Posts Tagged ‘mother goose’

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.

The Gooses are Back

Friday, January 26th, 2007

After a long day of tech we are ready for an audience tomorrow. I have not seen the show in two years. I was skeptical how much of it I would remember. We focused the lights and it all started to become familiar. Then, we loaded the disk into the light board and and lo and behold there was the show. I love computers. Keeping my lighting safe and secure for two years only to come back just the same.

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It is a curious thing about remounting a show. There are things about the show that get better. You see things you missed, or texture and nuance is added where there was not so much before. There are things that get worse. Some of the light will inevitably feel dull. There are choices that two years later you would not make. So then the whole process becomes one of negotiating between these various currents. Obviously the major ideas and structural aspects of the piece need to remain the same. At the same time one must take those ideas and evolve them into something that feels right, now.

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It’s a great kids show, so if you have the little ones I highly recommend coming to see it. It only runs this weekend.

Upgrade

Sunday, January 21st, 2007

I recently installed Camino on my computer and have been using it as my main browser for a couple of days. While it does not have all the supercool extensions of Firefox, it is a hell of a lot faster. So my time on teh intrawubs has been sped up tremendously.

One of the extensions it does not have is rss integration. I had been using Sage for Firefox, which is a very nice feed aggregator. As a result I opened a Bloglines account and easily imported all my Sage feeds. Overall the transition has been very smooth indeed. Although I do sorely miss my ‘undo close tab’ extension. Oh well!

Tomorrow is the lighting load-in for Last Word. The scenery went in today I am told and as there have been no frantic emails, I assume all is well. There was a small change to the scenery this morning. Nothing big, just a slight adjustment to the rotation of the walls. So the electricians are loading in the lighting and then we focus on Tuesday and begin the technical rehearsals that evening.

The run through the other day went very well. Travanti brings an amazing energy to the room. He is also at least as much of a coffee snob as I am so we had a great time discussing beans and brews around New York. I felt it my duty to help the out of town coffee connoisseur traverse the generally bleak landscape that is New York coffee.

This afternoon I saw a run of the first act of Artfuckers. It is looking good. Eduardo and I had a nice chat about the design of the piece. Because the play is set in the new York Art and Fashion scene, we are going to utilize an fashion photography aesthetic/vocabulary to light the piece. Fashion photography is one of my loves and there is such a wide range of styles and aesthetics within it, that to say “fashion photography” does not really narrow it down at all. What it means in this instance is using certain lights that are specific to the fashion/portrait photography world, like softlights and umbrellas. These we will combine with standard theatrical lights to create a lighting vocabulary for the piece.

It is interesting that a lot of fashion photography these days is highly theatrical. Not only does the lighting and styling create dramatic scenes, but the layouts ore often such that a whole story is told like fairy tales or Film Noir or something more abstract. Since there is already so much crossover into theatrical lighting the translation is rather simple.

And in the when it rains it pours department, I load-in and tech Mother GOOSE! at the end of the week and it runs through the weekend. Good grief!

Familiar Faces

Thursday, January 18th, 2007

The run through for The Last Word had to be rescheduled for today. I am about to head out to go see it. From a lighting perspective it is rather straight forward. A naturalistic office interior. There is of course a balance between the naturalism of the text and the theatricality of the comedy that must be achieved, but there are no major technical challenges to the play.

There are many familiar faces on this show. I have worked with the director two times before. I worked with the stage manager on Sake with the Haiku Geisha and the set designer on Cupid and Psyche. The costume designer I have also worked with once before.

It is a very nice feeling to be around a familiar group of people when working on a project. It makes the whole process a lot easier. Working with a new group of collaborators is like going on a blind date. You are stuck with them for some predetermined period of time and you have no idea how anything will turn out. Further, you spend so much time discovering each others vocabulary that you can not get as deep into the work itself. But all of that goes away once you have worked together a few times. It becomes easier and faster to get deeper into the work, and there is a richness that can come out of the process that does not exist in first time collaborations, except perhaps in that rare instance.

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I sent out the paperwork for Mother GOOSE! last night. Like Nutcracker, this is a fantastic kids show. It runs only next weekend.

So I load-in and tech GOOSE! with New York Theatre Ballet between the technical rehearsals for Last Word. It’s a little nutty. The time scale for dance is so different than that of an Off-Broadway play. The one has eight hours total to load-in and tech the show and do a dress rehearsal before the first performance the next morning. Last Word on the other hand has a week of Load-in and technical rehearsals before we go into almost two weeks of previews.

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I like this post about aesthetic needs in the theatre. I don’ t think it is so much an issue as she makes it out to be. If you need something in a play the answer is simple, “Yes I need that.” Do you really need that specific color or this exact piece of furniture? Well, yes. Actually I do. How can you ask someone to contribute as an artist and then not give them the tools needed to do what it is you asked them for in the first place?

Some of this comes from an unwillingness to expend money to really make a play all that it can be. That can lead to the idea that paying people is a novelty. It seems absurd to me that either of these issues are really of concern.

Of course people should be paid for their work. When one makes a commitment to produce a work of theatre the artistic and aesthetic needs of the artists involved need to be taken into account. So too does the need to eat. Poverty can make great drama, but it does not eliminate the need for food and shelter.

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.

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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.

Portfolio Updates

Sunday, June 18th, 2006

I have updated my portfolio with a new section for the Mother GOOSE! I had posted here recently. Feel free to explore.

Gooses! Geeses!

Wednesday, June 14th, 2006

Pink and Pretty

Tuesday, June 13th, 2006

It may come as a surprise to some of the readers of this journal but in addition to minimal and cerebral works, I do in fact light a wide variety of shows. I once almost lost a show because while the director very much wanted to work with me, the producer felt my portfolio was “too Brechtian.”

Note to Producers: I can change styles faster than th’inconstant moon.

I just recently got a series of images from a children’s ballet that I lit over a year ago. I will put a new page up on my portfolio as soon as I have a chance to process them all. But here are a few for now. The Ballet was Mother GOOSE!. The conceit of the piece was that all the traditional Mother Goose characters were the children of the Old Lady who lived in a shoe. And all the various stories from the rhymes were the children play acting the different characters.

The first image is from the “Little’s Section” where we encounter Little Bo Peep, Little Boy Blue and Little Miss Muffett.

And here are the Three Blind Mice.

One thing about theatre artists in general and designers in particular is that a large part of the craft and indeed art of the work comes in the form of stylistic flexibility. One must be able to go from Brecht to comedy. Or even Brecht to Brecht. It is important to have a viewpoint on the piece, but it is dangerous to have a singular style.

Often one hears things like “Dance lighting is like this” or “Musicals are like that” or the dreaded word “Brechtian.” Brechtian lighting. It sounds so silly. What, after all, is “Shakespearian Lighting.” Or “Millerian Lighting.” Or “Operatic Lighting.” Each piece must be taken on its own terms. For every piece of writing is different, and every production is a new and different thing. In the end, both Romeo and Juliet and Midsummer Night’s Dream have moonlight. But never and in no way are they the same moon.


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