A Les Mis For Right Now by Rob Halliday

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Rob is delighted to be part of the all-new production of Les Misérables, being staged by Mountview as the official opening show of their new theatre, which is to be named The Mack in honour of Cameron Mackintosh who has supported it financially.

Rob has been involved with Les Mis from the time of the show’s tenth anniversary concert at the Royal Albert Hall and on through productions in London, touring the UK, in Australia, Belgium and New York. His summary of the history of the lighting of that remarkable production can be found at The Lighting Archive: [link].

However almost exactly none of the knowledge of that production is relevant to this one, which is being re-invented from the ground up in a contemporary setting by directors Matt Ryan and Shiv Rabheru and designer Lee Newby with lighting by Rob. It promises to be quite something, a thrilling evening of theatre even to those who think they know the show well.

Les Misérables plays at The Mack at Mountview in Peckham from November 1-6th.

More details here: [link].

Death Drop Takes To The Road by Rob Halliday

Death Drop, one of the shows which played in London during the various early stages of unlocking last year and earlier this year, has now hit the road so that all of the UK can enjoy this unique drag murder mystery…

Rob was delighted to work once again with lighting designer Jack Weir, re-creating and programming the show lighting for him at the first stop on the tour in Southend with a compressed version of the set, then programming at the second stop in Salford as the show stepped back up to its full design.

The show is now making its way around the UK. Full details can be found here: [link].

Back In A Theatre - For Real! by Rob Halliday

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In complete contrast to some recent projects - Rob is delighted to be back in a real theatre with the real performers and the real lights, getting the UK tour of the musical Waitress up and running.

This is the production that Rob worked on remotely in Japan back in January with lighting designer Ken Billington and associate lighting designer Aaron Porter. It was interesting to load the show into the desk and see what things actually looked like - which, as it turned out, were pretty good!

With Ken Billington in New York re-opening the Broadway production of the show, the relight here was carried out by Aaron Porter, with regular note-swapping across the Atlantic so that changes being made to the show in New York could be incorporated into the tour here.

All of this was ably supported by production electrician Chris Vaughan and the touring lighting team of Ben Webster, Thomas Pritchard and Robin Potter.

Waitress launched its tour at the New Wimbledon Theatre, and is now making its way around the country.

Watiress: [link]

Long Range Lighting, Again... by Rob Halliday

A year on from re-creating Billy Elliot in Japan remotely, five months on from programming Waitress in Japan remotely, Rob is remote-re-lighting and remote-programming again - this time for Billy Elliot in Korea.

Remote lighting plans were put in place for this production at a point when travel into Seoul from the UK was not allowed. Even as that became possible (with two week quarantining), Rob decided to continue to work remotely because of the uncertainty surrounding international travel. Lovely as Seoul is, it would be unfortunate to be there and have the rules change so you weren’t allowed home…

The remote working system Rob has designed is a refinement from that used for Waitress, with two video feeds offering the best balance between image quality and low latency, and then a working set-up that includes a large monitor for stage view, and an Eos Ti console connected to the Korean console via theBRIDGE networking system. Considerable care was taken with camera specification and, particularly, colour camera set-up to give the best possible representation of the stage to those working from afar. As before the only drawback is a crazy work schedule: a Korean working day maps to a 1am-2pm day in the UK.

The other different this time is that the lighting designer, Rick Fisher, will get to be in the theatre once he is allowed out of quarantine - so there will be ‘eyes in the room’ and so an ability to make real, useful comparisons between the on-stage image and the on-camera image.

Technical rehearsals for Billy Elliot in Korea begin today; the show previews from August 31st, and opens on September 5th.

Remote Lighting at Virtual Showlight 2021: [link]

Back In The West End! by Rob Halliday

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Six months since the last attempt at getting shows open again, Rob has been back in London’s West End, helping get shows open again - in this case programming for lighting designer Jack Weir on Death Drop at the Garrick Theatre, which re-opened on Wednesday night.

In a theatre? With a cast? And a creative team? And then - an audience?! It’s a bit like normality is returning!

Death Drop: [link]

Cats - 40 Years On by Rob Halliday

Whatever it is, the way you tell your story online can make all the difference.

Forty years ago today, a new musical with an unlikely subject reflected in its single-word title opened in London: Cats.

It would be fair to say that in the run-up to its opening, no-one gave it much chance of success.

Twenty-one years later, as its London run finally came to an end, it proved those cynics wrong - and it continues to do so, with performances still running around the world.

To mark the show’s anniversary, Rob set out to talk to the people who put the show together - and in doing so established much of the way shows are done today, and indeed much of the basis for the live entertainment industry as we know it now. Quite an achievement.

You can read all about it in the latest issue of LSi magazine, out now.

Cats in LSi: [link]
Cats in The Stage: [link]
The original lighting plan for Cats: [link]

Upcoming (Virtual!) Appearances by Rob Halliday

Rob will be involved in three on-line sessions over the next few weeks, covering quite a diverse range of subjects.

On the morning of Wednesday 12th May, he’ll be part of the panel talking about the EU’s Ecodesign regulation (and its new post-Brexit UK equivalent) as part of the PLASA Online 2021 event, alongside PLASA’s Peter Heath, Silke Lalvani of Pearle, and Christian Allabauer of OTHG. This will be a great place to learn about where things have ended up with these regulations, how they might affect you as a manufacturer or user of lighting equipment, and what might happen in the future in both the EU and the UK.
[Link]

That afternoon, Rob will be back as the host of a session on the recent production of Romeo & Juliet which combined real performers with virtual scenery and lighting. Rob will be chatting to those responsible for the production - Ryan Metcalfe, who produced it,, created the visuals and edited it all together, designer Jamie Osborne and sound designer Olly Steel.
[Link]
Read about the production here: [link]

Two weeks later, on Tuesday May 25th, Rob will be back as part of the ‘Virtual Showlight’ day, which sees the wonderful Showlight event move online for the year. Rob will be teaming up with Ken Billington and Aaron Porter to talk about their work lighting the musical Waitress in Japan - without leaving home!
[Link]
Waitress Japan: [link]

Both PLASA Online 2021 and Virtual Showlight 21 are free to attend and contain many fascinating sessions. Sign up today!

Lighting and Programming Without Leaving Home by Rob Halliday

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Rob is currently programming the musical Waitress in Tokyo from the front room of his home in London - working with the lighting designer Ken Billington, who is sitting in his office in New York!

One of those things that would have been dismissed as nonsense a year ago, before Coronavirus hit, now feels almost normal - and while it’s certainly not an ideal way of lighting a show, it does at least allow a show to be lit at a time when travel restrictions mean there was on other way of lighting it.

Rob was originally scheduled to work on the show in Tokyo, having programmed the London production of the show for Ken a couple of years ago. However, as Japan closed its borders to arrivals from America and the UK yet the show’s producers decided to press ahead with the musical, an alternative plan had to be formed. The question: was it possible to light a show with the production desks spanning the world?

The immediate challenge was whether it was possible to connect two ETC Eos consoles across the internet. It seemed that a Virtual Private Network (VPN) would be required, ideally one that was easy to configure. Research led to the discovery of the company Just Networking, who it turned out were making the perfect pandemic product: theBRIDGE, a hardware VPN solution aimed at the entertainment industry. They’d tested it with grandMA consoles successfully; their UK distributor LCR supplied a couple of units and tests were carried out using Eos consoles between two locations in London - successfully! Additional units were immediately dispatched to Tokyo and London.

Next, Ken Billington’s associate Aaron Porter designed a system of Zoom calls to effectively replace both the traditional comms in the theatre and the traditional view of the stage from the auditorium. Finally some additional equipment - consoles, large monitors to provide a stage view - was delivered to Ken Billington’s office in New York and Rob’s home in London by the show’s lighting supplier, PRG.

Finally, all of the elements were put together as the show loaded-in in Tokyo: the consoles came on line, Zoom connected everyone together, there was some adjustment of cameras to make the picture look like everyone remembered the show to looking like (since the rig and showfile are from earlier productions), and off the show marched into a rapid tech… The will to make it work and the support of the team in Japan, particularly production manager Takaaki Tanaka, head of lighting Wataru Okazaki and his team from ASG, and interpreter Sonoko Ishii.

It’s not an ideal way of lighting, and not definitely not how you’d want to work if you had a choice. But it works - and as a result the show will open on time in Tokyo next Tuesday, March 9th, before touring.

Waitress Japan: [link]
theBRIDGE: [link]
Ken Billington talks about the project: [link]