Pro-Light-News |
Architectural Lighting
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Held at New York City's Radio City Music Hall on August 29th, MTV's Video
Music Awards were as colorful as ever thanks to a plethora of music
superstars (Bruce Springsteen, Guns N' Roses, Eminem, White Stripes), not so
intelligent speeches (Michael Jackson gave an acceptance speech for an award
he didn't win) and intelligent lighting projection.
Another Michael, Michael Appel, an automated lighting programmer from New York City, worked on the awards show with Lighting Designer Daniel Kelley from the Lighting Design Group. Their challenge was to light the outdoor pre-show and post-show, as well as the building facade during the main show. Michael explains, "The main scenic element of our shots was going to be a banner covering the outside of Radio City Music Hall. In order to light this banner and frame it out from the rest of the building the LD originally specd an automated light that, in my experience, wasn't going to be bright enough to compete with the lighting conditions at dusk (when the live shoot would begin). So I spoke to the LD and we decided to go with 4 Martin MAC 2000 Performance units to light the sign and another 13 MAC 2000 Profile units to light a performance on 6th Avenue in front of Radio City, as well as to color the air for wide shots of the street." Michael also used other automated lights on the show. The MAC units were provided by Paradigm Productions. "The gobo animation system helped us create various interesting looks on the banner and the fixture's output and beam coverage were most impressive. The framing shutters were very accurate in repeating focuses." |
Then the rain came"We were deluged by rain the morning of our show and because of how some of the hanging positions had been built we could not send up any stagehands to bag 7 of the MAC 2000 Profiles. They were rained on for about 10 hours. When the rain finally let up we let the units air dry for about 1 hour and then we needed to power them up to see what kind of situation we would be in for the show. The units powered up and after a couple of lamp strike attempts they all fired and worked for the show - an amazing feat for any moving light." |