Below are images from Berkeley Opera’s production of Don Giovanni that I lit in February.
Directed by Mark Streshinsky
Scenery by Mark Streshinsky
Projections by Jeremy Knight
Costumes by Romy Douglass








All photographs courtesy Steve Hughes
Below are images from Berkeley Opera’s production of Don Giovanni that I lit in February.
Directed by Mark Streshinsky
Scenery by Mark Streshinsky
Projections by Jeremy Knight
Costumes by Romy Douglass








All photographs courtesy Steve Hughes
Tonight I have two openings.
The first is Den of Thieves at SF Playhouse. More info, including ticketing, can be found here.
The second is Emax and Zurno’s Amazing Circus Humans a circus show for kids created and directed by my old friend Jaron Hollander. More info, and ticketing, can be found here.
I hope you enjoy!
When I first moved to the Bay Area after leaving New York I kept hearing about SF Playhouse. It seemed that in the time I had been on the East Coast this little company had gone from nothing to making quite a name for itself in San Francisco. Eager to find interesting work, I made a point to see some of their shows and was not disappointed. So, when Artistic Director Bill English asked me to light a play for them I was excited at the opportunity.
I need to confess something to my readers at this point. I don’t like reading plays. I enjoy rehearsals, and techs, and worksheets, and everything that goes into making a play, with one exception. I don’t like reading plays. Thus it was with my usual resignation of “Well, I have to get through this part in order to get to the fun stuff” that I picked up Stephen Adly Guirgis’ Den of Thieves and began reading.
The result? I had not laughed so hard in quite some time. The script is so outrageously funny that I had trouble getting through it, but this time for totally different reasons than a typical script read. I kept laughing so hard I had to put the script down repeatedly. The story revolves around a group of thieves in a kleptomaniacs recovery program. Then someone shows up with the perfect heist. Wackiness ensues.
When I did finish the play I began thinking through how to light it. There is a sharpness to the comedy that demands to be addressed through light. No mushy recessive stuff here. Both colors and angles need to be crisp and distinct.
The first thing I saw clearly was that the air must feel colorful. Much like approaching musical comedy, the farcical nature of the piece demands a feeling of color everywhere. But that color must be carefully chosen to augment the crisp dialogue. I also knew that I wanted a very sharp look in terms of my approach to angle but was not sure how to achieve that.
At the first production meeting Bill, who was designing the scenery, came in with a corner set on a 90 degree angle (the US was the corner of a room with walls at approximately 45 degrees from that point). Upon seeing this I was immediately struck with my solution to the sharp angle. I would hang a two color system of diagonal front Head-Hi’s following the angles of the walls. Once this piece was resolved everything else fell into place.
Backlight would be a cool and a color changing system. Sidelight would be a pair of pipe-ends from each side. A bunch of scenery specials. Both the Act 1 and Act 2 set had windows, so light through the windows would be prominent. The nature of the comedy led me to choose to fill in the shadows with color. As such there would be a medium blue through the windows for the night scenes and a dark blue frontlight system to fill from front of house. A pair of FOH IQs would do any additional specials as needed. The final element would be a lot of practicals in each scene to really bring the world to life.
Lighting systems are as follows:
Below is a look at the lightplot:

I hope you have enjoyed this edition of Inside the Design Idea. Please leave any comments or questions you might have.
More information here. Note, this is a link to a Facebook event page. You may need an account with that service to view it.
I find Charles Mee to be one of the most interesting playwrights alive today. His texts, often contemporary reworkings of the Greeks, are deeply profound insights into the contemporary American experience. Orestes 2.0 is no different.
Upon my first read of this play I was hit with a strong visual sense of the world. The first thing I was struck by was how bleak the world is. A desolate landscape where words like “possibility” or “hope” come across as cruel jokes at best. While that is the background of the play, there is a deep and almost perverse comedy element as well. The lighting had a difficult balance to strike. On the one hand we have this desolate place. On the other hand we have this big, broad, and perverse comedy. Exploring that tension is where the visual world gets interesting very quickly.
When I brought my ideas to director Jessica Heidt she was a bit wary of the bleakness and very eager to explore the comedy. Her concern, and rightly so, is that if the production focuses too strongly on that one aspect of the text, the delicate balance Mee has constructed will be lost. And it is in that balance that the play finds resonance with our contemporary experience.
Our research focused on post-invasion Iraq. Demolished palaces and military occupation. We looked at images of once grand palaces turned lounges for soldiers with fluorescent tubes bolted randomly to the walls and broken chandeliers hanging sadly unlit.
The space is a three-quarter round thrust stage. The set consists of a broken marble floor backed by a half demolished wall with three crumbling arches. Upstage of the arches is a CYC which might be a sky or perhaps a lake in the distance. This left the lighting unobstructed and gave me a large canvass to work with.
Solving the desolate landscape came first. It is the foundation upon which the action occurs. How would I approach this? Gray came first to mind, a sad and lonely gray. But there must also be a harshness. Something unforgiving as well. This led me to consider exploring soft diffuse sources contrasted with hard sharp ideas. The frontlight would be addressed with bounce light. I hung 9 Source-4′s with bounce cards to ring the stage, three per audience side, to give us facelight. Contrasting against that is a 3×3 grid of hard edged boxes that will allow us to delineate areas on the stage floor that we want to highlight. The facelight would be in a dominant daylight color and the boxes would be in a pale cyan.
This gave us our base for the landscape. Now on to the comedy.
Jessica was interested in my idea of heavy and saturated color invading the space. As such, I placed a system of color changing backlights using Source-4s with Seachangers. This would give me the ability to transform the space into any color needed for the many scenes. Further, several of the monologues have been converted into rock songs along with a dance number to Lady Gaga’s Bad Romance so having color change options is necessary. Upstage, the CYC is being lit with a three color RGB striplights. This allows us to get a lot of color out on stage in any hue we might desire.
Two sidelight systems and some cool PAR bakclights fill out our full stage ideas. We then have several ideas of light scraping across the scenery to pull out the textured walls as well as help lend a degree of realism to the painted scenery. People upstage of the arches are lit by booms with a Head Hi and a Shin.
The research image of the fluorescent bolted onto the wall really stuck with me. As such I asked to add two T-8 fixtures to the walls. In addition we will have a pipe added 3′ below our, already low, grid to hang three large scoops pointed out at the audience just downstage of the wall. Add a small handfull of worklights and we have a good array of practicals to play with contrasts between realism and theatricality.
And contrast is the name of the game here. Contrasts in color, quality, and angle of light; as well as contrasting reality with theatricality.
The system breakdown looks like this:
The grid, as mentioned before, is very low at 13′-9″. All lights will be overhung to give a clean grid line with the exception of the bounce lights (which have to underhang to work properly) and the low pipe with scoops. The intention there is to allow the lights that we are meant to see be very visible while those just lighting the show are more or less out of the visual field.
Here is a look at the lightplot:

I hope you have enjoyed this installment of Inside the Design Idea. I would love to hear your thoughts or ideas in comments below. Thank you for reading.
Don Giovanni with Berkeley Opera is a radical exercise in minimalism. The stage is a standard black surround; black floor, a series of black legs and borders all framing a white CYC. An upstage set of legs against the CYC is also white in order to make the space visually continue further offstage. Upstage just in front of the CYC are four steel framed boxes faced with milk plexi and topped with clear plexi. Downstage on the floor is a 4′x8′ mirror which serves as Don Giovanni’s personal island of narcissism. For the second act we have a single hanging streetlamp that flies in.
Minimal.
The director, and artistic director of the company Mark Streshinsky, was interested in creating a very spare environment wherein we could focus on the performers and the music without the distractions of all the scenery which can often get in the way of the basic storytelling. The lighting too wants to be in a similar spare vocabulary. A few simple and distinct elements will reconfigure and move through the piece.
One last design element worth noting is projection. In addition to the statue of Il Commendatore a few scenic moments will be treated with projections (on the CYC and white masking legs) to locate us in specific places throughout the piece.
One thing that will really help sell the minimalism of the piece is the performance style. Mark is doing a lot of work to keep the singers from “acting” and has placed the performance within a very naturalistic idiom. This sets the characterization against the setting, and the inherent absurdity of Opera, in a powerful way. By making the people real it allows the design to really push the edges of what is needed to tell the story.
Don Giovanni is a dark comedy. Often the nasty and despicable character of Don Giovanni, and his misanthropic sexual exploits, can overshadow the comedy. But the comedy must be treated with a very steady hand or the weight of Giovanni’s actions can be lost. It is a balance. And no simple task. Especially for a piece which begins with a near rape on stage.
As I thought through the piece, it was the darkness that first struck me. Most of the piece takes place at night. Further, we start with a rape and end with our villain being dragged into Hell. Not exactly the lightest of material. This led me to want to approach the piece with cool colors and a lot of shadow. Sidelight would be the name of the game. Sidelight and silhouette. Aside from being stylistically wrong for the piece, with the use of projection it made no sense to bother with front light. There are a few moments where we will want to see faces clearly, but those should be distorted, so the choice was made to place a series of floodlight footlights at the downstage edge of the stage. Some boxbooms will allow us to fill out the faces a little more for the wedding scene, but other than that we are lighting from the side and overhead.
Since our venue has a repertory plot, and my paperwork consisted of channeling their hookup, I will not be including a lightplot for this iteration of Inside the Design Idea. I will, however, give you a list of systems and colors. So here we go:
We load in and focus this evening. The show opens next week. See here for more information.
Please let me know what you think about this look inside the design of Don Giovanni in comments.
Floating Lightbulb by Woody Allen opens tomorrow at Traveling Jewish Theatre.
