Our General Izenour
A couple of weeks ago, Sonny Sonnenfeld – the elder statesman of the entertainment lighting industry – was holding court at the Rose Brand cocktail… Read More »Our General Izenour
A couple of weeks ago, Sonny Sonnenfeld – the elder statesman of the entertainment lighting industry – was holding court at the Rose Brand cocktail… Read More »Our General Izenour
With the Internet at our fingertips (another remarkable result of Moore’s Law), it’s fairly easy to stay current. Learn, read, inquire or take a video… Read More »The Challenge of Keeping Current
Every once in a while I feel the need to get away. It doesn't mean I stop working, but it means I'm not travelling to a different town to do a gig. I enter a work/play zone. So I did that last week.
"Here is what I tell young people: Work for a year or longer as a stagehand with whoever does that where you live. A college… Read More »Two Roads to Success
Back in the television world again last weekend. Got to work with an old friend of mine, Jeff Ravitz. We shot a show featuring Willie Nelson and a few other country legends at a Chicago theater.
What up everyone!? Its 3am Arizona time and I have a lot on my plate to talk about in the next few months. To start, EastonAshe and I are getting ready to hit the road next week. I have to say I’m excited to get on the road and see some new venues and people. That’s the joy of the road to me is to meet cool people and learning along the way, and just having fun at what I do. We travel in a suburban with a trailer hitched to the back with all the gear and we also have a van too for extra room so we’re not packed in like a bunch of sardines.
Hey everyone welcome back to The Notebook. This week I’d like to start with my first visit to the USITT here in Phoenix, Arizona. I was familiar with the LDI and NAMM shows where they have a lot of lighting displays, but not this particular one. Fortunately in a previous blog I plugged that I was in Phoenix and if anyone was in town could contact me to see an EastonAshe show. Little did I know that Richard Cadena would be contacting me saying that he’d be in town and interested in checking out a show. I happened to be interested in checking out the USITT since it would be a great opportunity to mix it up with my peers in the industry.
“But remember, in New York, you’re with thousands of designers who want work. In a town outside of New York, there might only be a… Read More »Wanna Take That First Step toward Lighting?
“Stars on Ice: Double Exposure” is the new professional ice skating tour from champion Scott Hamilton featuring top skaters who get to let their hair down and show the audience many sides of their lives beyond the skating rink. Lighting the many talented performers is a simple but effective lighting rig that allows the ice to be completely covered by patterns and colors throughout the show, and with the versatility of Vari*Lite VL3000 Spots, each production number and solo performance looks entirely unique.
Corporations and insurance companies raise the bar for qualified techs.
Despite what Donald Trump might have us believe, the age of the apprentice is coming to a close. Training for technical stage skills continues to expand, from college programs to private skills schools. ESTA, in conjunction with other professional organizations including IATSE, and with private entities such as Live Nation and PRG, has established the Entertainment Technician Certification Plan (ETCP), a voluntary testing and certification program that grants enhanced status to individuals who have passed its examinations.
The electrician is master of the theatre domain
“It seems the expectation is that an entertainment electrician should be an engineer, licensed electrician and theatre technician.” Virginia Croskey, an adjunct professor at Prince George Community College in Largo, Md., wrote those words after taking a two-day entertainment electrician’s course. The course is designed to teach the principles behind the practice of being an entertainment electrician. Yes, Virginia, there is more to the entertainment electrician than meets the eye.
As Broadway has become littered with revivals or shows inspired by movies or tied into famous franchises, it’s refreshing when an original work comes along to stir things up. One such production is the new off-Broadway musical In the Heights, a production certainly worthy of the Great White Way. With lyrics written and music composed by star Lin-Manuel Miranda, the bilingual In the Heights chronicles the lives of residents in a Latin neighborhood in Washington Heights, their interweaving stories, how they keep their heritage alive while adapting to a different culture and their pursuit of the American Dream. The musical features dynamic staging, a clear and vibrant sound mix full of Latin sounds, show tunes and hip-hop, and lively, inspired performances from the cast, particularly Miranda as grocery store owner Usnavi and Olga Merediz as Abuela Claudia, the matriarch of the neighborhood.