is best known for his theatrical, television and film lighting design work — not outdoor venues subject to any kind of weather conditions. Even a cloudy day that gave way to sunny skies could pose problems lighting the Pope, who started the Mass in the shade under a roof. “Alan had to make sure the lights chosen could effectively be constantly shifted to keep up with the shifting clouds, keeping the Pope lit perfectly,” said Edgren. “It was a daylight job, and the challenge there is always balance,” Adelman explained. The sun can produce about 12,000 footcandles, and for the Pope to be seen, “you’re basically trying to make up that sunlight. Otherwise, on wider shots the Pope could be in the black. We needed something at least in the 5,000 to 6,000 footcandle range.” That challenge, combined with the need for “a system where you’re able to constantly fill in shadows, accommodate for the sun which might go behind some clouds for a few moments,” was “daunting,” Adelman said. The configuration of Yankee Stadium didn’t make things easier. Long Throw Distances “The throw distances ranged from 200 to 300 feet, plus there was a strict limit on seat kills. It would have been easier to put all the lighting at the front of house,” but that was out of the question. “So additional, special rigging was bolted into the upper deck to carry extra lights.” Adelman used a dozen Vari*Lite VL3500 Wash units and another dozen VL3000 Wash units in conjunction with Arri 6000 HMIs and 12 Zap Technology Lil’ Big Lite 3.5 units. “They are automated and offer a very high intensive, very narrow beam. We hung 12 of them, six on each side on the trusses on the upper deck, each on a 30-inch truss with special breakers. They were intense — they were blinding in daylight.” Programmer Paul Sonnleitner controlled the lighting with a grandMA from MA Lighting. A wireless DMX512 provided by Scharff Weisberg “worked flawlessly,” Adelman said. Along with Yankee Stadium, Scharff Weisberg supplied lighting packages to support broadcast coverage of the Pope’s visit to the World Trade Center site and to the Chapel at St. Joseph’s Seminary in Yonkers, N.Y. The Scharff Weisberg team included Chris McMeen, Chris Komischock and Ian Healy. “Yankee Stadium didn’t open the doors for us until 12:01 A.M. Friday morning, and by 1:00 A.M. Sunday, Secret Service locked it all down for a security sweep.” — Patrick Stansfield, co-producer LYN PARKER The papal coat of arms served as a fitting backdrop to the altar. PLSN Erin Siegal very pleased with the final result. “The beauty here was that I had a huge support team — including Edward Pierce.” Riggers needed to anticipate inclement conditions… …but the weather cooperated, as if on cue. Advertising and baseball stadiums go together like Oscar Meyer Wieners and Coca-Cola. Like most sports venues, Yankee Stadium is normally the architectural equivalent of a NASCAR chassis, plastered with ads. But at wishes of the Vatican, it all had to disappear. “I’m especially proud of how we were able to cover up all the advertising in the stadium,” said lighting designer Alan Adelman. “The day of the Mass, at dawn, when it was still a little cloudy …it was transformed into a Cathedral.” He gives a lot of credit to gaffer Tom Blancato. “He did a great job. Tom does a lot of big shows, but logistically, this was something else. And it’s a tribute to Patrick [Stansfield] and Doug [Pope] that it came off so well.” Scenic designer Edward Pierce said that the massive undertaking meant more than just throwing some fabric over the signage. Over 12,000 square feet of soft goods were used to cover it all. It required creative rigging and some customized digital prints of the Vatican coat-of-arms. “All that work involved a team of 20 and was completed in a day and a half.” Yankee Stadium doesn’t have the flying buttresses that adorn and support the world’s great Gothic cathedrals. But as an outdoor venue, it could serve as the launching point for flying special effects — far more appropriate for a celebration of Mass than pyrotechnics or confetti cannons. “The icing on the cake was the release of several hundred live doves of peace,” said co- producer Patrick Stansfield. “It was done in coordination with the kids running, circling the stadium with doves made of lightweight foam, each suspended by a fishing pole. At a dramatic point, we released 200 live doves. They circled the stadium twice and then flew back to their home in New Jersey, just like they were supposed to.” About a week before the big event, an advance team of doves, made up of a lead dove and some dutiful lieutenants, were brought to the stadium from their home in New Jersey. They checked out the stadium, and then the lead dove circled the stadium twice and flew back home, lieutenants in tow. On the day of the big event, two hundred other doves were released with them, and following the team leader, executed their assignment with aplomb. Some mysteries remain, however. Were these doves in the union? And what was in their rider? How, exactly, does one get to be the lead dove? Is it based on merit and hard work, or just a matter of who you coo? (Maybe they have to fight for the honor, but then again, probably not.) Producer Stig Edgren chuckles and sighs. “Oh yeah, there were a lot of dove jokes — even the secret service guys got on it saying they needed to frisk them and check their beaks.” 2008 JUNE PLSN 29 FEATURE P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Pope on the Pope PLSN Doug Pope, who has a 30-year history with Edgren, said early on a key factor was bringing in Hudson Theatrical Associates. “Neil Mazzella and Sam Ellis put together a crack labor team, starting with scores of department heads.” How important was this gig? “People dropped out of their Broadway shows to do this.” For Pope, spreading the work around as much as possible was going to make this event a success. “We didn’t want to wear people out—just the department heads!” After the first site survey in the fall, they put together a timeline. They knew they would be starting at midnight and knew the Bravomats needed to go down quickly in order to accommodate the forklifts and rest of the workers. “We did have the benefit of a pre-rig day, the Monday before, where we moved in as much equipment as possible. It was still not very much — it is an 87 year-old stadium and there are not a lot of spaces to put things,” he said. The Yankee Stadium grounds crew was looking over the creative team’s shoulder the entire time, making sure nothing damaged the turf. As intrusive as that sounds, Pope says they did their job with professionalism and respect for what the team had to do. “People like us, we’re only there a little bit,” he explained. “But the Yankee team personnel have to carry on, and they have a love and respect for their grass, and we Fleeting Moments PLSN Composer Benoit Jutras was brought in to compose special music for the event. “He’s very brilliant, and quick, and he came up with themes for the opening and closing that sounded like angels,” said Edgren. This music inspired Edgren to imagine flying doves, and he passed the idea along to his creative team. The director of the pre-Mass show, Ezralow, brought in Michael Curry, a renowned designer known for his work with the The Lion King. “He came up with an idea which included doves that fly on sticks.” Edgren said that he would have liked to see the young people and the doves run out on the field one moment before the Mass, “but it was just something that didn’t happen in time.” Even so, the papal visit to Yankee Stadium scored a home run on most accounts, thanks in large part to the prevailing spirit of teamwork. “I had the best team in the world,” Edgren said. “They surrounded me, protected me and I was honored to be part of it. It was magical.” Perhaps a higher power was rooting for the production team as well. Everyone involved needed to be prepared for the worst, but the weather improved, as if on cue. “At the youth rally the day before, it was a warm beautiful day. Then at the Pope’s visit to ground zero of the World’s Trade Center, the clouds were dark and ominously low; it was as if you felt the victim’s spirits in the air. It stayed like that through Sunday morning, and then when Jose Feliciano started to play, the clouds broke,” Edgren said. “It was good advance work from God Almighty!” AutoCAD renderings helped the crew prepare for the actual event. The diamond-shaped set was designed to keep off the grass. Part of the set’s overhead truss, being prepared for the massive Mass. Along with Pope Benedict XVI, there were 14 cardinals, 200 bishops and 300 priests. LYN PARKER René Lagler’s front elevation of the stage. respect that. Hats off to the Yankees for all they did, including allowing us to use the team’s locker rooms and everything else,” including the umpire’s changing room, which was transformed into a vesting room where the Pope could “suit up.” PAtRicK StANSfiELd Security, of course, was always a concern. Once the Pope entered the grounds, everyone was locked down into position. This meant that Adelman and everyone else had to anticipate any problems that might occur. Jumping up and running to fix it during the Mass was not an option. Good planning and execution preempted the need. The kid from the Bronx was unfazed. “It was pretty cool to be locked down in the visitor’s dugout,” said Adelman. The entire set was rigged, wired and lit within a 50-hour window. Yankee Stadium, Bronx, N.Y. Creative Staff for the Archdiocese of New York: Executive Producer: Stig Edgren Production Designer: René Lagler Co-Producer: Patrick Stansfield Lighting Designer: Alan Adelman Creative Consultant: Imero Fiorentino Production Supervisor: Doug Pope Sound Mixer: Howard Lindeman Pre-Mass Show Director: Daniel Ezralow Pre-Mass Show Producer: Ken Ashby Pre-Mass Talent: Rick Southern Scenic Designer: Ed Pierce Exterior Décor Manager: Paul Chavarria Scenery Associates: Nick Francone, Jen Price 30 PLSN JUNE 2008 Communications Director: Larry Estrin Media Director: Maris Segal Head Gaffer: Tom Blancato Programmer: Paul Sonnleitner Backstage Managers: Scott Schneider, Beth Schneider Communications Manager: Pete Erskine Production Controller: Mark Aurelio Lead Production Coordinator: Dennis Menard Production Rigger: Hans K. Wert Production Site Electrics: James Eisner Production Electrician: John Ellar CAT Event Power: Burt Bracegirdle Media Project Coordinators: T.J. Morehouse, Nancy Shefts Traffic Manager: David McDaniels Runner: Jedi Keith Ketchum Crew Caterer: Gordy Hebler, Full Plate Catering, Inc. Yankee Stadium Staff: Stadium Operations Manager: Doug Behar Stadium Superintendent: Pete Pullara Stadium Electrician: Fran Ninivaggi New York Police Department: Capt. Drew Kastner Production Suppliers: Sound: Clair Brothers Systems — Ralph Mastangelo, Mike Wolf, Doug Nightwine, David Staub, Tom Huntington, Christopher Fulton, Robert Bussiere, Kevin Dennis, Anthony Sabao, James Ward Video: Pete’s Big Screen TV — Peter Daniel, Erin Lynch Lighting: Scharff Weisberg — Chris McMeen, Chris Komischock, Ian Healy Scenery: Hudson Scenic Studios — Neil Mazzella, Robert McGarvie Labor: Hudson Theatrical Assoc. — Sam Ellis, Susan Bristow, Irene Wang (Supervisors) Staging and Ground Cover: Mountain Prod., Inc. — President Jim Evans, Ron “Wilky” Wilkinson, Paul Serkosky, Michael Gasper, Jake Smolenak, Bill Heinzlmeier, Paul Simoncavage Rehearsal Studio/Music Rentals: Studio Instrument Rentals — Bo Holst, Carly Vena, Erik White IATSE Stagehands Local #1: Carpentry: Frank Illo, Kevin Camus, John Woytas Rigging: Wally Bullard, Jeff Goodman Electrics: Jimmy Maloney Sound: Tommy Arrigoni, Rich Gilmour Load Master/Forklift Crew: Pat Quinn Teamsters: Vinny Russo Local One Steward: Dan Gilloon Lighting Consoles: 2 grandMAs, 2 grandMA NSPs 6 6K HMI PARs 8 Arri 2.5k/4k HMI PARs 12 Zap Technology Lil’ Big Lite 3.5s 12 Vari*Lite VL3500 Wash lights 12 Vari*Lite VL3000 Wash lights 10 Vari*Lite VL3500 Spots 8 Vari*Lite VL2500 Wash lights 9 Mini Lite 10s Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info ROAD TEST P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Barco DML- 12 oo By NookSchoenfeld Since Lighting & Sound Design introduced the Icon M at LDI in 1998, manufacturers of lighting equipment have ventured into the video production market. Barco, the Belgium-based manufacturer of video equipment, has reversed this trend and ventured into the lighting market with their new product, the Digital Moving Luminaire 1200. A Floor Wax and Dessert Topping RT This fixture is designed to be used as both a high quality video projector and a bright moving light fixture. By selecting the correct setting in the DMX512-controlled menu, the fixture can be in light or video mode. In light mode, the fixture emits a perfect circular beam of light that looks to be equivalent to a 1200-watt hard edge fixture. (no video playing). The lamps are easily replaced by clicking them into place; no need for alignment. Barco claims that the lamps cannot explode because each one is locked in its own module with a separate cooling fan. For heat management in the rest of the fixture, it has a water-cooled radiator, built into the fixture. There are also heat sensors located in the head. You can switch between one, two or four bulb mode to control the heat, if necessary. Signed, Sealed, Delivered RT When it’s opened up, I can see that everything is modular and the modules are sealed. This is good for technicians, as they can easily replace a faulty module. But more importantly, no dust or fog juice will accumulate in the fixture as in normal projectors. Finally, someone has made a moving head projector bright enough to work alongside moving lights in large shows. To the naked eye, it appears to be about the same brightness as a Martin MAC 2000 Profile. The output measures 12,000 field lumens. It has a mechanical dimmer (iris type) that produces true black versus video black. It fades in a smooth linear path. Of course, it strobes as well. In video mode, the beam and image are rectangular. The fixture has a sealed DLP engine which delivers full color, DLP-quality video with SXGA+ resolution (1400 x 1050 pixels). The light output in this mode is over 10,000 center lumens, making it at about twice as bright some of the other digital light products out there. I saw four of their competitor’s fixtures quadruple-stacked to blend one video image on a screen. Next to it was one DML-1200 with the same image. To my eye, the brightness of the one Barco fixture was equal to the four others combined. This fixture contains four 300-watt UHP lamps. If one fails, the other three stay lit. The lamp life is rated at 750 hours before noticeable lumen depreciation. In projector mode the color temperature is 6400K in white For instance, there are two color systems in the head. Neither one will ever need cleaning. In projector mode, colors can be blended with the video image using RGB. In lighting mode it uses the subtractive CYM mode for adjusting and bumping colors. The color system is extremely fast and totally seamless, unlike most moving lights sold today. The RGB color system does cut down the light output; hence, the fixture is brighter in light mode. The optics (lenses) are also enclosed in a sealed module. The fixture can zoom between 12º and 42º while keeping a gobo pattern perfectly focused. You can zoom out the beam to a full 50° if a wide unfocused light beam is desired. It has a lens throw of 1.2, meaning that if I have a throw distance of ten feet, the image on the screen will appear eight feet wide. Hip Media Server RT requires 78 DMX512 channels to run one fixture. Through the Ethernet connectors you can synch all the fixtures together to play footage at the exact same speed. Finally, someone has made a moving head projector that is bright enough to work alongside the moving lights that we use in large shows. It can be used as another moving light when it’s not being used as a projector and it can hold its own very well. What it is: Digital luminaire that runs in video mode or light mode Who it’s for: Anyone wanting full-color animated graphics and a profile fixture in one Pros: Bright enough to work along side bright moving lights; SXGA+ resolution; sealed optics; modular; easy lamp replacement; built-in media server; effects; nice zoom; image blending Cons: Slow movement for a moving light fixture; extremely heavy Retail Price: $50,000; Media Wing: $12,000 Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info The fixture has Green Hippo Hippotizer v3 software and a built-in media server. The Hippo plays back any file uploaded to it by Barco’s main controller. This controller is a PC-based machine called the “media wing.” The wing will convert any file into MPEG files with no loss of frame-to-frame data, which the Hippo requires for playback. It deals with file management for the fixtures and can also control other attributes of the fixture if necessary. The DML-1200 comes stocked with plenty of images as well as complete gobo files from all your favorite pattern manufacturers. This fixture is also able to take in any Barco’s DML-1200 outside media source through HD or SDI inputs. Live video can play through this fixture with no noticeable time loss. You can also blend images from multiple fixtures. Through the “Encore” system, the Hippotizer can blend up to 64 separate projectors to make one seamless image. For live video, the DML-1200 uses its own algorithms to collate the images. There are four layers on this particular media server and you can design your own mask to be used on any layer. The media wing provides a series of different wipes, which they call “transition EFX.” Effects can also be added to existing images to create things like water, tiling and rippling on top of the image. Physically, this fixture is as large as any moving light head on the market today. But it is well-built with an aluminum frame and plastic covers. It is approximately 42 inches tall and about half that wide. It weighs in at 165 pounds. There are clamps that attach to the top for easy truss mounting. It has a 540° pan and 270° tilt, but it moves very slowly — only about 80° per second. It can take between 200-240 volts AC at 50 or 60 Hz. It runs off of any DMX512 or ArtNet output either through a 5-pin XLR connector or Ethernet input. It 32 PLSN JUNE 2008 BUYERS GUIDE P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Media O Servers ne of the best indications of the growth of a new technology is to compare the latest Buyer’s Guide with a previous year’s version of the same subject. If it grows horizontally (features) and vertically (listings) then that’s a good indication that the category By RichardCadena is thriving. This year’s Buyer’s Guide on media servers is as wide and tall as ever. A more subtle way of gauging the technology is to keep an eye on which columns go away after they’ve appeared at least once. You see, as a new technology develops, particularly software-based products, new features are added and the number of columns in our buyer’s guide grows. But as all of the competitors catch up, then the answers in the columns start looking the same — there’s less competitive advantage, at least on paper. Fewer Distinctions Pandora’s Box Media Server from Coolux Axon Media Server from High End Systems Hippotizer V3 HD from Green Hippo Maxedia Pro from Martin Professional Mbox Extreme v3 from PRG ArKaos VJ DMX screenshot grandMA Video screenshot BG Take, for example, the column that used to say “graphics mapping to geometric objects.” In the early days of media servers, this was a feature that some offered while others didn’t. Today, virtually all of the media servers offer some form of graphics mapping onto objects. The same goes for keystone correction. The column that used to say “number of file locations” has gone away because computers have gotten so powerful and memory so cheap that it’s not much of an issue any more. So we have eliminated some columns as the competition catches up and competitive advantages diminish. On the other hand, the number of listings has grown. Today, there are 18 individual product listings from 10 different manufacturers, with prices ranging from $899 to $42,999. With the media server Buyer’s Guide growing in width and height, it’s not easy keeping up with the new offerings. But a few minutes spent perusing the next couple of pages will keep you up to date until the next trade show. BUYERS GUIDE Mfr. / Distr. / Web Site ArKaos s.a. Rose Brand www.arkaos.net www.rosebrand.com Coolux Gmbh Coolux Int’l www.coolux-us.com Product Name Number of Outputs/ Format(s) Output Resolution Number of Layers Live Video Input? Software that runs on both PC and Mac. 1.07 GB ArKaos content and 703MB AV3 media content included Up to 4 outputs by using Matrox DualHead2Go Up to 4096 x 4096. Support for standard resolutions + user-defined settings Unlimited in simple mode (lim. by computer perf.) 8 layers in fixture mode Yes, unlimited (as much as the computer can support) ArKaos LED Mapper Software extension which enables mapping of the server’s video output directly to any configuration of LED panels without additional hardware to convert video signal (VGA or DVI) into DMX signal. Software that runs on both PC and Mac. none Up to 256 DMX universes with ArtNet, more with e:cue butlers - - - Pandora’s Box Media Server Digital hi-def video playback with softedge on all systems; 2K x 4K resolution per server; unlimited number of linked servers; live image acquisition and real-time processing.. 19” dual quad Core-Duo Intel server w/ integrated SATA-2 RAID system, N-Videa 768M graphics RMA, 2GB system RM, ArtNet 1000baseT 700+ media content files, gobos, tiles and masks 2x DVI / VGA / RGBHV 8x VGA with MediaSpitter Interface 2 outputs up to 1920 x 1080 per output for each output Up to 48 (model dependant) Dependent on I/O card 1x VGA,; 2x VGA; 1x SD-SDI; 1xHDSDI4x composite 2 outputs VGA,DVI,RGBHV,CV or S-Video; up to 6 outputs using splitter modules. 2 x Up to 2560 x 1600 (model specific) Up to 16 model dependent As many live inputs as the computer can handle; standard options, single+quad SDI, VGA, DVI, composite/4-input composite + S-video, Firewire yes Description Hardware Libraries ArKaos VJ DMX Media server software that allows triggering and real-time manipulation of video, graphics and flash texts. Hippotizer V3 HD, V3 Stage Networkable media server w/ up to 16 configurable media layers; built-in media encoder and media database system; 2.4Ghz dual core Duo processor, 2GB RAM ATI X3870HD (model specific) graphics card in custom-designed touring case with pro connectors and configuration LCD on front. Full gobo library, 50 Alpha Wipes, test patterns, moving media content from Mode, Showfootage and Beacon, plus 100 HippoFeed clips High End Systems Inc. www.highend.com Axon Media Server 3U rack-mounted media server powered by the DL.2/DL.3 graphics engine. Provides all the functions of the DL.2/ DL.3 including Collage Generator and Curved Surface Support. 19” 3U rack server running XP embedded on 2.4GHZ Core2 Duo, 2GB RAM, highestend ATI graphics card available, DVD+/-RW drive, DVI Output, DMX512 and ArtNet Input, and now shipping with SDI input/output as standard Royalty-free stock digital art collection w/ 1,000+ lighting-optimized files; supports custom content 1 graphics output (DVI), 1 local CMA output (DVI) 1920x1080 3 active media layers + many built-in functions that serve as separate ‘layers’ MA Lighting A.C.T Lighting www.actlighting.com grandMA Video Real-time, two-way communication between server and the console allows for instant access to new content. Any console in the grandMA range (including onPC) and user-supplied PC; minimum 2.4Ghz CPU, 512MB RAM, Win XP, DirectX 9, 64MB dedicated video RAM Included with grandMA software: 18GB+ of free content plus Bluff-Titler application for content creation. 1 format defined by user-supplied hardware Adjustable up to 2,048 x 2,048 Up to 32 content + 1 SoftEdge, 1 Keystone, 1 Master, as needed 4 - user supplied hardware Maxedia Broadcast Advanced version of Maxedia Pro that handles various types of digital media; files can be altered, mixed, masked, added to, and generally changed using Maxedia Plug-ins; Pentium Dual PCI Express 512MB graphics card w/ second engine suport (4xDVI outputs); Black Magic SDI input card; Raid5 config for media disk (650GB capacity); 4GB RAM; Intel Quad Core processor; input/output unit, flight case, rackmount keyboard/mouse 20 yes (2) Maxedia Pro Media server that handles various types of digital media; files can be altered, mixed, masked, added to, and generally changed using Maxedia Plug-ins; Pentium 4; 3.2GHz w/ hyper threading; 1GB RAM; 2 x 120GB SATA; DVD R/W burner; I/O unit, flightcase, rackmount keyboard/mouse Maxedia Compact Maxedia Compact is a ecomical version of the Maxedia PRO. This media server capable of handling a multitude of digital media. Shuttle PC XPC P3100G - Pentium D, 3.2 GHz - 2 GB 200 SA memory - 2 x SATA WDC 200 GB hard disk drives - ATI PC I Express X1600 video card - DVD +/- R/RW drive 5 yes, firewire Mbox Extreme v3 Mbox Extreme can display up to six layers of video. Layers can be any combination of 3D objects or backgrounds. Apple Macintosh (Mac Pro), custom dual I/O dimmer module with program monitor; custom rolling-rack w/ integral UPS. 6 layers w/ ability to transition content on the same layer. 2 local - SD/HD-SDI or composite, and FireWire/USB (DV), up to 30 additional via network feed PixelDrive 2 Controls DMX lighting fixtures via DMX or built-in preset creator w/ scheduled playback. Green Hippo Ltd. TMB www.green-hippo.com www.tmb.com Martin Professional A/S Martin Professional, Inc. www.martin.com www.maxedia.com Production Resource Group www.prg.com Radical Lighting PixelRange www.radlite.com www.pixelrange.com Rose Brand www.panoramadigital scenery.com or www.rosebrand.com SAMSC Designs Ltd Projected Image Digital, Ltd. www.samsc-pm.com 650+ free content (5 DVD set) 2 DVI, VGA, composite or S-video (out 1 + GUI or out 1 + out 2) 2 output - DVI or VGA (Out 1 + GUI or Out 1 + Out 2) 1380+ stock movies and stills, 70+ 3D objects, 6 animated gobos, 624+ digital gobos 2 outputs - each output has DVI, RGBHV, SDI, and HD-SDI; each output also has DVI preview. Video playback with enhanced 3D effects and advanced keystoning features. VideoDrive One layer of video playback with enhanced 3D effects and advanced keystoning features. Panorama Digital Scenery Tour Edition Media server with 8 layers of video, still images, live feed, and flash text control and manipulation in real time. Server is controlled from a console or from the internal Panorama DMX software. 8RU flight case, 2 monitors, keyboard, mouse, rack-mount PC: Intel Duo Core Processors, dual NVIDIA graphics, 2GB RAM, 2x 160GB SATA drives, DVD R/W +/- burner, 2 video capture cards, rack-mount I/O: DMX in & out, ArtNet In & out, SMPTE in & out, VGA ove Panorama Digital Scenery LE Identical to the Panorama Digital Scenery Tour Edition except it does not contain internal video capture abilities. “Light” refers to weight and compactness at 13.5 lbs, 9”x9”x13”. 2 monitors, keyboard, mouse, custom Shuttle PC w/ Intel Duo Core processors, dual NVIDIA graphics, 2GB RAM, 2x 160GB SATA drives, DVD R/W +/- burner, DMX in & out, SMPTE in & out, ArtNet In & out, VGA over CAT5e adaptors. Panorama LED Mapper Add-on for any Panorama enabling the broadcast of up to 128 universes via ArtNet. Available as stand-alone. Catalyst v4 Pro, DV, Express, Lite Media Server software Macintosh-based software w/ up to 16 configurable layers up to image or movie size of 4096x2048. None supplied (software only) PC only Hundreds including Radical Flashes, AlunaBlue and more Supports 4 outputs, dependant on hardware 60 ArK fram for a effec Up to w/3 layer 100+ engin per u “stack mu Hund color laye effe effec Hardware dependent Up to 2048x1536, output resolution depends on connected video equipment Incl. w/ Pro Edition of NG or as a personal edition w/ 2, 4 or 8 universes + video output NG 34 PLSN JUNE 2008 4 DVI, VGA, composite, S-video or SDI (optional); total of four outputs can be used at one time. Nu 75 laye 54 t effec Up to 4 Hund lation Unlimited Up to 2048 x 2049 Supports 3 outputs, 1 for control panel, 2 outputs Up to 4, up to SDI quality 1 Additional plug-in available at extra cost 2, S-video or composite Supplied w/ 20+ GB of content from multiple creators: Blue Pony, GoboMan, Braden Stroup and more. Dual control monitors plus dual output with 2 VGA or 2 VGA over CAT5E, number of outputs can be expanded. Standard options 1024 x 768 (single or cloned outputs), 2048 x 768, 1024 x 1536 8 n/a n/a ArtNet n/a n/a n/a Best performance on Tiger 10.4.9 or greater w/ 2GB RAM, SCSI disc preferred, X1900 video card preferred. Universal binary supports PPC and Intel. Intel preferred None included. Supports up to 65,535 files with 65,535 frames in each file Up to 8 outputs independent mixed outputs w/ dvi /vga splitters Output resolution up to limit of graphics cards - can be as high as 3840x1024 on 2 outputs Up to 14 Up to 8 live video inputs simultaneously; virtual video inputs 0, inputs can be added via firewire P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Import 3D Objects? Serial Frame Synch Control of for Multiple Outboard Media Servers? Devices? Input Control Protocol DMX Channels Warranty Retail Price Comments yes DMX, ArtNet, MIDI, keyboard, mouse Maxi fixture-51 channels; full fixture-43 channels; small fixture-25 channels; simple mode up to 128 channels - $899 ArKaos runs on servers and laptops with leading consoles and accepts major video formats. - - - - - $899 ArKaos LED Mapper is a software extension for ArKaos VJ DMX. yes, 1024 ports with network and remote RS-232, 422,485, TCP/IP yes, sub-field accuracy with greater than 128 servers yes, 2/8/24/48/72 output channels with full 3D control of channel placement. 48K audio with full SMPTE synchronization over all audio channels PB Automation, DMX512, ArtNet, Serial RS232, RS422, TCP/IP 37 ch. per layer; 44 ch. per output 1 year $21,500 - $42,999 based on config. The Coolux family of products integrate to allow selection of different system configurations to work where needed on each project. Multiple complete time lines and remote resource management with MediaManager allow operation from any location. yes DMX, ArtNet, RS232, MIDI, TCP-IP, keyboard, mouse 2 to 450 (configurable) 1 year Hippo HD V3, $42,079; Stage V3, $21,830; Zookeeper software, $1,485 Additional components: scenery automation link, calendar/scheduling, advanced timeline, 360 degree sphere projection, multi-channel audio, soft edge blending, beat recognition, pixelmapper, video to fixture mapping, SMPTE sync, remote media management, H-Map 2 and more on the way. no DMX, ArtNet 35 global layers; 38 per media layer 1 year $8,960 MSRP US D. Built on the same graphics engine in the DL.2/DL.3 Digital Light. CMA software allows content and configuration on multiple Axons to be managed remotely across a Gigabit network. New software release coming this summer. All software downloads free from website MA-Net From 2 to 2048 per server, depending on required amount of control. All channels are calculated at the server, not the console. 1 year (parts & labor) $8,775 grandMA Video connects to any grandMA console.Software installs on any laptop w/ min. requirements; or a PC that exceeds min. requirements for larger shows. Pixel-mapping with Art-Net output. nput? Number of Effects d (as comport) 60 ArKaos effects, 40 Freeframe effects. Support for additional Freeframe effects and Core Image (Mac OS X) no no no - - - n I/O x VGA; xHDosite Up to 144 effects engines w/3 effects engines per layer and 255 effects per engine .x Files nputs er can dard +quad DVI, input -video, 100+ effects per effects engine, 18 effect engines per unit; engines can be “stacked” for more effects; multi parameters per effect yes, via external program; can import 3D scenes or objects yes yes, frameaccurate sync between servers or individual layers plus “virtual” server emulation for big multi display screens Hundreds of graphics and color effects; each media layer supports multiple effects stacks + global effects stacks that apply to all layers yes, .x format no yes no yes - between up to 144 grandMA video servers in a network plied e 23 yes Audio Effects? no $41,995 DMX, ArtNet Hundreds yes no yes yes 75 effects total (2 per layer, 2 on camera) and 54 transitions; custom effects (image units) can be added. yes, .obj format 3D objects, .svg and .ai digital gobos no Yes - via SMPTE or MIDI timecode or between layers on servers no DMX512, ArtNet yes DMX via ArtNet, Pathport, Enttec or local control and scheduling. Midi control now available yes Hundreds including pixellation, mosaic, chromakey o SDI ug-in ra cost 2 years DMX(external interface needed), Artnet re D-SDI , and DV), up nal via ed Base: 24 channels/ output adj; 48 channels (optional)/ layer; 24 per layer (optional) yes, .x files 20 yes no $11,495 Operating mode dependant P.O.A. New I/O module receives DVI video from server and converts it to analog (RGBHV), SDI, and HD-SDI, no scan converter required. Pixel-mapping with ArtNet output, no limit to number of universes. Three dual-output modes allow vary amounts of cooperation between screens. Personal Edition avail from $1,600 Off-line editing even from free evaluation version, w/ DMX512-controllable playback of cues or automated scheduler; new auto setup and extra selection tools available. $6,250 software only “Click and Fit™” allows NG to act as a stand-alone unit or integrated into other NGs to make a customized media server. $1,600 software only Designed for smaller budget events where a video display is desirable but the features of a full media server is unnecessary. $8,500 $8,500 price includes entire system and all components in the flight case $5,500-$6,500 Base system incl. Panorama LE PC w/ software and DMX/SMPTE USB dongle: $5,500; full system incl. optional hardware: $6,500 none $1,200 $2,000 Panorama add-on: $1,200; stand-alone software: $2,000 - does not include ArtNet-to-DMX nodes/conversion. software only Software only: Pro$5500; DV $3500; Express $2500; Lite $1500 All versions support HD playback on all layers, compressed or uncompressed Quicktime movies, 8 video inputs, cue lists, show control; upgradeable between versions, and upgradeable to 250 DMX output universes. n/a Between 13 and 33 per layer type 1 year no 4,11 or 37 channel mode no Setup dependant; 25 ch/layer; full: 43 ch/layer; max: 53 ch/ layer; internal board - 0 ch/layer. com- Hundreds no no no DMX, ArtNet, SMPTE n be ewire deo ineously; nputs n/a Unlimited n/a yes n/a yes no yes no yes n/a DMX512, ArtNet, MIDI, or Mackie controllers $26,500 Maxedia can be programmed or operated ‘stand alone’ as a virtual media switcher without a lighting console. Touch screen optimized customizable graphical user interface, custom wipes, build-in media manager and pixel mapping allows for mapping of digital 40 per layer; 10 layers = 400 DMX channels 1 year 2008 JUNE PLSN 35 COMPANY 411 P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S The set design for NBC’s Identity is helping All Access make a name for itself in television. By Kevin M. Mitchell I t may still be referred to as the “small” screen. But TV sets are growing in size. So, it turns out, are the sets for TV. “We just had a production meeting here, and everything is getting bigger and bigger,” says Clive Forrester, CEO for All Access Staging and Productions. “A lot of it has to do with our products,” Forrester said, noting the company’s transition from the concert touring industry to TV production. “Our products lend themselves more and more to the needs of the current trend in television shows and events.” Thinking Outside the Riser 411 More than a staging and platform fabricator, All Access is able to come up with custom designs that think creatively outside the typical riser. As such, it has the ability to serve as a design partner, shaping and adding momentum to demand for its services. “We’ve always done quite a few TV shows — MTV events, and so forth,” says Bob Hughes, vice president and co-owner. “But recently, in the last few years, we’ve become seriously involved in a wider variety television productions — and more of them.” Serious indeed. From wrestling to game shows to special events like Nickelodeon’s Kid’s Choice Awards, the company is increasingly being called on for big entertainment events. A Good “Deal” 411 Hughes, with All Access since 1994, cites Deal or No Deal, which premiered in late Dec. 2005, as a “break out” show for the venerable live event staging company. A personal relationship with Emmy Award winning production designer Anton Goss got Hughes in the door, but then he and the All Access team still had to prove themselves. Goss, a sought-after designer, and his team went on to do Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader, Identity, Show Me the Money, Set for Life, Master of Champions and My Dad is Better Than Your Dad, among other shows. All Access played a part in them all. “But our biggest single rental period to 36 PLSN JUNE 2008 date is our relationship with American Gladiators, Hughes says. First aired from 1989 to 1996, the athletic competition reemerged, bigger than ever, in 2008. For the TV show’s revival, All Access was given the challenge of building arena seating inside an arena, yet make it intimate. “It’s becomes a really cavernous space which is hard to fill, so we had to make the audience risers steeper and closer in. That was a particular challenge because we had to build it over the existing upperlevel arena seating.” Plexiglas Steps 411 Everything within view of the television cameras was carefully scrutinized. The show’s producers planned out every shot from every camera, including audience shots. That led All Access to use Plexiglas for the steps on the set to add a critical element of illumination. “When the audience was shown, it started looking like a black hole in the sea of people, so we constructed the steps from Plexiglas and lit them from behind,” Hughes says. “It helped bring the whole thing to life.” American Gladiators shows are typically filled to full seating capacity, and the challenge is to fit stairs for egress in the event of a fire. “That’s where our creativity comes in. We have a good team that we rely on, and one of our CAD guys works through any situation. After all, as much as I’d like to think so, I don’t have all the answers,” Hughes laughs. New Season, New Challenges Bob Hughes, vice president, All Access Staging and Productions. 411 All Access was recently involved in installing the set of American Gladiators’ next season, which will take place inside the L.A. Sports Arena. “It’s funny — you’re always happy when a show gets called back because you think you can just go in and redo it, and it’ll be easy.” Think again. The new season’s set required a complete redesign. First, they brought in two new 50-foot-by-15-foot climbing walls. At the other sound stage, the water tank was below floor level. This time they had to bring in an 180,000-gallon water tank that is 10 feet deep and 61 feet across. Because of the tank, A circular set brought visual focus to the two contestants facing off in ABC’s Duel. the walls and seats had to start at 10 feet off the ground — the height of a NBA basketball hoop. “It’s cool, though, because while it’s an above ground pool, we had to create the illusion that it’s in-ground. Right off the bat, the first bleacher is 12 feet off the floor.” The seats, meanwhile, were built to accommodate an audience of 1,500. As for the walls, they needed to be supported carefully. Staging supervisor Joe Barry put a trussing structure together to hold the walls, and it was rigged with two-ton hoists from above to support the weight and to accommodate a deck, handrails and a camera. Turning Visions into Realities 411 The current trend in prime-time game shows and special events play to All Access’s strength, Hughes says. “The first thing we try to do is take the television producer and designer’s creative vision and turn it into a reality. We’ve adopted our concert industry standard to the television world, and it has been a good fit.” All Access’s Rob Achlimbari worked on another recent television event, WWE’s WrestleMania and the Wrestling Hall of Fame Award Show. Working with set designer Jason Robinson, they re-created a South Beach hotel look. They handled the seating needs and a 50-foot high WrestleMania sign, among other elements. “We also provided the grand entry way, which is where all the wrestlers enter,” Achlimbari says. They fabricated custom pieces and, borrowing a page from their All Access playbook, they also supplied a Plexiglas staging deck, which could be lit from below. All Access’s handiwork can also be seen on ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel Live. The company supplied the outdoor stage, roof and tower system, building on its six-year relationship with the late night talk show host and his staff. “I’m very proud and happy to be part of the Jimmy Kimmel family,” Hughes says. If All Access’s success has grown along with the complexity of its installations, Hughes isn’t inclined to crow about it. “I just happen to have relationships with a few designers in town, so all this work kind of fell into my lap.” But of course, if you don’t prove yourself day in and day out, the phone stops ringing. Hughes does give in to that point: “We’ve carved a decent niche.” 411 To ensure that the phone keeps ringing, All Access tries to stay ahead of the curve on custom TV set design trends, without abandoning its basis in off-theshelf rentals or its concert touring business. “One of the great things about our rental operation is we see the demand, the way the trends are moving, and we try to fill that demand and build rental stock for some of these more lucrative custom jobs,” Hughes says. “We’ve always had an 80 percent outlook. We can provide 80 percent of your rental equipment off the shelf, and 20 percent custom equipment to give you your specific creative individual look. So in the world of seating, for one example, that means we build angle decks to interface with our inventory and it’s a facetted system — not really round, but straight-turn/ straight-turn. We’ve amassed quite a bit of rental stock with these pieces.” The company added a swing shift to its manufacturing facility for two months to fabricate nothing but rental equipment in anticipation of further demand. But that’s not to say that all this television work is going to the company’s head. The concert business remains the company’s bread and butter. And concert tours, of course, can be every bit as demanding as a hit TV show. A recent case in point: the wildly successful Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus Best of Both Worlds tour, which Hughes described as “having gotten my ass kicked by a 14-year-old girl.” “We’ve adopted our concert industry standard to the television world, and it has been a good fit.” — Bob Hughes, vice president, All Access The multi-level set for American Gladiators amounted to an arena within an arena. Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info A Balancing Act 2008 JUNE PLSN 37 WIDE ANGLE P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S LDs Leif Dixon and Chad Peters on their Co-Headlining Tour Photos & Text by SteveJennings Chad Peters used the latest version of SharpieCAD for Paramore’s backdrops. A Résumé, of Sorts, for the Gig Chad Peters (Paramore): “I would assume my career on the technical side of showbiz started like most everyone’s – a failed audition. The sweet drum gig I should have gotten turned into an offer to be the lighting guy instead. The journey’s taken me along the way. I’ve worked for Stagepro, CCE, Performance Lighting, Windy City Music, PRG, and Upstaging. The last four years I have been pretty consistently a touring tech, which allowed me chances to gain experience while running a lot of support acts. Other than a handful of smaller tours, this tour is one of my first opportunities to design on a real level. Luckily its a perfect chance to grow as a designer at the same time as the band is growing in popularity.” Leif Dixon (Jimmy Eat World): “My resume? I’m tall and incredibly sarcastic. The ‘tall’ part makes me hate European (double decker) tour busses, and the ‘sarcastic’ part has kept me single for most of my life. I have a natural affinity for Nutter Butter cookies and blackberry pie.” Leif Dixon gave Jimmy Eat World a different look with HES Showguns and tungsten specials. Putting Together a Co-Headlining Rig Leif Dixon: “I put together a very simple design of three straight trusses and a deck package and suggested to Chad that we share those fixtures. The design for my own show included an additional upstage lighting truss and a soft goods truss, and the overall layout allowed space for Chad to add his own specials, backdrops, etc. Chad and I did a few rounds of compromise until we settled on an overall shared design, with each band having their own additional specials. I tried to add a live goat to the design, but the budget did not allow for a handler, and the production manager refused to allow hay on the bus, so we had to leave the goat at a venue about two weeks into the tour.” Chad Peters: “Once the budget came back and slapped me with reality, it was much easier than I thought it would be. We agreed on much of the basics like fix ture types and gobo loads right away. The majority of what followed was bouncing e -mails back and for th about moving trusses or adding a fix ture here and there. For budget reasons we tried to share as many lights as possible so we talked about having different trim heights for each show. I n the Paramore show I toned the truss to make the different truss heights really stand out. One of the most noticeable differences to me was the floor pack age for each band changed drastically.” Peters lit Paramore’s backdrop and truss with LEDs. Two Bands, Two Looks Leif Dixon: “We use a series of backdrops – four in total – to give us a few different looks throughout the show. Ultimately, however, I think the biggest contrast between the shows came simply from the respective styles of the two designers. We did have some significantly different fixture types in our extras packages – Paramore with a ton of LED fixtures, and Jimmy Eat World with some HES Showguns and tungsten specials – that helped keep the two shows a bit different. Also, the goat liked to chew on the soft goods, so my show looked a little different every day.” 38 PLSN JUNE 2008 Chad Peters: “Ah, yes, the old ‘lights in the guitar’ cabs gag... It was actually something the band really wanted from the beginning. The biggest thing I thought stood out in my show were the Color Kinetics ColorBlaze that lit the backdrop and the Coemar LED PARs that toned the truss. It was actually a pretty big part of my show and something Leif didn’t use in his. One of my favorite differences was actually Leif ’s show. He had 100-watt bulbs that hung throughout the rig. I would make it out to FOH most nights just to see that.” Dixon used VectorWorks to draw his plots for Jimmy Eat World, shown here. Programming and Control Leif Dixon: “I use a MA Lighting GrandMA Light and programmed a large portion of the show at home using the Light and MA’s 3D Visualizer software. I use VectorWorks to draw my plots, while Chad uses SharpieCAD. I think my plots were a bit easier to read, though he definitely won the efficiency contest; it would take me an hour every time I needed to draft a revision, while he could have a new plot in under two minutes.” Chad Peters: “I used the Flying Pig Systems Hog iPC running Hog3 mode with a mini wing. The previz was done using ESP Vision.” I am still learning VectorWorks and am incredibly slow, so I found SharpieCAD and a digital camera was the best way to keep up with the changes in the plot. In my defense though, the symbol for the goat in my plot looked way better than the VectorWorks one Leif had. Mine had some grass to eat!” CREW Lighting Designer/Director: Leif Dixon (Jimmy Eat World) Lighting Designer/Director: Chad Peters (Paramore) Crew Chiefs: Mark Weil, Kevin Tyler Lighting Techs: Blake Rodgers, Jerry Smith Rigger/Carpenter: The Amazing Dave Johnson Production Manager: Marc Immerman Tour Manager: Mark Haworth (Jimmy Eat World) Tour Manager: Andrew Weiss (Paramore) Lighting Company: Ed & Ted’s Excellent Lighting (Kevin Forster, account rep) GEAR Lighting Consoles: MA Lighting grandMA (main), MA Lighting GrandMA Full-size (backup), Flying Pig Systems Hog iPC console 23 14 8 8 18 13 9 18 8 1 Martin MAC 2000 Profiles Martin MAC 2000 Wash fixtures Martin MAC 700 Profiles High End Systems Showguns DWE 4-Liter Martin Atomic 3000 Strobes Color Kinetics ColorBlaze 72 LED Strip Lights Coemar LED PARs ETC Source Four PARs goat The two LDs compromised on a rig that allowed for each designer to add a few specials. Shown here, a moment from Paramore’s show. The Band Had Ideas Leif Dixon: “The band take a significant interest in the overall presentation of their show. Before I joined the tour, they worked with another designer (Dan Hadley) to conceive the soft goods they’d use on this tour. During the design and budgeting process they frequently will check in on the status and ask lots of questions and offer up ideas, especially about ideas for gags or other ways to make the show unique. Once the rig design is finalized and a show-flow has been es- tablished for the soft goods, all lighting and cueing is left up to me.” Chad Peters: “Paramore are really into lighting. They give me freedom to do what I think looks good, but sometimes they will have requests for a certain color, or more strobe, etc. I would like to add a huge ‘thank you’ to our crew, and working with Leif. Speaking of our crew, we have fun on this tour. Just ask our sound monitor guy who we taped into his bunk.” Band members from Paramore and Jimmy Eat World took an active interest in the lighting design for their tours. Shown here, Jimmy Eat World. Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info 2008 JUNE PLSN 39 Lukasz DrapaLa INTERVIEW Taking Risks, Taking Breath Away By RobLudwig Ballet Deviare is known for dance performances set to heavy metal music. Here is a moment from Forged. I n this month’s PLSN Interview, we get acquainted with Diana Kesselschmidt. The multi-talented lighting designer with a clever and sharp sense of humor tells about how she gained real-life experience in high school and college, why her professor thought she had gone off the deep-end and her most intimate design to date. PLSN: So how did you get involved in the industry and how long have you been doing it? DK: The first set I worked on was at day camp. I was six. In hindsight it was completely inappropriate for children to be wielding saws and paint — nevertheless, they let us. It was you go up that spiral staircase and figure out how to use the board.” I was meeting with the director the next day and the show was the day after. You mean you had two days to get up to speed and you had never touched a lighting console before? Yeah. I went back the next year and spent the entire summer making cable, off the spool, and never went back to carpentry. You started doing what a lot of people learn in theatrical houses at a very young age. I got into theatre because the shows at school and summer camps had plenty of vol- “I served mini meat pies in fillo dough at intermission. The professors looked at me like I was crazy.” Bye Bye Birdie and we were supposed to be the chorus. They didn’t know what else to do with us while the bigger kids were rehearsing, so they put us to work. I don’t know if anyone knows what a coping saw is anymore. They just let us play with them. It was a horrible idea but no one was injured. Is that what led you to scenic construction? From that point on, when a show was happening, I was there, but not on stage. I liked being a part of the cooperative effort. By 14 I was a really competitive carpenter. I had worked on two gigantic two-story sets, with huge turntables and double-swing doors. What got you interested in lighting and how did you make that transition? One day, the T.D. at Usdan Center for the Creative and Performing Arts, Howard Rhorbach — he’s IATSE Local 1 and my first mentor — came over and said, “The lighting guy doesn’t want to do it anymore.” I said, “What does that mean?” “That means unteer actors, no one to do anything else, and I was qualified. I was a part of the Student Television Arts Company with Ron DeMaio. It is a program wherein high school kids learn film study, theatre study, cooperative creativity, arts, dance, drama, music and writing. That’s where I began learning about visual arts and where I could use all the creative tools I had picked up to produce something. Was that offered at your school as an extracurricular activity? It was offered in school and was sort of a fringe program. It was an extended class. Did it take place in your school? Yes. Sometimes we had outside workshops with the program’s alumni. They were producers, directors, designers and writers — some of them were published or had done pretty high profile work — so we had industry mentors through the company. That sounds like a great experience. It was wonderful. How old were you at this point? Fifteen through 18. That must have been a very impressionable time. Yes. When you are doing film workshops at that age on the magic of Hitchcock, it can really direct a person’s life. I was very lucky. So you were sold on it at that point. Where did it take you from there? I did try to get away from theatre and keep it as a hobby. I went into archeology because it was so much more interesting at the time, but that didn’t last long. A lot of people talk about the theatre addiction — they can’t get away from it, no matter what they do. That’s what happened to me. I was trying to find something that I could really study in college. It didn’t occur to me at all that you could actually study theatre until I was already a sophomore. I realized there were other people doing something that I’d rather do and I wanted to get in on that. Where did this occur? I went to Boston University and it was just an accident that they happened to have a nice theatre program. The first year ended, and I told my parents, “I don’t think you’re going to like what I have to say, but, I’m pretty certain that I want to do this.” They were both supportive. You’ve had some success early on in your career. When did you graduate? I graduated from grad school in 2004. Did you do shows while attending BU? I spent all my spare time interning and traveling to New York to work, which I thought was the best way to learn. I think a lot of people started in the industry straight out of high school and worked their way up. Or they studied in college and worked their way up from a different starting point. It seems you got the best of both. I did try really hard to arrange what they called in school “real life experience,” which is Lighting Designer Diana Kesselschmidt actually an absurd title. It’s hard to go back and forth between school and work because the rules don’t match up. How many hours would you spend in the theatre at that point? In Boston, I spent whatever hours were required to help everybody with their shows and the time I took to work on my thesis. It culminated in a PowerPoint cue-to-cue of Sweeney Todd with soundtrack clips that runs by itself, as a Sweeney abridged. I served mini meat pies in fillo dough at intermission. The professors looked at me like I was crazy. Seeing that look was the best moment of my entire school career. I had gone into isolation for three and a half months to work on my thesis, and I looked like an eccentric by the time I crawled out of that hole. I’d also take two or three weeks off here and there and go to New York and work with anybody that would have me. Once I was there, I’d work up to 16-hour days. I showed up first just to be there — and do anything I possibly could — and then stay until the very end to close up, so everyone knew I’d heard every last piece of information and I’d have answers in the morning. That’s great advice for people in school and doing internships. I hope so. I’ve spent a lot of my time guest teaching. I taught students in the theatre departments at Bergen Community College, Fitchburg State College and I’ve been emailing back-andforth with a few of the kids from BU. I do everything I can to help clarify the difference between rhetoric and useful information that will help them become comfortable with themselves in time to do their job successfully. 40 PLSN JUNE 2008 100.0806.40-42.indd 40 6/2/08 1:45:50 PM With Caged Visions, at the HB Theater in New York, Kesselschmidt, director Rasa Allen Kazlas and the cast and crew made the most of a minimal set and rig. Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Do you think feeling comfortable with oneself is a prerequisite for being a good designer? I find that with most students that I work with, and with the work I did as a student, the difference between getting things right and wrong is almost purely confidence. Most often, people aren’t asked to do more than they know; and if they are, confidence helps them to know when to ask questions. Do you mean confidence in their existing abilities? Yes. The catch-22 is that confidence isn’t something you can make up — you do have to earn it with practice. On the shows you’ve worked on since graduating, what have you found most challenging? I think challenges and pride go handin-hand for me. I love solving challenges and I’m really proud when I do. I think my greatest challenge is Ballet Deviare. Their first show was Lightening the Dark. It was in a theatre that had 34 working 1.2k dimmers, 75-watt bulbs and a ETC Microvision. They had a wonderful choreographer and a good managing director who had experience in just about everything except theatre. My job over the last five years with them has been to help turn their dream into a reality — in the most clichéd sense, but also in he most in-depth sense — because I introduced them to production management and stage management. Why you would want to put money into a light plot, how big the plot could get, how they could make scenery useful without being impossible to design, manufacture and transport and how lighting and scenery can work together with a specific piece. Now, five years later, Ballet Deviare’s Memento Mori is a full blown ballet — 180 circuits, scenery, effects, piece specific lighting designed in detail, custom costumes — ready to perform this summer and tour this fall. Memento Mori is a perfect example of building magic from nothing. I pushed the company heavily to add a more personal element this time around, as we have developed a fan base that has known us long enough to have an interest in us personcontinued on page 42 Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info You’ve done a lot of work since then — do you prefer to work in New York? I’ve done a season or two in East Hampton and Cortland Rep and a few other places. I did a couple of seasons of an ice show in Boston. I love to travel for fun. I end up sticking to New York for work because I’m a New Yorker, born and bred. INTERVIEW Mark Lanks P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Kesselschmidt turns up the visual heat for a scene with Maggie and Brick for a Boston University production of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. Another scene from Ballet Deviare’s Forged, at the Abrons Art Center in New York. “I showed up first just to be there — and do anything I possibly could — and then stay until the very end to close up, so everyone knew I’d heard every last piece of information and I’d have answers in the morning.” Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info continued from 41 ally. This show was delayed six months from our usual yearly schedule because so many company members were dealing with death and disease within their families. The pieces in Memento Mori were taken from our rep, or created fresh, to present the full gamut of living, the strength, the weakness and the hope that we have to continually choose in order to keep living. This may be the first truly personal piece I have ever worked on. Each number is designed with dance, death metal/ traditional rock and film editing style in mind. In the plot and use of angles, you can see the dance. In the impact and fast cueing, you can see the metal and rock. In the length of the cue times, the dynamic contrasts and risky use of space, you can see my film study background. The unusual color choices of R50, R370, L088 and this time R32, you can see me, my vision. Only a combination of these three loves in me could warrant such an unusual palette. It helps that I was able to control the unity of the design elements by designing and building the scenery to interact specifically with the lighting. I’ve found that no matter how hard I try to stick to lighting design — because of all of my training with carpentry, sewing, organization, management — I just can’t shut my mouth when people ask me, “How do we do X, Y and Z?” That’s a good quality to have. But it gets me into a lot of trouble. I don’t now how many times I’ve had to do absurd things because someone figured out I happen to know how to do X, Y or Z. But that’s puts you in a unique position. A lot of designers say their most gratifying moments occur when they pull something off, even though they don’t have much to work with. Absolutely. One of my proudest productions was Caged Visions, at HB Playwrights. We walked in and the most exciting things in the theatre were their new striplights, which were beautiful, but we still had to spend half the evening attaching the plugs ourselves. They had some benches and sticks and that was the show. But, with a very skilled director, a very talented cast and a crew that loved each other, we came up with something that was absolutely breathtaking. 42 PLSN JUNE 2008 100.0806.40-42.indd 42 6/2/08 1:25:35 PM Video Cubes Add New Dimension to Awards Show Transparent LED Maker Expands in U.S. G-Lec’s transparent B:xel LED video system. The SAMA awards show featured StageQubes that opened and closed, providing an entrance and backdrop for performers. SUN CITY, South Africa — A variety of video effects and moving lights jazzed up the 14th annual South African Music Awards (SAMAs), staged at the Sun City Superbowl and broadcast live on SABC1. The event celebrates South Africa’s diverse range of music with 64 awards categories and was watched by 3 million viewers. Robe’s StageQube 324 LED panels, supplied by Mark Gaylard of MGG, were a prominent visual feature onstage, with 24 of the units adding a new dimension to the show. The lighting design by Robert Hoey also included Robe moving lights, and the stage design featured additional low- and high-resolution LED surfaces and plasma screen columns. The production manager was David Hossey of Strike Productions. The StageQubes were placed center stage, mounted on two customized movable stage trucks which split the panels down Continued on page 46 Screen Company Rep Gets Leed AP Certification WARSAW, IN — Tim Shinners, CTS, a sales consultant for Da-Lite Screen Co., has received Leed AP certification from the nonprofit U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), which encourages businesses to develop environmentally friendly practices and programs. A Leed AP certificate documents knowledge of the Leed rating system and its application in practice. Da-Lite has initiated several programs in 2008 including its Screen Green exchange program, which makes it easier for customers to recycle old projection screens instead of sending them to a landfill. The company said that as more of its staff becomes Leed AP accredited, Da-Lite will be better positioned to respond to RFPs requiring Leed APs. The certification will also help Da-Lite assist architects and other clients working on Leed-rated projects. In addition to its Screen Green exchange program, Da-Lite Screen Co. has attained multiple levels of GreenGuard certification for its projection screens and fabrics. The company has also obtained ISO 14001:2004 registration for its Environmental Management System. NEW YORK — Germany-based G-Lec, a manufacturer of transparent LED video systems, is expanding its U.S. operations with a new location in New York. The company’s products are also on display at XL Video’s new XL LED Lab in New York’s SoHo district. The XL Lab is currently showcasing the Phantom 30, Phantom 60 and B:xel system, giving G-Lec an opportunity to extend its contact with designers in stage and architectural environments. By seeing the installations at the lab, architects and designers can learn more about the ways that LED video products can be used. The New York office is now at 75 Broad Street, 21st Floor, New York, NY 10004. The phone number is 646.405.1023, and the email address is info.usa@g-lec.com. Inside… 44 Busy Projectors The Zee Cine Awards Show for India-based films kept 24 projectors busy. 48 Video World Digital technology makes it quick and easy to produce video content — and easy to lose it as well. Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info A nostalgic Elton John image gazes out over the Garden. NEWS P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Zee Cine Awards Show Keeps 24 Projectors Busy LONDON — The Zee Cine Awards, an international awards show for India-based films, got busy this year with a dizzying array of projected imagery. To create more than 90 stage projection looks, E/T/C London supplied 24 Christie 20K projectors and 16 OnlyView servers for control. The 2008 event was staged at London’s ExCel Centre, produced by Cineyug and broadcast on Zee TV. The starting point was an original set design by scenic designer Bart Clement. The widescreen feel of the set was enhanced with its deceptive angles and shrinking points, which amplified the visual depth of the space. E/T/C projected onto the proscenium arch, the ceiling, both walls and the floor of the set, and each projection area was a different size and shape, creating a series of interlocking visual backdrops. The default projection look for the Awards presentations featured an old cinema style tromp-l’oeil treatment, complete with red swagged curtains. The fast-paced show included 37 Award presentations and live performances ranging from Bhangra rap artists to big carnival troupes. Along with more than 90 stage projection looks, each award presentation used four or five different projection cues. Andy Joyes managed the project for E/T/C London. Paul Chatfield was commissioned to produce all of the artwork, on which he worked closely with scenic artist, Omung Kumar, and E/T/C’s OnlyView programmer and The Zee Cine Awards program was staged in London, broadcast on Zee TV and included a dizzying array of projected imagery. The wide-screen feel of the set design fit in well with the awards program, which honors those who make India-based films. section, flanked by a custom staircase with Barco OLite LED modules embedded into its fascia, which was built by Stage One to E/T/C’s requirements. Eight more Christies — four per side — projected across the stage onto the opposing walls and vertically soft-edged in the middle using OnlyView. Two projectors a side covered the ceiling. Finding a position for these was tricky — they had to be inside the proscenium, above the heads of the dancers and far apart enough to clear a car being wheeled onstage towards the end of the show. The focal point at the top of the stairs was a 16-foot-by-eight-foot OLite wall, which was center-split and acted as a pair of doors for entrances and exits. XL Video supplied all the OLite elements used in the show to Joyes’ specification. Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info operator, Richard Porter. An international team of technicians from E/T/C’s offices in London and Paris crewed the event. One of the many logistical challenges facing Joyes was determining the projection layout and where to rig the Christies. Six were used to cover the pros arch — two flown vertically and four horizontally. The return surfaces of the shallow proscenium construction were also covered in projection, and OnlyView was used to re-map the image so it stayed in perspective, lining up on both surfaces simultaneously. Onstage, right behind the proscenium arch, a flown center-cluster of four machines fitted with wide-angle lenses was concealed in the roof, pointing downwards to cover the floor. These projected onto a triangular All the images were distortion-corrected and fitted to the projection surfaces and the OLite using OnlyView in an effort to give a consistent look to the video, regardless of the type of surface it was displayed on. The challenge here was to work out a template for all the differently sized and angled surfaces. Chatfield and Porter attempted to do this with an “exploded box” rendering for the stage and the proscenium arch. The idea was to map the direction and travel of the imagery from one surface to another so it became a seamless operation. The artwork was then worked on as a flat piece with the appropriate masks applied to make it fit the assorted projection areas. The template was then “refolded” together into 3D format. Having received the majority of the artwork from the client less than a week before the show, Chatfield and Porter had their work cut out for them. The mapping and programming period was intense and constantly evolving. On the night of the event, many elements of the show were swapped from the intended order at the last minute, rather than running in the order in which it had been programmed. The OnlyView system managed to keep up with these last-minute changes. A wide variety of image sources were incorporated into the show, including Mpeg files and PhotoShop images. The Awards playins were all stored on five Doremi hard drives and inserted into the mix via OnlyView. “Twenty-four flown projectors for a one-off live event is quite a challenge. Even though there was very limited technical time on site, the show went seamlessly and the client is very happy,” said Joyes, adding “It’s a great tribute to all our crew who worked very hard under lots of pressure.” Other crew members included Briony Margetts, Fabrice Auchere, Robin Darraux, Mark Hayes, Phil Pieridis, Fergus Noble and Michael Barry. E/T/C London’s Steve Larkins helped Chatfield and Porter produce the graphics, and John Steel and Jack Middlebrook joined them for the build. XL Video’s crew of Graham Vinall, Chris Isaacson and Pete Egan worked alongside the E/T/C team. 44 PLSN JUNE 2008 Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info NEWS P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Creating a Proscenium Theatre in 10 Days OSA turned a bare convention hall into an event-ready space in less than 10 days. LAS VEGAS — OSA International, Inc. was tasked with the challenge of turning a concrete convention hall into a working proscenium theatre in less than 10 days when the Palazzo Las Vegas casino opened earlier this year. As the newly-appointed technical producer for the first event to take place in the revamped space, OSA needed to coordinate audio, light- ing, video, staging, scenic and drape elements and audience risers. The company’s new video fly pack also made its debut, providing record and IMAG functions on four screens — two 15-foot-by20-foot screens at the stage and two 7.5-footby-10-foot screens mid-way back. As a group, they provided a clear viewing experience for an audience of 3,500. Mike Patton of OSA notes that the real test for a system’s capabilities is “its ability to deal with on-site changes un-noticed.” The system’s support gear allowed for ease of setup and the flexibility to adapt to the needs of these acts, Patton added. The main component of OSA’s system was a Ross Synergy 2 multi-definition SDI switcher with 16 inputs and two mixer effects, Patton says.“This switcher gives us the capability of mixing two separate destinations simultaneously, such as in this multi-screen event where we may need to mix each screen independently.” Another key piece of the fly pack was the Evertz Xenon 64x64 MD router, which allows for signal to flow internally through, and externally from, the system. OSA used this piece to externally route the inputs, which included three Sony DXC-D55 cameras, for record, and to internally route them to the multi-viewer. OSA’s fly pack made its second appearance in New Orleans at the 2008 NBA All-Star Technology Summit. OSA’s three Sony DXCD55 camera packages brought the image magnification of the event through the system. Each camera had an ISO record, along with a program overlap, on five Sony MSWM2000 record decks. The system also was used for the Legends Brunch at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center in New Orleans. Ken O’Connell, technical director of OSA, said the 2008 event marked the first year that “the NBA did not have to bring a broadcast production truck.” With the three Sony DXC D55 cameras shooting the event, the system provided a direct broadcast feed to the Turner Network’s NBATV. Projection Company Expands in Asia SINGAPORE — Digital Projection International (DPI), a manufacturer of projection systems, opened a new sales and distribution hub in Singapore. Gordon Tay, vice president, will lead the staff serving DPI customers in Singapore, Malaysia, Brunei, Thailand, Indonesia, Korea, the Philippines, New Zealand, Australia, Taiwan and Vietnam. Called Digital Projection Asia, the Singapore office will also complement the company’s presence in China. Video Cubes Add New Dimension to Awards Show Continued from Projection Connection cover Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info the middle so they could be moved on and off stage for changeovers. With the ability to open and close, they provided a stage entrance and a dynamic backdrop for all the live performers, beneath the main LED screen. Eugene Naidoo, the TV director, wanted the StageQubes run without their diffusion panels on the fronts to produce a dotty LED effect on camera. Graphics and content for all the screen surfaces were custom-created for the event and fed directly into the StageQube controller. They were run at 60 percent brightness to stay balanced with the rest of the lighting design. Hoey operated the lighting using a WholeHog3 console, with the Robe ColorSpot 700E ATs and ColorSpot 250E ATs — also supplied by Strike Productions — all focused on the stage and set. LD Mauritz Jacobs also used MGG’s StageQubes on South Africa’s most recent Idols series, another set of shows produced by Strike Productions for independent TV channel MNET. For the Idols series, the StageQubes were used to create four stepped pyramid shapes positioned around the stage and flanking a large projection screen, with their orientation changing week to week. An ArKaos media server supplied a wide selection of abstract effects and wallpaper content. “LED is definitely a technology of the future for television visuals,” said Gaylard of MGG. 46 PLSN JUNE 2008 P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Barco NX-6 Barco is expanding the NX product line with the introduction of NX-6 six millimeter indoor LED tile. Each tile provides a 4200:1 contrast ratio and a calibrated output of 2000 NIT, and each 3-in-1 SMD LED uses black silicon resin instead of white epoxy for visual clarity. For mounting, NX-6 tiles use the same Mag-frame as NX-4. Mag-frame is Barco’s carbon fiber rental structure that uses magnets instead of screws to secure the tiles. In addition, a new “creative” option is being introduced that enables customers to create concave or convex curves with all NX tiles. Barco • 877.992.2726 • www.barco.com Chief Power Accessories NEW PRODUCTS Madrix LED Lighting Control Software Madrix Windows-based lighting control software that can be used with any console. Madrix Basic includes16 DMX universes, DMX512 and ArtNet II output, cuelist, two effect pipelines, 120 storage places with layer technology, unlimited layers, graphical mapping function, and fixture editor. Madrix Professional includes 64 DMX universes, DVI output, and all the features of the Basic package. The new 2.3b release features include: load background images for preview windows, monochrome mode for the equalizer effect, new direction mode for the equalizer tubes effect, support for the GLP large DMX 1024 protocol, cross and opacity fader, and more. Madrix USA • 303.296.7778 • www.madrix.us Sharp TL LCD Display Series Chief Manufacturing now offers power accessories integrated with Chief mounts. These accessories improve the audio and video performance of projectors and flat panel displays by cleaning and purifying the AC while also providing surge and spike protection. The new range includes the CMS440P suspended ceiling kit with power outlet conditioner, the CMS445P replacement tilt suspended ceiling kit with power outlet conditioner and the PAC521P in-wall box with power outlet conditioner. The accessories replace the need for an outlet while providing lossless AC cleaning. They are not visible from below the ceiling and can recess into an in-wall box for discreet, high-performance power conditioning. Sharp’s new TL Professional LCD Monitor line includes the 52-inch class (52.03 inches diagonal) TL-M5200 and the 46-inch class (45.9 inches diagonal) TL-M4600. The series features a new thin, lightweight cabinet design, RJ-45 LAN control, twomegapixel 1920 x 1080 HD resolution, pixel response time of less than 6 ms, 176° viewing angles, 1500:1 (TL-M4600) and 2000:1 (TL-M5200) contrast ratio, and an array of input connectors to show all types of content, from DVD to varying PC resolutions from both analog and digital (DVI-D) sources for all types of presentations. They include a three-year on-site parts and labor limited warranty, including three-year warranty on the backlight. Chief Manufacturing • 800.582.6480 • www.chiefmfg.com Sharp Electronics Corporation • 866.484.7825 • www.SharpLCD.com Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info 2008 JUNE PLSN 47 VIDEO WORLD P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Oh, Brave New Workflow I By PaulBerliner f you’d like the full surround sound version of this column, I’d recommend playing Bob Dylan’s “The Times They are A-Changin’ ” as you read along. I recently had the opportunity to shoot with a Sony XDCAM-EX, a new full-featured professional camcorder that offers HD resolution up to 1080i, at a very economical price point. The differentiating factor, though, is that the model EX records on high speed, high capacity “SxS” memory cards, and this presents a few workflow surprises to the shooter. This month’s video installment isn’t intended to review the XDCAM-EX, and I’m not going to read the spec sheet to you. Instead, the intention is to provide a few words to the wise for the shooter who’s making the transition from media-based recording to memorybased (solid state) recording. Things indeed are a-changing. PLSN A Box of Tapes From a quality and flexibility standpoint, Sony’s XDCAM-EX is absolutely superb at its price point, and it sports many features typically found on high-end cameras. Of course, with any new compact camcorder, every square millimeter of the camera surface is covered with buttons and switches. So for my first tip, you better know (blindly) where gain, white balance, iris, peaking, and zebras are — before you head out on a shoot. But given these wonders of miniaturization and quality, there are hidden costs in the workflow. As an editor who learned his trade back in the 1980s, I’m rooted in a workflow that involves physical media — specifically, tape. I write the script, produce the graphics, hire the talent, shoot the footage, index the original tapes, edit in non-linear fashion on the PC, and then deliver the edited master to the client. At the end of the day, I’ve got a box of original tapes that I can pull from the archive when the client wants to re-edit. Today’s modern memory-based workflow changes the entire dynamic. With cameras such as the Sony XDCAM-EX and the Panasonic HVX series, recording is solid state. The camera’s record path has no moving parts, and unlike tape-based methods, there are no spinning heads moving across magnetic tape. Instead, the recording medium is a tiny flash memory card, optimized for the high bandwidth and high capacity data rates required for HD. Typically, these cameras have slots for two memory cards. PLSN Dollars, Cents and Gigs For today’s lesson in economics, a 16 gigabyte (GB) “P2” card for the Panasonic HVX-200 costs around $899.00, while a 16 GB Sony SxS card costs around $875. Record capacities are similar (around 60 minutes), but recording times can vary based on the quality and compression ratio at which you record. Regardless, the media is by no means inexpensive. Weigh these factors Panasonic P2 Card, 16 GB Sony SxS PRO Card, 16 GB against a traditional tapebased workflow in the DV format. You can go down to Best Buy and pick storm cloud, and your footage is toast (along up a five-pack of mini-DV tapes for about 30 with all the Earth’s data, but that’s a topic for bucks. If you shoot at a 20:1 ratio for your another column). Your hairy-eared PA can’t rehour-long documentary, you’ve spent about member any instruction beyond “Here, dude, back this up” … and your footage is toast. You 120 bucks for tape stock. No biggie. But in the memory-based workflow, invited Murphy to the shoot. Toast! Me? Concerned? I’m only trying to prothere’s no way that I’m gonna stock up on a six-pack of flash memory cards at over tect my client’s footage, because I don’t have $800.00 a pop. You could make a sizable a box of camera original tapes in the vault at down-payment on a new HD camera for that the end of the day. On this particular shoot, price. Instead, these puppies are intended my caution paid off, and there’s a beautiful edited master to show. to be re-used — again and again. PLSN The Need to Re-Use Media This little financial and operational quirk — the need to re-use your original recording media — presents an interesting dilemma to the paranoid producer/director (me). Let’s say you go out on location with only one flash memory card. In order to record hour number two, you have to delete your original footage and make a safety backup — in the same way that you backup the memory card from your digital SLR after your Grand Canyon vacation. After the backup, you delete all the pix to free up space, and the wise photographer probably makes a backup of the backup — in case your primary PC decides to toast its hard drive. If you’re shooting in HD for a client, however, with a major production budget, some serious planning is required — as I learned first-hand on last week’s shoot. First of all, for field recording, you must include a laptop in your production inventory, plus lots of batteries, and a stack of portable USB hard drives. As another prerequisite, the laptop requires a high speed flash card reader compatible with the Sony SxS or Panasonic P2 format. You might also want to hire a PA to handle the backup tasks and logistics — yet another line item on the bid. Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info PLSN Brave New Workflow Even with the luxury of a dual flash card setup, the workflow now goes like this: Shoot the first hour. On the camera, switch over to memory card slot B — and continue shooting. Eject the first card and back up all of your footage to the PC, and/or the external USB drive. Ensure that you account for the backup time, which can take upwards of 20 minutes, depending on the resolution at which you recorded. Now, Mr. Trustworthy, here comes the fun part <shudder>. With your first hour of camera original footage backed up, insert the card back into the camera, delete all the clips from the card, and continue shooting. It makes an old media-based shooter like me turn gray. (Wait — I already am turning gray). So, what could go wrong in this workflow? Drop the PC or one of the external USB drives, and your footage is toast. The Earth passes through a high-gauss magnetic intergalactic 48 PLSN JUNE 2008 PLSN But Wait, There’s More Yesterday’s archive solution was a tape vault, with all of your masters waiting patiently on the shelves. Today’s archive solution is one (or more) terabyte raid arrays, capable of storing all the footage that you’ve shot. Editors typically call this “nearline” storage, because the footage can be brought back online fairly quickly if a reedit is required. For true long term storage, editors are turning to ultra-high capacity tape-based solutions, such as those made by Quantum. As an alternative, you could cut Blu-Ray disks of the footage, but this introduces additional compression. In this digital age, the question of longterm archiving actually poses some interesting questions. When a big film studio archives a movie, a sprocket hole still resembles a sprocket hole — year after year. And film projectors will still be film projectors, in spite of the migration to digital cinema. The question is … will the digital devices, codecs and drivers with which you archive your digital video masters still be in use — five or ten years from now? And if not, what expenses would be required to keep those archives current with the changing state of storage? My computer junkyard at home (if it’s anything like yours), is full of obsolete devices, some of which no longer work. The power supply has failed, the drivers have been lost, the OS has changed — and those archives are harder and harder (if not impossible) to access. Consider the floppy disk (RIP). Yes, we embrace the new technology, and for the shooter, it puts wondrous capabilities at our fingertips — as simple and elegant as solid state recording. Yet it can’t be overlooked that this technology is delivered with a price, in terms of workflow, compatibility and complexity. The underlying message is — adapt, but be fully aware of the ramifications. During a shoot, I used to say “roll tape” to the crew. Now, I can’t say “roll” — because nothing inside the camera is rolling, and I can’t say “tape,” because it’s a lump of silicon. I know — how about just “action!” Paul Berliner is President of Berliner Productions in Davis, Calif. He can be reached at pberliner@plsn.com Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info ROAD TEST P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S High End Systems Showpix Y ou can throw away the spec sheet for this fixture — or at least put it away until you’ve seen the video. Sure, it’s great to read the specs, especially for a brand new fixture like the High End Systems Showpix. But until you’ve seen the video at www.highend. com/showpix/videoqt.html, you ain’t seen nothing yet. Differences At a Glance RT Of course, watching the video is only second best to seeing the product itself; the Showpix speaks for itself. It is a moving yoke fixture that looks an awful lot like the Showgun — same housing, same LEDs — except it has a lot more of them. Instead of a 2000-watt MSR lamp ringed by 36 3-watt RGB LEDs, it has an array of 127 3-watt LEDs without the MSR lamp. Did I say it speaks for itself? It screams, really. Especially when all 127 LEDs pan into your face. I measured 46 footcandles at 16 feet in white with a Minolta T-10 Illuminance Meter, and considering the size of the field — 45º beam angle and 80º field angle; almost 27 feet in diameter at 16 feet throw distance — it’s a lot of light any way you measure it. High End’s official spec is 24,000 “RGB lumens.” This is their way of quantifying a discontinuous spectrum like RGB LEDs. Devising a New Metric RT It’s a common issue in the industry; you can’t take a conventional handheld illuminance meter made for measuring incandescent or natural sunlight and expect it to yield an accurate reading for a narrow band source like LEDs. So High End devised a way of comparing the light output with a conventional automated light. They measured the Showpix in seven different colors — white, red, blue, green, cyan, magenta, and yellow — and did the same with a Studio Color 575. Comparing the results, they found the ratio of light from the Showpix to the light from the Studio Color for each color. For example, the white light might be .5X, the red 3X, etc. Then they averaged them out and multiplied by the number of lumens in a Studio Color, which is 12,000. the media server, including the ability to use standard “lenses” or masks that change the look and feel of the graphics coming from the fixture. There are several DMX512 modes, from 451 channels in enhanced mode to 12 channels in big wash mode that allow you to tailor your rig to your needs. In standard mode it uses 70 DMX512 channels. Innocuous to Interesting Physically Similar RT But the crowning feature is the graphics capability. If a picture is worth a thousand words, then this low-res, high-brightness moving yoke digital luminaire speaks volumes. One-hundred and twenty-seven color-changing LED pixels arranged in a concentric circle array can paint quite an impressive picture, particularly when it’s aided by the onboard media server and pixel-mapping application software they call Echo. By dragging and dropping graphics — any graphics — into the application, it automatically performs an algorithm that maps animated graphics or still graphics into the LED array. The built-in visualizer allows you to view the results on the computer display. It can take a video clip of every day ordinary life and turn it into something extraordinary. Just by adjusting the sensitivity, some of the most innocuous video turns out to be very interesting. You can load the content via a USB port or by DMX512 (using RDM-like protocol) into the on-board media server. It comes with 255 factory files and it holds up to 255 user files with up to 256 frames per file. The media server allows you to “scratch” via DMX, adjust the playback rate, rotate globally or by layer and use a number of crossfades and transitions. There is a lot more to By RichardCadena RT From a physical point of view, the fixture is identical to the Showgun except for the LEDs. By removing four screws on the snoot of the fixture you can access the LEDs. Each LED pie-shaped segment is held in place by three screws and they have a snap-on connector, so they are easily replaced. Even the drive boards for the LEDs have retained fasteners and the circuit boards snap into place. The road to hell is paved with bad inventions. This is not one of them. The Showpix is a refreshing change in a sea of mediocre automated lights and LED wash fixtures. It can provide a big color changing wash or it can entertain with animated color-changing graphics. Or it can do both at the same time. The Showpix from High End Systems comes with a built-in media server. What it is: Homogeneous RGB color mixing wash fixture with animation and graphics capability Who it’s for: Color wash and/or graphics playback Pros: Very bright, very wide field, dynamic low-res graphics, modular, easy to service, built-in media server, versatile pixel-mapping application software Cons: Very large, heavy Retail Price: $16,500 It also packs 127 color-changing LEDs in a concentric circle array. Scenic Alternatives T Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info here are an increasing number of options for incorporating video into today’s sets. LED tubes typically contain a row of pixels composed of red, green and blue LEDs. Some work by mapping pixels from a computer image directly to the pixels in the tube. Some can do color changes within a single tube. Others only offer solid color changes. LED strips are pixel strips that can be mounted and arranged in a wide variety of shapes and sizes. Transparent LED displays are lightweight and modular for indoor use, and add a creative element to any designers’ tool bag. LED backdrops are modular panels that provide creative low-resolution graphics. And a few manufacturers are taking the LED concept into the 3D world with 3D LED. — Vickie Claiborne, from Video Digerati, PLSN, May 2008 50 PLSN MAY 2008 Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info TECHNOPOLIS P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Stealth Programming The Art of Moving Your Lights Under the Radar By PhilGilbert S everal years ago I made an amazing discovery about automated lights — they actually make noise when they’re on. I know, I know — I was as shocked to learn this as you are. Up until that point, all of my experience had led me to believe that those babies manufacturers began addressing the issue by offering specially engineered versions of automated lights designed to reduce the noise rating factor by using noise absorbing foam and baffles. The first version that I recall was the Cyberlight SV — “SV” for “Studio Version.” Years ago, there was no such thing as a quiet version of moving lights. They either made noise or they weren’t on. were silently operating behind the 115 dB wall of sound produced by whatever band happened to be on stage at the moment. The moment of elucidation came when I was trying to place several automated lights on a major television show and the light director informed me that there was a problem. The audio engineers were complaining about the noise emanating from the general direction of the eight automated fixtures. No problem, I thought; just make sure they weren’t moving when the band wasn’t playing and no one would be the wiser. But I was surprised to find out that it wasn’t the panning and tilting that the audio engineers were picking up, but the fan noise. They said something about the frequency being in the vocal range and they weren’t happy. Baffling Technology TECH In the early days of automated lighting, there was no such thing as a quiet version of moving lights. They either made noise or they weren’t on. But due to the popularity of the technology, It had an acoustic baffle that was tuned to the frequency of the fan and was supposed to cut the noise in half. There are now many other automated lights with similar designs, such as the Vari*Lite VL 3000 Series Q — “Q” for “Quiet” version. Of course, there are also several automated lights without any fans at all. These fixtures have incandescent lamps with convection cooling. Among them are Martin’s MAC T W1, High End Systems’ Studio Command Halogen, Robe’s ColorWash 750 AT Tungsten, ETC’s Revolution, and VariLite’s VL1000 Tungsten. But the absence of forced air cooling doesn’t necessarily translate to completely silent operation. There are other moving parts, and moving parts can be noisy parts, particularly fast moving parts. When a fixture pans or tilts, the stepper motors, gears, and belts produce varying amounts of noise, depending on their speed of movement. Stepper motors also have a resonant frequency and when they hit that certain speed they whir the loudest. Most luminaire manufacturers are well aware of those resonances and they write acceleration curves that avoid those motor speeds that produce resonance, thus reducing the whirring sound. And there are also yokes such as City Theatrical’s AutoYoke and Apollo Design’s Right Arm that are designed to reduce pan and tilt noise by using a high gear ratios. The Masked Mix TECH Still, there’s nothing like theatre silence to bring out even the slightest noise in your gear. Therefore, it’s a good idea to take precautionary measures to prevent, minimize and mask as much noise as possible. Precautionary measures to reduce noise include gear selection, soft goods masking and proper programming. We’ve already discussed options for gear selection, and if you have the budget to rent or buy silent versions of automated lighting, then you’re starting out on quiets a stepper motor like a very slow movement. One trick that works very well is to create a mark cue to move the fixtures without being seen. A mark cue is a preparatory cue that moves in black out to the new focus position before fading up. For example, if you have a fixture on an actor downstage center and the next cue is upstage center, you can keep a second fixture in black and move it into position before fading fixture one to black and fading fixture two to full. The cue to move fixture two upstage in black is a mark cue. It doesn’t matter how fast a mark cue is executed because it’s not seen. So make your mark cues as slow as possible but don’t miss your next cue. Turn it Up Lastly, mask sible by making when to move scene changes, TECH as much noise as posjudicious choices about your lights — during during loud passages, There’s nothing like theatre silence to bring out even the slightest noise in your gear. the right foot. But you can also use soft goods to help mask not only the line of sight from the house, but also the line of sound. Borders and legs made of heavy velour are great noise sponges. As for programming, common sense tells us to avoid fast pans and tilts during quiet passages. Minimizing noise is a matter of reducing the speed of panning and tilting as much as possible. Even though the software engineers work hard to avoid those resonant stepper motor speeds, nothing and between the action on stage are logical places to refocus lights when necessary. Remember, just because they can move doesn’t mean that automated lights have to move. If none of this seems to work well enough, then the only logical thing to do is to get a really loud band on stage. Phil Gilbert is a lighting designer and programmer. He’s currently looking for an amplifier that goes to 11. You can reach him at pgilbert@ plsn.com. Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Big, Shiny Dump Trucks and a Long Line of Sand Suppose you owned big shiny dump trucks. The dump trucks are filled with 100 tons of sand. But it turns out that those trucks have a leak and only about 3.5 percent of the sand makes it to the construction site. It’s enough to drive you to the sanditorium. This scenario may sound ridiculous to you, but you witness it every day. Except it’s not sand we’re talking about, but electricity. Every time you turn on an incandescent lamp you’re seeing about 3.5 percent of the energy you’re paying for to power it up. The other 96.5 percent is the long, thin line going back to the power plant. You can’t see the lost power, but you can feel it — in the form of heat. …Look closely and you’ll find that the line of sand leading back to the electric plant also trails back to the designer. We can’t completely plug the energy leaks, but in many instances we can make them smaller. — Richard Cadena, from Focus on Fundamentals, PLSN, May 2008 52 PLSN JUNE 2008 Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info THE BIZ P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Projecting Into the Future O n t h e cu s p o f th e co n ce r tto u r i n g s e a s o n , p ro j e c t i o n v i d e o f i n d s i ts e l f co m i n g to te r m s w i t h th e L E D. A q u i ck s u rve y of som e p ro je c ti o n v i d e o s ys te ms p rov i d e rs fi n d s th at th e s e c tor i s st i l l ro b u s t, bu t th at L E D s a re g a i n i n g gro u n d w i t h d e s i gn e r s a n d b o o k k e e p e r s, t h a n k s to t h e i r l owe r cost, i nc re a s i n g f l ex i b i l i t y a n d pro gra m m a b i l i t y a n d h ow e a s i l y t h e y p a c k a nd t ran s po r t. also keeping projection a relatively expensive proposition, but one that designers are finding new uses for. Paul Becher, co-CEO at projection provider Nocturne Productions, says increased brightness is allowing projection video A Shifting Balance biz John Wiseman, CEO and president of XL Touring Video, says he noticed a shift in demand between projection and LEDs start to take place nearly a year ago. “It’s gone from about 50-50 to about 80-20 in Increased brightness helps projection video compete with LEDs. “They can cut through the stage lighting better these days.” — Paul Becher, co-CEO, Nocturne Productions to compete well with LEDs. “They can cut through the stage lighting better these days,” he says, adding that some designers seem to have found a new infatuation with them. “I find we’re shaping the image more lately, with circles and ovals and more edgeblending. No one’s reinventing the wheel but people are looking for what they haven’t seen before, and projection can do that.” favor of LEDs,” he estimates. “They’re easier to use in many ways, and they are being accepted more into a wider range of situations. Projection is gorgeous and it can give you great textures, but it comes with a lot of pain — it has to be the perfect distance from the screen. LEDs are more forgiving. Also, a lot of venues, like sheds, don’t have the space to allow for rear projection, and that limits a designer’s options.” Projection systems, however, have not remained static. New projectors from Barco and others have pushed the horsepower limits of projection up to as much as 35K ANSI lumens while also becoming high-def. That’s User-Generated Content biz One of the more unique applications for projection that Becher has spotted has been on sponsored tours, like the current Honda Civic tour featuring four bands headlined by Panic at the Disco, for which Nocturne is of shows, most recently Kenny Chesney, where you have tons of LEDs, low- and high-res, doing main-stage effects and then using projectors for side screens,” he says. “Projectors have caught up to a degree in terms of brightness, but not enough to match LEDs yet, unless you use them in separate sequences. I have to think someday in the future the technology will catch up and allow this combination to become a reality.” New Effects Niches biz In today’s show environment, he sees projection carving out new effects niches for itself, such as the High End Systems D series digital light with projection applications, and more projection being used in general as brightness increases, weight decreases and prices come down — except for high-definition, which Haney says usually triples the cost. Haney, currently out directing Eric Clapton, adds that projection by itself can be a powerful tool at any video event. “Hooking the projector into a media server and creating huge shapes and colors, or using it like a gobo I'm just seeing the projector being used as part of the lighting design more and more. Add to that new applications in high definition, better file formats to display media, “I’m seeing the projector being used as part of the lighting design more and more.” — Mark Haney, PlanetLive content designer and video director providing projection video services. “There’s always a bit of advertising before the show, which lends itself to projection,” he says. “But we’ve recently been integrating incoming texting from the audience into the images. Someone backstage is managing the text messages being sent by the audience and deciding which of them to send to the projector. It’s a great way to engage the audience and get them up for the show. And it’s only something that a projector can do.” PlanetLive content designer and director Mark Haney is another professional who views projection and LED as distinct from each other, and who sees projection and lighting as increasingly in the same camp. “I’ve done and seen tons gear that better handles all these file formats both for display during gigs and in content creation, and you have new linear technologies that are making what used to be the impossible, possible.” Wiseman agrees. He believes that as projectors get smaller, brighter and more innovative in their deployment (integrated with moving yokes, for instance), they’ll begin to merge with lighting itself. “And that’s due to the influence of LEDs,” he says. “So it’s all intertwined.” And, amplifies Becher at Nocturne, “It’s going to require that the lighting, projection and video crews have more cross-learning between them. It’s all going to require a much higher level of technical proficiency.” Tips Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Tricks Q: Is it better to stick with one console, or learn many? A: Yes. For years I’ve been deeply allegiant to a single console. I’ve recently come around to the fact that this just doesn’t make sense, and that I was walking around with blinders on to some really great technology that could be in my programming tool kit…But now I’m going to give you some reasons why you should forget everything I’ve said and spend your every waking moment learning one console. By learning at least one console top to bottom, you can give yourself some significant advantages: • Become better and more efficient at your daily programming duties • Exceed expectations of designers and clients • Increase your chances of becoming a go-to programmer Mastering a console is not dissimilar to learning improvisation on an instrument, including pattern recognition, sense memory and working with the quirks. — Phil Gilbert, from Technopolis, PLSN, April and May 2008 54 PLSN JUNE 2008 100.0806.54.indd 54 5/30/08 5:55:14 PM 100% Au d or io E NO Au dit die or nc ial e Visual Presentation Editorial Visual Presentation Audience www.plsn.com PROJECTION, LIGHTS & STAGING NEWS Advertise Where You Get Results – Projection, Lights & Staging News • 22,167 Qualified Subscribers* USITT JECT ION, LIGH PR P TS & artie S TA G s for ING N Plan EWS t In Like A Li April on, Out Like r Lion A Bigge Zoom In Projecti On on Pros HES Se ll s C a t a ly s t B ack to Invento r /instan t-info w.plsn.com Bill Andersen, Marketing Director, TMB 2007 Wave of consol idations sugges ts a tum ultuou By Dan s year Daley A wave of cons through olidatio the lig n swep hti industry t in the firs ng and stagin the year. g t three In mo Industrie March, U.K.-base nths of s’ profe d Coop ssional sidiary er lighting Cooper subControls percent acquire of the ou d 93 Polaron tstandin plc g of intell , a UK-based ma shares of ige nufactur Mary J. 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With each contact representing a potential customer for us, our dealers and reps . . . well, you do the math.” N IO N 7 T O 3 C TI ge JE C a O E p R N n P ONs o C rt ta PRO 16 :http:// ww *Dec. 2007 BPA Audit Statement **Publisher’s Own Research page Ad info • 38% of PLSN subscribers indicate a future spending level on entertainment technology for themselves or their company in excess of $100k** t, Vol. 8 .3 • 88.98% of PLSN subscribers recommend or make final purchasing decisions.** • 41% of PLSN subscribers have — as a direct result of viewing an ad — purchased a product and 84% have visited an advertiser’s Web site.** Up th e Des er S • 57.2% of PLSN subscribers are presidents/ owners or are in management.* Heats “We got one of our larger projects as a direct result of a PLSN ad. PLSN goes to a wide range of potential clients inside and outside of the mainstream lighting business who use the magazine as a resource for solutions. PLSN has proven value to us.” Jack Calmes, CEO –Syncrolite LP 3/31/07 12:39:37 PM “Advertising in PLSN has been key to CHAUVET’s branding and successful crossover into the production and rental markets. PLSN is one of very few publications in this industry with editorial credibility. It attracts the kind of potential buyers we seek: discerning and educated readers, savvy designers and installers.” Berenice Chauvet, Vice President – CHAUVET Find out how PLSN can GROW your business at: www.plsn.com/mediakit PLSN FULL.indd 55 5/30/08 2:15:20 PM FOCUS ON FUNDAMENTALS P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Electricity and Water — What Could Possibly Go Wrong? By RichardCadena I n North America, getting an occasional shock from a 120VAC household mains supply is almost a way of life for some of us. In Europe, getting shocked by their 230VAC or 240VAC is a good way to lose your life. Ohm’s law is ever vigilant. A higher voltage across a given impedance produces higher current, and if you happen to be the impedance in question then you’d better hope you have lots of it. It doesn’t take much current to change your status from active to “he was such a nice guy.” As little as 60 milliamps (that’s six one-hundredths of an amp) can cause your heart to go into fibrillation. Multi-grounded vs. Uni-grounded FOF In Germany, the utility companies ground the electrical service at the utility pole and at the point of consumption. It’s a multi-grounded system as opposed to a unigrounded system such as we use in North America. It saves the utility money because they don’t have to run a grounding wire back to the utility pole. Instead, the earth becomes the return path for the current in the event of a ground fault or an accidental short from a live conductor to ground. What could possibly go wrong with that? If the soil conditions are such that the impedance is too high then there might not be enough ground fault current to trip the circuit breaker. And circuit breakers are inverse-time devices; the higher the current, the faster they trip. So you want a low impedance path back to the source to make sure the grounding system does its job of protecting people and equipment by tripping the circuit breaker in the event of a ground fault. In the United States, the National Electrical Code calls for no more than 25 ohms to ground. An Ingenieus Concept FOF But the Germans are an ingenious lot. Their response was to figure out how to sense a ground fault and shut down the circuit before anything can go wrong. They came up with the idea of running both the phase and neutral conductors through a sensor that picks up the magnetic fields produced by the flow of current. Since the phase current is flowing towards the load while the neutral current is flowing in the opposite direction, the magnetic fields oppose each other and cancel — as long as they are balanced. But if there was a ground fault, then some of the current would “leak” through the grounding wire and the magnetic fields of the phase and neutral currents wouldn’t cancel. This socalled residual current would cause the sensor to pick up the difference in the currents and trip the circuit breaker. The sensor they used was a donut-shaped current transformer that would generate a voltage in the presence of a varying magnetic field like that produced by alternating current. The output is tied to a solenoid which would in turn open two switches to interrupt the phase and neutral conductors and stop the ground fault before it could do much harm. RCDs and GFCIs FOF They called this apparatus a residual circuit device (RCD). The first RCDs were sensitive enough to trip if there was a 500 milliamp difference between the outgoing and incoming currents. They eventually improved them to trip at 100 milliamps and then again to 30 milliamps. RCDs gained popularity in the mines of South Africa in the 1950s because they had problems with electrical safety. When University of California Berkeley Professor Charles Dalziel began his work in the area of electrical safety, he learned about RCDs during a meeting in Geneva, Switzerland in 1962. He was impressed with the idea but he thought they could be improved. When he returned from Europe, he met with a manufacturer and together they developed a version of an RCD that tripped at 15 milliamps. They called it a ground fault circuit interrupter (GFCI). Eventually, the company started manufacturing them in various forms. In 1968, the National Electrical Code started requiring their use in swimming pool lighting circuits in the United States. The popularity of GFCIs has grown tremendously. Today, there is a harmonized tri-nation standard among Canada, Mexico, and the United States for Class A GFCIs, which is intended to protect personnel. The standard says that it must trip at a minimum of 6mA and it must not trip below 4mA. Class B GFCIs were very early devices with a trip value of 15mA. They are now obsolete, but there are still many of them around from the early days. Good Servant, Cruel Master FOF To borrow from Dominique Bouhours, electricity is a good servant but a cruel master. There are many ways to protect equipment and personnel from the hazards of electricity, including insulation (insulate the wires), isolation (keep unqualified personnel away), grounding (to avoid energized metal parts) and overcurrent protection (to avoid overloading and burning up a system). But in his book Undercurrents and Overcurrents: All About GFCIs, AFCIs, and Similar Devices, (available at www.plsnbookshelf.com), Earl Roberts explains why GFCIs are superior to grounding for the protection of personnel. To paraphrase him, there are two at least two things that can go wrong when you get tangled up in a live circuit; you can come in series contact with ground or in parallel contact with ground. Grounding can only protect you from the hazards of parallel contact with a live circuit and ground. In fact, in the series scenario — where current flows from a live wire through a person and then to ground — the grounding wire only makes the situation worse. It helps complete the circuit and you pay the price. In the parallel scenario — where current flows from a live wire in parallel with a person and a grounding wire — the current will divide in inverse proportion to the impedance. So what if you happen to come in contact with an energized metallic enclosure? If the equipment is grounded and bonded properly, what could possibly go wrong? Not much, unless you are standing barefoot in a puddle of water. Toward a GFCI Standard… FOF Unlike the grounding system, GFCIs will protect you in either of these situations regardless of the condition of the grounding wire or the condition of your judgment. Up until now, the live event production industry has been left to its own devices to use or not use GFCI protection in their power distribution systems. But ESTA’s Technical Standards Program has a new proposal regarding the use of GFCIs. BSR E1.19, Recommended Practice for the use of Class A Ground-Fault Circuit Interrupters (GFCIs) intended for personnel protection in the Entertainment Industry is in public review and is expected to be approved soon. This standard spells out the whats, wheres, whens and hows of using GFCIs in our industry. In brief, it recommends their use in outdoor shows and/or in any situation that might be wet or damp. It also describes various types of GFCIs that are available including those in duplex receptacles, portable adapters, portable PDs, quad strings and circuit breakers, all with GFCI protection. And if you are wondering about putting a GFCI on a dimming circuit, you can’t — at least not your typical GFCI and dimming circuit. The control circuitry in a GFCI is solid-state and needs non-dim power for the electronics to operate properly. Dimming the control circuitry won’t do. But there are specially-made GFCIs with a separate power input for the electronics. …And a Safer Future FOF Ad info:http:// www.plsn.com/instant-info Had RCDs and GFCIs been more widely used in the 1960s and 1970s, we might not have lost Leslie Harvey of Stone the Crows, John Rostill of the Shadows and Keith Relf of the Yardbirds. Back then, little was known about the potential dangers of improper grounding and less was known about RCDs. Today, we know better. Let’s not let one more person be injured in an accident that could have been prevented. Thanks to Roger Lattin for recommending Overcurrents and Undercurrents: All About GFCIs, AFCIs, and Similar Devices. You can reach Richard Cadena by e-mailing rcadena@plsn.com. 56 PLSN JUNE 2008 100.0806.56.indd 56 5/30/08 5:41:31 PM FEEDING THE MACHINES P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S By BradSchiller Peeling Back the Layers E ach year it seems that new lighting fixtures become more and more complex. If you attend any lighting tradeshows you will find that most manufacturers have LED fixtures, media servers and digital lighting products. These unique products are very different in output and control from good old “automated” lighting fixtures. Many of these units require knowledge of their protocol as well as a good understanding of how they interact with a lighting desk. Unfortunately the consoles of our industry have not yet fully embraced the capabilities and requirements of these newest products. For this reason, it is imperative for automated lighting programmers to be aware of the complexities and requirements of the newest offerings from lighting manufacturers. console. In the example above, imagine that each of the graphic layers contains 40 unique parameters. This means that if you were to select the fixture as a single unit, you would have well over 120 attributes to adjust at once. Never mind the fact that many of them repeat in name as they are applied to each layer. That is a lot of data to have to keep track of on the screen and with the encoder wheels on your desk! I would much rather select each layer one at a time and work with “only” 40 parameters at a time. Fixture Numbering FTM When you’re working with multi-cell LED fixtures or digital lighting, it is essential that you number your fixtures in a method that helps you to quickly recall the various The problem of multi-part fixtures can become even more complex with media servers and digital lights. Newer fixtures can be very different in output and control than traditional automated lighting fixtures. A single LED may have three cells, each with red, green and blue parameters. instrument I am working with: 1 – motion, 2 – global, and so on. Now I am sure you can quickly see that if I select fixture 163 on my console that I have selected graphic layer one on the sixth digital light. When I am working with more than nine digital fixtures then I will apply the same technique but start my numbering in the thousands instead of hundreds. As I stated before, this same principle can be applied to LED batten type fixtures. Many of these units must be patched as a number of cells that correspond to the different sections within a single instrument. Patching the Parts The Console Problem FTM Automated lighting consoles are great for programming “conventional automated lights” that have a single set of parameters. But when a fixture contains many layers or cells of the same information, most consoles have trouble. For example, imagine a simple LED fixture that has three cells, each of which have red, green and blue parameters. An automated lighting console has trouble with a fixture like this because it expects a fixture to have only one color system, not three. A fixture of this type does not fit into the color picker, fanning, spreads, copy functions and other console features that are designed to work between fixture types, but not within a single fixture. So to get around this, users will patch three identical fixtures into their console to control one real world instrument. In order to program this instrument the programmer must select three unique fixtures on the console, each controlling only a part of the instrument. The downside is that you must remember which fixture numbers relate to which portion of a fixture and some features such as Highlight or ID may not function. The plus to this method is that effects, fanning, copying and more are much easier across multiple “fixtures” than within a single “fixture.” The problem can become even more complex with media servers and digital lights. Most of these units use multiple layers that contain many of the same parameters on each layer. For instance, if you are programming a digital fixture you might have one motion layer, one global layer and three graphic layers, all of which control the same instrument. To the lighting console these will be setup as individual fixtures, each with their own unique fixture number. Again the benefits of this method far outweigh the disadvantages of having all parameters on one single fixture within the portions of each instrument. When I work with digital lights for example, I will number them using a three-digit system where each digit helps me to remember the purpose of that fixture selection. So again using the above digital light example, I would number the fixture as follows: 121 – motion, 122 – global, 123 – graphic 1, 124 – graphic 2 and 125 – graphic 3. I can instantly remember and locate each portion because I know that fixtures in the one hundred range are digital lights (the first digit). The second digit tells me the “instrument” number; the example given is for digital fixture number two. Then the third digit defines which portion of the FTM When you’re working with multi-part fixtures, you must remember the structure when patching. If you are working with the above mentioned digital light, you must patch each portion in the correct order that matches the DMX protocol, while ensuring the sequence starts at the DMX start address for the fixture. So in the example, you would patch the motion layer first at the DMX start address, then each of the other layers in the order that matches the protocol at each successive DMX address. If the layers are patched out of order, then the fixture will not respond correctly. Furthermore, care must be taken when patching multiple instruments to ensure that all the parts of each instrument are patched before the next instrument is patched. You cannot start another fixture at an address that overlaps part of an existing address. The Missing Link FTM In the future automated lighting console manufacturers need to confront the problem of multi-part fixtures with new console paradigms. Programmers now require methods to quickly select fixture “parts,” yet also have the ability to copy and fan within and between each part. New color tools should allow for quicker access to fixtures with multiple identical color parameters and better layer tools should assist with programming routines. Other new concepts will ease the patching by allowing each instrument to be patched and addressed as a single unit. When will these features be seen in modern consoles? Soon, I suspect, as our industry keeps creating more and more LED fixtures, media servers, and digital lights. Until then, it is imperative that programmers familiarize themselves with the current methods for working with these instruments and become proficient at the routines mentioned above. Brad Schiller can be reached by e-mailing brads@plsn.com. 2008 JuNE PLSN 57 Ad info: www.plsn.com/instant-info To Advertise in Marketplace, Contact: Leslie Rohrscheib • 702.932.5585 • lr@plsn.com Ad info: www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info: www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info: www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info: www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info: www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info: www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info: www.plsn.com/instant-info 58 PLSN JUNE 2008 ADVERTISER’S INDEX COMPANY PH URL 56 800.555.0050 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-187 PR Lighting/ Pearl River 31 253.395.9494 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-138 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-266 Precise Corporate Staging C3 480.759.9700 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-207 310.784.2464 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-102 Pro-Tapes & Specialties 8 800.345.0234 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-237 10, 43 800.883.0008 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-105 R&M Materials 47 800.955.9967 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-140 Atlanta Rigging Systems 48 404.355.4370 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-107 Robe Lighting s.r.o. 5 954.615.9100 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-141 Bulbtronics 23 800.227.2852 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-110 Roc-Off Productions 32 877.978.2437 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-142 Chauvet Lighting 7, 53 800.762.1084 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-110 Rosco Laboratories 44 800.767.8652 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-143 Checkers Industrial Prod. 32 800.438.9336 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-112 Sanyo 45 888.337.1215 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-197 City Theatrical Inc. 54 800.230.9497 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-114 SGM 2-3 +39.0721. 47 64 77 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-271 Clay Paky America 15 609.812.1564 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-115 Shockwave Cargo 44 310.643.6024 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-240 Coolux International 42 818.597.1100 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-273 Staging Dimensions 19 866.591.3471 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-145 Creative Stage Lighting Co., Inc. 14 518.251.3302 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-118 Strong 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http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-100 Philips Lighting ACT Lighting 33 818.707.0884 http://plsn.hotims.com/18507-101 Advanced Entertainment Services 42 702.364.1847 All Access Staging & Production 23 Applied Electronics PG# If you think classifieds don’t work... why are you reading this? Call Leslie at 702.932.5585 Ad info: www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info: www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info: www.plsn.com/instant-info Business/Owners and Managers: Ad info: www.plsn.com/instant-info Make sure your staff is up-to-date on the industry by having them read Projection, Lights & Staging News every month. Send your company an e-mail with our URL www.plsn.com/subscribe and encourage them to get their own subscription. If they are serious about your business, they should be seriously reading PLSN. 2008 JUNE PLSN 59 LD-AT-LARGE P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S The BS Factor By NookSchoenfeld I I programmed a series of chases complete with movement, strobing, white light mixed with purple and a bunch of other tricks. When the client approached me I was on my game. I explained that the purple bricks were just plain boring. With all the CEOs arriving in a drizzle, who would even notice this wall? I explained that I thought we would be better off dazzling them for a few brief seconds than trying to get them to notice a purple wall as they exited their limos. The client totally agreed at this point and thanked me profusely for my design integrity and my ability to adapt and overcome. n every business, there is a lot of scheming and plotting to get accounts. Presentations mean a lot. Not just the financial charts or 8-inch-by-10-inch glossy renderings of a stage, but of the presenter himself. Whether we like to admit it or not, lighting and set designers are salesman. And as we sell ourselves to any potential client there is one thing we must be able to deliver on demand without any hesitation whatsoever — BS. I mean this in the best possible way. You have to be very confident of yourself in our world. If you say you can do something, you’d better be able to back it up. But the best laid plans… Unforseen Obstacles Brilliant Solutions LD@L On any show there are often unforeseen obstacles. On many gigs I do, there is no fudge factor. I’ve used up every dime and cannot obtain any more lighting gear because the cash is gone. At times like these, you must think fast. While I’m tackling whatever issue has come up, in the back of my mind I’m formulating a backup plan, thinking about the best way to BS the client. I know a few so called “designers” who can talk a mean game but can’t back it up. I’ve seen enough of their work. They suck. They make careers out of onetime customers. They hire artists to draw up beautiful pictures and He couldn’t light a candle on a menorah to save his they sell such amazing BS that But he gets some really good accounts — once. they get the gig. But once they start programming, it is evident that they are lacking in talent. And then You see, someone has hired this de- told him that I do indeed know him, but the chain of real BS starts. signer for an exorbitant fee and they I think he’s a slimeball. Kid laughed and can see that they have been lied to. This goes on to explain that this guy was sayshow will not look anything like what was ing that he’s known me forever and that promised to them but there is little they we are good buds. But he also said that I COMING NEXT can do because they are now in the hot suck as a lighting designer and he could MONTH... seat. Whoever hired them to find the right do Kid justice on his next tour and should person for the gig will now be breathing be hired immediately. The BS had now down their neck. So they must explain that crossed the line. Now, whenever I get a Got Wheels? the show actually looks fantastic by point- chance, I will indeed explain to people ing out whatever highlights they can and that this salesman is a joke in our indusThe high cost of gas steer clear of the actual lighting until after try. What’s that saying? Oh yeah. Payback doesn’t slow the wheels the show. They are forced to be BS artists is a mother… themselves. of these transportation LD@L Hitting the Wall LD@L Smiling Faces companies. Last year I got hired to light a brick Buyer’s Guide Power to the people and the power distros they make. InfoComm 2008 Get the latest from the video world without the hassle in our trade show review of InfoComm. I know a salesman in Los Angeles. He specializes in selling himself as a lighting designer. He couldn’t light a candle on a menorah to save his soul. But he gets some really good accounts — once. I sincerely doubt he’s ever had a repeat customer. No band has ever hired him twice and I’ve known this guy for 20 years. He gets by because his BS potential is unsurpassed by anyone I’ve ever met. This guy thinks he’s my friend, but I know better. What’s that old adage? Oh yeah. You can’t BS a BS’er. My friend Kid Rock was at a party in Los Angeles recently. He called me on the phone and started laughing. I said, “What’s up?” I was surprised that he was calling me when he wasn’t on tour. He asked me if I knew this guy and if he’s my friend. I wall outside of a venue for a corporate party. The client wanted the exterior of the building to “glow in a bath of purple light.” No problem. My buddy and I decided to use some new high-dollar lighting fixtures that are supposed to be the brightest light available for this application. We fell for the manufacturer’s BS about lumens and rented a bunch of these fixtures. But when the sun went down and I started programming, I soon realized that we had chosen the wrong fixture for this application. The lights would not zoom wide at all and were nowhere near as bright as the Syncrolites we should have rented. Instead of a big purple wall, I had 24 purple dots on a brick wall. It was time to turn on the BS. LD@L Often enough, somewhere between a salesman fielding a call for a project and the crew pulling the pieces together, someone will screw up on their count. And the tech crew will get to the gig and soon realize that someone has dropped the ball, forgetting to relay some pertinent info to them. With any luck, the lighting vendor is in the same town and a few calls can rectify the situation. But if that’s not the case, someone must start the plan of attack to fix this while another starts thinking up BS. A friend was doing an outsoul. door show last year that required him to illuminate 50 square panels of a building’s exterior. There was one Leko with a gobo image and one Leko with the company’s color designated to light each panel. When the crew got there they realized the salesman had really screwed up and there were actually 100 panels to light. They were missing half the gear to do the job correctly and there was no power available to double the amount of fixtures. The crew chief quickly decided to alternate panels and light one with the corporate logo and every other one with the corporate color. He was able to throw light on all 100 panels this way. When the client came over with a confused look on her face, the LD was quick to point out certain design issues. “You see, if I focus the gobos right over the colored panels, nothing will stand out. I decided that it would look 100 times better if we simply put big blocks of color on every other panel and use just the patterns on the others. See how those colored squares just pop out at ya?” By maintaining a serious face, he got the client to agree with his line of BS. The gig was a huge success. Yes, there is a lot of BS in every business, but maybe we have a disproportionate share. No BS. After all, I wouldn’t BS you, or would I? Nook Schoenfeld is a freelance lighting designer. He can be reached at nschoenfeld@plsn.com. Ad info: www.plsn.com/instant-info Ad info: www.plsn.com/instant-info