In Print: Dear Evan Hansen by Rob Halliday

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Rob’s article about the hit Broadway musical Dear Evan Hansen, part of a new wave of original new musicals from Broadway, is out now in the new issue of LSi magazine.

In writing the piece, Rob was lucky enough to get to talk to the show’s lighting designer, Japhy Weideman, projection designer, Peter Nigrini, and sound designer, Nevin Steinberg, about their work on this remarkable show, the success of which it feels has rather taken everyone by surprise - but which is nonetheless entirely deserved. As ever, Rob was delighted to be able to talk to three professionals at the very top of their game, about a show they clearly adore.

Rob also has a second piece in the same issue, about the re-opening of the Fairfield Halls in Croydon after a protracted refurbishment process, as well as his regular Classic Gear and Tools from Beyond columns.

The February 2020 issue of LS is available now in print or online. [link]

Playing Now: Betty Blue Eyes by Rob Halliday

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Taking a break from the big secret project overseas, Rob has been back in the UK and has just lit the musical Betty Blue Eyes at Mountview’s new theatre in Peckham, south London.

The show is directed by Bruce Guthrie, for whom Rob lit City of Angels at the Royal Academy of Music last summer, and designed by Loren Elstein with costumes by Jennifer Gregory and sound design by Matt McKenzie.

This production also marks a very particular first: the first time Rob has lit a new production of a show where he was involved in the original production, having served as lighting programmer when the show premiered at the Novello Theatre in 2011.

Mountview’s production is smaller in scale, but arguably greater in charm.

Rob’s work was supported by a great lighting crew (production electrician Jess Pomeroy and her team of Kiri Baildson Smith, Ruth Endersby, Bill Traore, Sofie Mirza and Jahmal Swaby), great programmer (Imogen Clarke), plus Mountview’s team of production manager Davin Patrick, Alex Cann, Andie Dew and Robin Nash - and of course Mountview’s principal, Stephen Jameson, with whom Rob has worked all the way back to the play Groping For Trouts In Peculiar Rivers at the Battersea Arts Centre in 1993.

Betty Blue Eyes is playing now, and runs until Wednesday 12th February.

Betty Blue Eyes: [link]
Images: [link]
Photo: Robert Workman

Busy, Busy... by Rob Halliday

Sometimes a lack of news means a quiet period…

But other times lack of news means a really busy period on a really exciting new show…. that no-one is allowed to talk about yet!

This is one of those times.

More soon…

Giudizio Universale at the V&A! by Rob Halliday

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Last night saw the preview showing of Staging Places: UK Design for Performance at the V&A Museum in London; the exhibition opens to the public today, Wednesday 24th July.

Rob was there last night to celebrate the fact that Giudizio Universale, the immersive show telling the story of Michelangelo and his work at the Sistine Chapel, was selected by the Society of British Theatre Designers to be part of this exhibition, which shows the best of design by British theatre designers over the last four years.

Giudizio sits in good company at the exhibition, but where many of the shows are demonstrated through models and costumes, Giudizio, as is seems perfect for a show led by projection, tells its story through projection, on a wall at the very centre of the exhibition.

“It’s an honour to have the show be part of this display of remarkable work by remarkable people,” Rob comments, “and a great tribute to the remarkable work done by all of the people involved with the show, particularly my co-lighting-designer Bruno Poet, Ric Lipson, Alicia Tkacz and all at Stufish, Luke Halls and all of his team, plus of course our composer John Metclafe, sound designer Mirko Perri, costume designer Giovanna Buzzi, choreographer Fotis Nikolaou, our directors Lulu Hekbek and Marco Balich and everyone who was involved in the show.”

Having already been seen as part of the Prague Quadrennial, Staging Places now runs at the V&A in London until 29th March 2020.

Staging Places at the V&A: [link]
Staging Places website: [link]
Prague Quadrennial: [link]

Farewell, Les Misérables by Rob Halliday

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A sad day: Saturday 13th July 2019 saw the final performance of the original and best Les Misérables at the Queen’s Theatre in London.

Les Mis opened at London’s Barbican Theatre in October 1985, transferring to the Palace Theatre in December that year; it moved to the Queen’s in April 2004.

Rob’s connection with the show began with the 10th Anniversary Concert at the Royal Albert Hall in December 1995, creating the light curtain flag for the triumphant end of the first act. That image can still be seen on the cover of the recording of that event.

Having worked with lighting designer David Hersey since 1993, Rob was then involved in the introduction of moving lights to Les Mis for the 1997 UK tour, originally with the aim simply to cut down on focus time on the road, but in fact allowing David Hersey to revisit the show and add some more precise detail and some greater variation in colour range. That tour used DHA’s Digital Light Curtains alongside High End StudioColors, with the entire rig - conventional and moving lights - controlled from one single lighting console, an approach that was unusual then but the standard way of working now.

That production formed the basis of the tenth anniversary Australian production of the show later the same year, a production which toured the world for several years, and then the Belgian production of the show in Antwerp in 1998. He was also involved with the show’s return to New York in 2006.

The moving light element of the rig was expanded for the transfer to the Queen’s. adding Pitching Digital Light Curtains, swapping the StudioColors for Vari-Lite VL2000s, and adding some Vari-Lite VL3500s for gobo work, including projecting the show’s famous captions.

Les Mis is a remarkable show, a remarkable piece of theatre, a remarkable production created by Trevor Nunn, John Caird, designer John Napier, lighting designer David Hersey and costume designer Andreanne Neofitou,” Rob comments. “It was an honour and a privilege to be a tiny part of the show’s history, to get to see just how this brilliant, magical piece of staging worked- though I have to say that watching the production for the last time just before it closed, as an audience member, no headset on, no cues to worry about, there were still moments that took me completely by surprise! It is an amazing creation, made by an amazing team. It will be missed.”

Rob notes also the countless people who have looked after the show with such care over the years, including associate lighting designers Jenny Kagan, Ted Mather, Rachael McCutcheon and the late Richard Pacholski, and the countless electricians who have looked after the rig, run the console (and smoke!) or driven the show’s followspots, including Mike Cordina and his team at the Queen’s Theatre.

Les Mis is just one of the many shows Rob worked on for Cameron Mackintosh (programming just about every one of the producer’s shows from 1994’s Oliver through to 2010’s Betty Blue Eyes). It was also one show out of the many on which he collaborated with David Hersey, starting with Piaf in 1993 and on through such notable productions as Oklahoma!, Miss Saigon, the Tony-award winning Equus and most recently Showboat at the New London Theatre.

Rob writing about Les Mis in The Stage: [link]
The Official Les Misérables website: [link]
Les Misérables at The Lighting Archive: [link]

Playing Now: City of Angels by Rob Halliday

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Second up in this year’s Royal Academy of Music summer season of musicals: City of Angels.

The production is directed by Bruce Guthrie, choreographed by Lee Proud, designed by David Harris with costume design by Simon Wells, video design by Gillian Tan and sound design by Mike Walker.

Always a complex show, this production was further complicated by being double cast. Nonetheless with the support of the RAM team, particularly production manager Michael ‘Skip’ Francis, and excellent stage management and technical teams the show opened to great acclaim.

City of Angels at RAM: [link]

Photo: Richard Hubert Smith

Playing Now: Tree of Codes by Rob Halliday

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Tree of Codes, the acclaimed dance show on which Rob collaborated with director-choreographer Wayne McGregor, visual designer Olafur Eliasson and composer Jamie xx, returns to Paris this week for a season at the Bastille Opera.

Since the show debuted at the Manchester Festival in 2015, it has been seen around the world - in New York, Paris (at the Garnier Opera), Aarhus, Melbourne, Sydney and Hong Kong.

The show plays as part of the Bastille’s rep between June 26th and July 14th, with tickets selling fast.

[link]

Photo: Joel Chester Fildes

Playing Now: The Wild Party by Rob Halliday

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Rob has been back at the Royal Academy of Music, continuing a working relationship with the Academy’s summer musicals stretching back 20 years to A…. My Name Is Alice in 1999.

This year the first of the two shows is The Wild Party, directed by Hannah Chissick and choreographed by Chis Whittaker, with whom Rob worked on the musical Cry Baby earlier in the year. The production is designed by David Harris, with costume design by Simon Wells and sound design by Mike Walker. The show’s production electrician was Dan Bowler, with Mark Matthews as lighting programmer.

The Wild Party is playing now, and will be followed by a RAM favourite, City of Angels

Photo: Richard Hubert Smith