- read thru age of arousal oct 16
- have to see professional theatre***
- (boeing boeing)
lighting
td&p ch 14-17
need to know the different components of a light nd what qualities that light will give you
need to have a plot for what you’re working with (like a ground plan only in the ceiling)
most common spaces are proscenium arches
- sometimes an orchestra pit
thrust
black box
alley
a lightning grid will have pipes across the room
- will be numbered and lettered
- lines horizontal and vertical
- walls will be very thick - filled in or filled diagonally (outer wall)
identified by Lx in cues
fresnel and leko
- fresnel is cheaper, shorter - pg 407
- has a bit of a reflector
- goes through the lens
- wide spill of light
- can’t get a hard edge
- for basic coverage
- don’t have a throw distance
- not that powerful
- alright for lower ceilings
- leko is more powerful, longer - pg 403
- ellipsoidal reflector spotlights
- have shutters to pull in and out to square in the light and focus it
- gives you the ability to have a hard OR soft edge
- much more powerful light
- better if you have a higher ceiling
lights are to see
representing outside light inside
lighting in general: have everything hung at a 45 degree angle for house lighting, hot lighting and cool lighting
red/hot, blue/cool
need to light actors
need to have people there to focus lighting
never touch the light bulb with your bare hands, you will ruin the bulb with the oils from your hands
minimum amount of wattage in a lighting instrument is 500
- our studio lights are all 500 watt lights and fresnel
- most of our lights in our theatre are 1000 watt lights (some 750 watts) and lekos
need minimum 2 lights on an actor, warm/cool, add lights as they turn (minimum 2 in arch, 3 with audience on 2 sides, 4 in thrust)
HOUSE HANG: lights hung just to light the space
lighting areas: pg 363
lighting has to overlap and be focused properly to keep consistent lighting
- we have 6 lighting areas in the studio
- we have 9 lighting areas in the theatre
proscenium arches often have pipes hung over the audience, called front of house pipes, labelled FOH
some theatres have booms, pipes on the outside perpendicular
SPECIALS: lights not involved in the house hang