Chapter 12 – Image Makers: Designers (Lighting, Sound, and Technical Production) I feel that light is like music. In some abstract, emotional, cerebral, nonliterary way, it makes us feel, it makes us see, it makes us think, all without knowing exactly how and why. —Jennifer Tipton
Chapter Summary In today’s theatre, lighting, sound, and computer technologies affect what we see, how we see, how we hear, how we feel, and often what we understand. As areas of theatrical design, lighting and sound, along with the new “machines,” are essential to the modern stage’s theatrical effectiveness.
Lighting Design: Background Ancient Greece: –Torches, fires, sunlight Medieval Europe: –Torches, cauldrons of flame and smoke, reflecting metals (outdoor) –Oil lamps, candles, reflecting glass (indoor) Renaissance: –Candles, oil lamps, panes of colored glass illuminated from behind, colored lanterns, transparent cloth veils, fireworks
Lighting Design: Background English theatre: –Onstage candles (lit before play, snuffed at end) –Chandeliers lit start to finish –Footlights (c. 1672) –Argand (“patent”) oil lamps (c. 1785): Replaced candles
Lighting Design: Background Gas (c. 1850): –Replaced oil –Limelight (prototype of spotlight) –Operated by technician at “gas table” –Drawbacks: Fumes Heat Live flame onstage
Lighting Design: Background Incandescent lamp (1879): –Replaced gas lights –Advantages: Not a fire risk Allowed for lightening and darkening different areas of stage Provided source of mood Allowed for different colors –London’s Savoy Theatre first to be fully lit with electricity (1881)
Lighting Design: Background Adolphe Appia: –First modern lighting designer –Argued for light as the guiding principle of all design –Established standards for lighting practices –Believed light could unify all production elements –Defined role of modern lighting designer
The Art of Light Light designer’s tools: –Form: Shape of light pattern
The Art of Light Light designer’s tools: –Form –Color: Mood achieved by filters (thin, transparent sheets of colored plastic, gelatin, or glass) or by varying degrees of intensity Death of a Salesman, with Lighting by Mary Louise Geiger Courtesy Will Owens/ PlayMakers Repertory Company
The Art of Light Light designer’s tools: –Form –Color –Movement: Changes in form and color using dimmers, motorized instruments, and computerized control consoles Courtesy of High End Systems
The Designer’s Process Read script: –Note visual images, practicals (lamps, chandeliers, etc.) Meet with director and designers: –Work out basic questions about lighting Create a design: –Light plot
The Designer’s Process: Light Plot and Focusing Light plot: –Map of lighting instruments: Location of each instrument to be used Type of instrument, wattage, color filter General area to be lighted by each instrument Circuitry needed to operate instruments Focusing: –Lights pointed toward area they will illuminate
The Designer’s Process: Cueing Operators provided with cue sheet: –Chart of control console showing instrument settings and color –Each cue numbered and keyed to script Designer and operators fine tune intensities, colors: –Each change marked on cue sheet Some shows use computer-programmed cues.
Special Lighting Effects Lighting effects: –Mirror balls –Searchlights –Projections –Holograms –Fireworks Gobos: –Slide inserted into gate of spotlight to project images
The Designer’s Assistants Assistant designer: –Helps prepare light plots –Compiles instrument schedules –Acts as liaison with technicians –Locates special equipment Master electrician: –Oversees safety issues –Maintains equipment, checks before performance Lighting crew: –Installs, operates, maintains all lighting equipment
Theatrical Sound: Background Earliest theatre: –Music –Choral chanting –Actor’s voices Elizabethan theatre: –Thunder machines (series of troughs for cannonballs to rumble down) –Thundersheets (sheets of tin that made a rumbling sound when rattled) –Thunder runs (sloping wooden troughs for rolling cannonballs down)
Theatrical Sound: Background Since 1900: –Telephone, doorbell ringers –Door slammer Since 1970s: –Audio recording, playback technologies, sound systems –Microphones, amplification
Uses of Live and Recorded Sounds Sound Foghorn Hourly chime Birds Rain, thunder Toilet flushing Scream, howling wind,creaking floorboard Telephone, door knock Helps establish: Setting Time of day Season Weather conditions Realism Mood Onstage cues
Music Functions: –Evokes mood –Establishes period –Heightens tension –Intensifies action –Provides transitions between scenes and at endings Implementation in production managed by sound designer
The Sound Designer: Process Reads script, makes note of cues Meets with director, designers, composer Researches sound libraries, records sounds, music Prepares sound track Plots effects/music on cue sheet
Special Effects with Sound Function of special effects: –Capture audience’s attention –Increase emotional impact Examples: –Offstage noise (e.g., car door slam) –Recorded music (e.g., to underscore emotional scene) Aids in telling story, reinforces intended impact of scene
Computer-Aided Design Computer-aided design (CAD) and computer-aided manufacture (CAM): –Help designers configure space “virtually” –Allows for preview, change of designs before manufacture –Access to virtual libraries –Allows for “virtual” design meetings
Technical Production Team Production manager (PM): –Coordinates staffing, scheduling, budgeting for every element of production Technical director (TD): –Manages scene shop, construction and operation of scenery, stage machinery Costume shop manager: –Manages costume inventory and budgets, buying fabrics, building, buying, and/or renting costumes and accessories
Technical Production Team Production stage manager (PSM): –Coordinates the director’s work in rehearsals with the actors and the technical departments –During show, responsible for running entire onstage and backstage operation Assistant stage manager (ASM): –Responsible for the smooth operation of technical systems and actors’ exits, entrances, and costume changes.
Core Concepts All design elements in the theatre serve the play and enhance the storytelling quality of the theatre. In collaboration with the director, designers (in tandem with actors) transform the “empty space” into the living world of the production. The theatre’s production and stage managers, along with the many technicians, provide the technical support system without which no theatre can open its doors.