Posts Tagged ‘butane group’

A good send off

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007

Mother GOOSE! is packed away in a truck on its way to Arizona. I will not be going to Arizona, but my lighting will. My friend Ben is traveling with the company as a stage manager and lighting director. His job is to as faithfully as possible recreate my lighting for the Ballet. This means is in a few days my lighting will be up before audiences in two different states.

Sending a piece out on tour like this can be a tricky proposition. Not every venue will meet all the lighting needs for the piece. The result is that items must be placed in a hierarchy of needs such that the core ideas are maintained even when it is not possible to recreate the whole and complete work.

The same thing happens with staging as well. Some venues are bigger, some smaller. As a result the staging must expand or contract to meet those changing needs. Taking a piece on tour is a powerful reminder that the term “site specific” is a bit of a misnomer. All works are site specific. Every piece of entertainment, be it theatre, opera or dance is all dependent upon the specific site that it is located in.

Very often these sites are quite similar. All proscenium stages have a regularity to them. But the devil, as they say, is in the details. Certain shots simply will not work in certain houses. Some places the proportion is such that the entire work needs to be restaged so that it feels right, even if it fits at a literal level. It can be a tricky balancing act.

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The Last Word has its first preview tonight. My work with the play is done. I am going to stop in again on Wednesday to go over a few things with the stage manager about maintaining the design, but the work part for me is finished.

The floor was white tile, but the intent was to make it look old and dingy. That, for various reasons, did not happen until the night before the final dress rehearsal on Sunday. It is an interesting thing lighting a set that is still being finished. During tech we had our rehearsals and then in the evening afterwards were work calls to finish the scenery. What this meant for me was that there was a lot more bounce to the light during tech than there was going to be in the end. As a result I was forced to overexpose the lighting such that when the floor came down in value to its proper level, the lighting would look right.

I loved watching the show on Sunday. I had spent the few days before a little nervous that the value of light on the walls was a little to high relative to that on the performers. I had to keep reminding myself that the walls would get dim when the floor was less reflective. And it worked. I had guessed almost perfectly and the lighting looked exactly as I had intended when I watched the runthrough Sunday evening.

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Photograph by Carol Rosegg

I have been up quite late the last few days working on various personal projects as well as tidying up a bunch of work stuff. Two shows I have coming up soon are fairly organic in their process. Of course that does not change the fact that lighting equipment must still be rented and dealt with.

It’s a busy time. I have four projects in the next three weeks. Artfuckers and Operation Ajax are full plays. Then I have a workshop of Ajax at Target Margin for two days. Also, I am assisting on a dance piece at The Danspace Project.

It is a bit intimidating, but somehow it all fits together nicely with days off for one coinciding with runthroughs for another. On the 8th is the official opening of Last Word. After the madness calms down I have a few days with no work in a theatre before I head south to Florida to meet up with the Ballet tour for a weekend of performances. Not Mother GOOSE!, they are performing a selection of their repertory for adult audiences in Delray Beach. And gauging by the weather here, I have a feeling that a Florida beach town will be a wonderful break from New York CIty.

Three is a magic number

Saturday, December 16th, 2006

Nutcracker, Becoming Adele, and Waiting for Godot all perform today. Three shows in Manhattan. That kind of trips me out.

Clurman Occupancy

Next year is beginning to shape up nicely. It has been so chaotic with dates moving and rights and funding disappearing then reappearing that I am only now getting a handle on what things look like. At the end of January I will begin working on a commercial Off-Broadway play Last Word written by Oren Safdie and directed by Alex Lippard. Alex and I met at the theatre a few days ago along with the producer, GM and set designer to do a bit of a site survey. As that gears up to go into previews I will remounting Mother GOOSE!.

February has the official opening of Last Word. Then a small play called Operation Ajax produced by The Butane Group. This is a great piece of political theater addressing the issues surrounding the CIA’s overthrow of the democratically elected government of Iran in favor of the Shah, all of course leading to the Iranian revolution and an Islamic Fundamentalist state.

This will be followed by Artfuckers at Theatre for a New City, directed, but not written, by Eduardo Machado. The play was written by Michael Domitrovich. It centers around the New York art and fashion scene. The play, given the characters, could easily fall into the “poor little rich kid” trap, but rather brilliantly does not. It looks to be a lot of fun. It is rather complex design-wise for all involved and should prove an interesting challenge. The costume designer is my friend Oana Botez-Ban who I have worked with a number of times before. I always have fun working on shows with her. Her costumes are so fun to light!

March looks to be dance month as I have three different dance shows penciled in for the month. There are still a number of things up in the air so of course some of this is subject to change, but it looks to be a nice winter by all counts.

To the local bodega to wolf down a hero, son is on a midnight run like Deniro

Friday, November 24th, 2006

A problem that had eluded me on the opera plot solved itself almost as soon as I opened the file this morning. It’s nice when that happens. I often find it better to “sleep on” a problem rather than torturing myself over it. This is why I find it useful to work on multiple projects at the same time. As soon as one hits a snag I can switch to another, either dealing with a different iteration of the same problem or something else entirely. Usually this causes the original problem to get solved. The answer is almost always there, you just have to relax into it at times. Wait patiently and it will come out of hiding.

Edison

Last night at Thanksgiving dinner there were various cries of “Wow three days off work!” or “Oh darn I have to go to work tomorrow, but at least I can come in late.” And then there was me, “I’ve got to get to work as soon as we get home.” I must say I am very glad I do not have a ‘boss’ who makes me show up in a regimented schedule. Sure during technical rehearsals I need to be at the theatre at certain prescribed times, but so much of the work is done on my own time and in my own schedule it is great. Even if this means working late on a day others consider a holiday.

It’s time to get back to the dance plot once this little break is over. It should be simple enough. I have all the basic ideas worked out. I just need to put them on the rep-plot and be done with it. There are so many variations on the concept of the repertory light plot and each one demands its own approach.

The basic idea behind the repertory light plot is that there is a set basic position and color for the lights in a theatre. Depending upon the venue you can make various changes to some or all of the lights. For Nutcracker I use almost the whole rep plot as drawn and only make a few minor changes to the position of the lights, but then I refocus them all to make them specific to the show and of course the color is all our own. For the dance piece in Williamstown I am making a few color changes and then the plot has a series of dedicated “specials” that can be refocused for each piece. Everything else remains in it’s “rep focus” and color. Theater festival plots vary from a total fixed focus to allowing you to do anything with the light so long as it remains hung in the same location.

There is a specific craft that goes into utilizing repertory plots. The SF Opera has a kind of hybrid system. There is a very extensive rep plot but any light can be focused however the designer wishes, with a few exceptions. On top of that a large number of lights can be added for more specific needs. It was a great experience in my two seasons there as the lighting assistant watching how different designers negotiated that system.

Hall Slashes and Rectangles

The bid for Becoming Adele should be going out on Monday. The show looks to be simple enough. It’s a lovely little play. A good heartwarming tale for the ‘Holiday Season.’

I have not mentioned here Operation Ajax that I am lighting for The Butane Group. This is a great piece of political theatre dealing with the US backed coup in Iran in 1953. The Eisenhower Administration, that wonderful group of people who systematically overthrew numerous Democratically elected governments in favor of repressive authoritarian regimes. You know, the guys who set in motion a series of events that led to radical hostility and animosity towards the United States from the Middle East, South America and more. Wonderful people.

I have not worked with The Butane Group before, although I was approached to light a show of theirs several years ago, I had a conflict. I seem to remember I was working in San Francisco at the time. Anyhow, they do some interesting work. I saw a workshop of a piece in progress a few months ago that I really enjoyed. If you want to get a sense of their work they have an audio piece available here.

I guess February is the month of political theatre as I am also working on a production of Mad Forest. And November, the month of only using rap lyrics in my subject headings, is nearly over.


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