Posts Tagged ‘nytb’

Color Sense

Tuesday, April 10th, 2007

I have been working on the lightplot for the revival of Cinderella with New York Theatre Ballet. Largely the plot is the same as last year. However there were some changes in the house plot at Florence Gould Hall and the repertory program that plays with Cinderella is different so the lightplot has changed some.

I think these are all very beneficial changes. Some things have been streamlined, some others expanded. For the most part it has been a matter of maximizing what is available in the palette. The company prefers a very colorful look. This is a fun aesthetic to work in, but the trick is to get the color sense without using so many colors that the light gets muddy. It is very easy with a lot of color to make costumes look old and dingy. The trick is to have a look that is clean and also shows off the dancers, costumes and scenery to the best advantage.

I love working in heavy color environments. Windows was quite the extreme as far as the use of color goes, but it helps make the point. Often, though, I find that direct saturated colors like that are not what is wanted in a colorful space. More the need of the piece is a sense of color. The feel of color is very different than the direct application of heavily saturated colors themselves.

The color sense of a piece is often a key factor in how a piece if perceived. Medea wanted a terse look. It needed a strong but minimal framework to place around the action of the play. The result was heavy use of shadow, black is a very important color in the lighting designers toolbox, and a very contained color palette. The Last Word . . . , a totally different kind of show, had en even tighter color palette. The color varied by less than 1000 degrees Kelvin, with no black.

New York Theatre Ballet can be a tricky aesthetic to nail down. My experience has been that it works best with a sense of color, but when saturated colors are used they are kept in the background. Saturated colors are very present, purples and blues and greens and reds, but the majority of the color work is “invisible.” That is, the colors are tints. A cool white or a warm white, slightly pink or a touch of amber or a pale blue, but no strong color.

It is the careful mixture of these tints, combined with the selective use of saturated colors, that gives the overall piece its color sense. Color can be a difficult thing to get a hold of. One of my reasons for going to NYU for graduate school is the legendary color lecture of John Gleason carried on by Curt Ostermann. And while this can provide all the rules, it then takes hundreds of experiments and breaking of the rules to really get a grasp on it.

Every play or dance or opera is a kind of experiment. Even revivals. They are never definitive, but always propositions. Will this piece resonate with an audience today? What must be done to make it speak in a language accessible today. In many ways dance is the strongest in this regard. There is an immediacy to dance that is a much less common thing in a play. In Opera it is the rare occurrence that it holds that fresh immediacy, but when it does, it is a sight to behold!

The color sense can be a powerful tool to help bring a piece into a framework accessible to the audience. It is a delicate balance to find what is both true to the work and at the same time pulls the audience into that work in a clear and direct manner. Lots of work, but a hell of a lot of fun too.

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A Very Happy Birthday

Saturday, March 17th, 2007

Eleven hours straight of tech is a lot to handle on a birthday, but I have to say getting to light some dance was a nice present. Yesterday went very well. We loaded in, focused and got the show cued by 3pm for a run through. A long exhausting day but very satisfying.

While I was just in Florida it feels like I have not lit any dance in a while. I am quite pleased with the result. I think there is some very nice stuff going on on stage from a lighting perspective. The pieces are very different from the company look I have grown accustomed to, it is much more in an aesthetic direction that I enjoy working in, so the lighting was a pleasure to do. It felt like a birthday gift, even though it was simply a pleasant coincidence.

After I got out of the theatre I met my girlfriend for dinner. She took me to an amazing vegan restaurant called Blossom. This was seriously one of the best meals I have ever had. Not just one of the best vegan meals, but one of the best meals. Ever. Seriously. Amazing. Anyone with a passion for good food would do themselves a disservice by not eating here.

What truly surprised me was the dessert. I ordered the cheesecake. Now I love cheesecake, and while I am only vegetarian, not vegan, I still try to minimize my dairy intake, so cheesecake is not consumed that often. But, OH MY GOD. This was amazing. It was not just amazing as vegan cheesecake, it was amazing cheesecake.

Between lighting dance all day, a play opening and having such a wonderful meal last night it was sure a good day. I was off line all through the day while at the theatre and dinner, so I was able to come home to a pile of emails and a few MySpace messages saying happy birthday.

A very nice day.

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Firebird Opens Today

Friday, March 16th, 2007

Carnival of the Animals and Firebird opens Saturday.

Ticket information available here.

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Settling In

Saturday, March 10th, 2007

It feels like things are calming down a bit here on the work front for the moment. Future projects are settled for the time being. Still busy working, but all the crazy prep stuff is largely out of the way for now. The show in NJ is open and out of my hands. I was really done with it two days ago, but the choreographer wanted me around yesterday so I went to the opening performance to keep an eye on things.

Next week I am in tech for two shows. Stirring with Shalimar directed by my friend Shoni and then Firebird with New York Theatre Ballet. Both of these should be rather low stress, or so I foresee. Stirring is in tech from Tuesday to Thursday and the NYTB show Techs Friday. I then run the NYTB shows all weekend.

Monday, we begin focus for the show I am assisting on at the New York Theatre Workshop. All The Wrong Reasons is being lit by my friend Mark. It is in previews for eight thousand years. Ok two weeks, but still . . . I am there in large part to deal with the previews. Mark has to leave early. So I am there to be available to the director until opening.

I have never done a show at the Workshop, so I am looking forward to this. Plus Mark is a lot of fun to hang out with and we have not seen each other much since he was at NYU. It will be nice to reconnect for a bit. Oh yeah, and do a show.

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Protected: Settling in

Saturday, March 10th, 2007

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So You Want to See a Show

Friday, February 23rd, 2007

Manhattan, NY
Artfuckers
Operation Ajax
The Last Word . . .

Delray Beach, FL
New York Theatre Ballet

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78 and Sun

Thursday, February 22nd, 2007

Sometimes I just love my job.

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Florida Here I Come

Wednesday, February 21st, 2007

So I will be inside a theatre for most of my time there, but we do get a half day tomorrow as the flight is scheduled to arrive around noon and we do not load-in until Friday morning. Warm weather. No snow. Even a half day will be a nice mini vacation before our whirlwind five shows in three days adventure.

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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.

LSTWRD7_C
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.

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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.

MG_little_bo_blue

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.

MG_sunset

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.

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