The Tender Land marks the second show I will be lighting for Berkeley Opera during their 2010 season. It is directed by Elkhanah Pulitzer with scenery by Chad Owens and costumes by Romy Douglass.
The Tender Land is set in the Depression-era American heartland. With this piece Aaron Copland has crafted a gentle look at life in rural America through one day in the life of our protagonist, Laurie Moss, a young girl on the cusp of being the first in her family to graduate High School whose dreams extend well beyond the fields of grain on her family farm.
The research for this piece centered around the documentary photography of Walker Evans. In addition to providing good visual research for scenic and costume elements, we took the tone of his black and white photographs as the springboard for our color palette.
The scenery, as you can see from the model shots to the left, consists of a few simple pieces evocative of the shape of various items rather than representational elements. These pieces are all painted white. Upstage, the cyc is tightly closed in and will be used as a projection surface and a lighting surface in Act 1 and Act 3. For the party scene in Act 2, the cyc will be covered with a blackout curtain.
The costumes follow in a monochromatic white palette but maintain the shape and form of period clothes. Thus we have very real people existing in a more abstracted space. The intent being to really bring out the humanity of the characters.
The form of the scenery, with its minimal structure and open use of space, brought to mind dance scenery. As such, I looked at traditional dance lighting angles to approach lighting the space. In keeping with the monochromatic white scenery and costumes I chose to be very sparing with my use of color. While I will use a pale blue for the outside night scene, everything else should fall into more of a sepia tone.
Act 1 is late afternoon on the farm. We are outside and see the edge of the porch leading to the house as well as one corner of the barn and a suggestion of the fence upstage. I wanted to provide some texture to the air as well as clearly give a sense of outside. Leaf patterns seemed an appropriate choice for this. My High Sides from SR all have patterns in them. Act 2 is later that night, inside at a party. For this, top light felt like the most clear indicator of place. We then have an interlude scene before Act 3 which takes place outside, as per Act 1, late at night, just before day break. For the external night scenes I have my High Sides from SL in L161
For general lighting throughout the piece I have a system of Head-Hi and Shin booms, as well as boxbooms for facelight. The boxbooms carry the lighting ideas of both the Hi Sides and the Head Hi Booms out into the front of house. The repertory plot in the theatre has many more lights hung than we are using, but we have a very limited load-in and strike schedule, so I planned for a minimum of lights initially, knowing that we could easily add specials as needed.
The systems are as follows:
- Template Hi Sides in CLR with pattern R77774
- Night Hi Sides in L161
- Party Top Light in R302
- Head Hi Booms in L203
- Shin Booms in R05
- Romance Shins in L201
- Box Boom SR in CLR with pattern R77774
- Box Boom SL in L161
- Box Booms in L203
- CYC in RGB from the top and bottom
Below is a look at the plot. As you can see there are many more lighting instruments available than I am using. Some of this is an aesthetic choice. I find that opera can often sustain, and in fact wants, a cleaner and more spare composition than do straight plays for example. The other aspect of this choice is time. With such a short load-in/load-out schedule, keeping the refocus to a minimum helps us on both ends of the show.

I hope you have enjoyed this iteration of Inside The Design Idea. Please leave thoughts or comments below.











