Merrily We Roll Along 2022: Difference between revisions
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|'''Assistant Stage Manager''' <div style="text-align: centre;"> [[Robyn Johnstone]] </div> | |'''Assistant Stage Manager''' <div style="text-align: centre;"> [[Robyn Johnstone]] </div> | ||
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|'''Head of Stage | |'''Head of Stage + Automation''' <div style="text-align: centre;"> [[Scotty]] </div> | ||
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|'''Flys''' <div style="text-align: centre;"> [[Toby Cass]] </div> | |'''Head of Flys''' <div style="text-align: centre;"> [[Toby Cass]] </div> | ||
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|''' | |'''Deputy Stage + Automation''' <div style="text-align: centre;"> [[Rory Campbell]] </div> | ||
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|'''Stage Technician''' <div style="text-align: centre;"> [[Jamie Burke]] </div> | |'''Stage Technician''' <div style="text-align: centre;"> [[Jamie Burke]] </div> |
Revision as of 15:39, 9 January 2023
Overview
Stage Management
Technical Stage Department
Design
At the White card stage, Merrily We Roll Along presented a huge challenge with multiple flying pieces and many moving set pieces. The biggest worry initially was that the Technical Stage Department was made up of the Head of Stage, a Deputy, and one Head of Flys. This posed a huge question as to how we could pull off the multiple scene changes. The set stayed very true to how it was at the white card. One major change was needed, however. To support the moving ‘Gallery’ Set piece which was 3m tall and 1.2m wide it posed the threat of being unstable, wobbly and tippy. The workshop manager decided that a ‘Truss Goalpost’ was needed on either side of the truck to support the steel-framed flat and stairs around the truck. This involved moving all of the Upstage set pieces 400mm further upstage.
Light Ladders
Two 1400mm x 6100mm Flats were built with Steel 'Ladder' like extensions and festoon. These were to feature in 3 different positions throughout the different scenes.
Lighting
Sound
One of the main challenges of this show was the pit being at half-height. This of course meant less control in the front of house mix, and an overall louder sound in the auditorium before amplification. This also meant carefully runnning our cables up onto the pit lift, including cue and comms cables as well as cat5 for personal monitoring. It was important that this was made safe for the muscicians by making cable runs as clean as possible.
This also meant rigging the MD Camera with a hex-clamp and camera rigging to the underside of the stage to ensure a good view of the MD.
Video
This show used two projectors, one in the FOH truss position and the other on stage on LX 1. This was due to the two different projection surfaces, one being the gauze and the other a flown balcony piece. Two projectors were used to adhere to the focal lengths.
Notes: Kramer HDMI to CAT5 extenders won't draw enough power when an optical HDMI is used on the other end of it.
Additionally, an old CRT monitor was to be used on stage, with a live camera feed going to it through the disguise server. However, due to the digital-to-analogue converter breaking, the monitor was sadly cut.
Here you can see the system diagram of the set-up. File:MWRA - Systems Diagram V002.pdf