Eos® says ‘Bring It On’ to Broadway’s biggest shows

A quiet revolution has been taking place behind the scenes on Broadway. An increasing number of lighting designers are choosing ETC’s Eos desk to control huge rigs of conventional, LED and moving lights for the largest shows. Currently, Eos-family desks run the lights on more than three-quarters of Broadway shows… and counting.

Broadway’s Bring It On is an energetic, acrobatic musical that gives a glimpse into the world of high school cheerleading. It features all the gravity-defying basket tosses, towering pyramids, and high-flying tumbling of a pep rally. The show’s high-impact, high-octane lighting design is also a highly ambitious endeavor. It features 29 DMX universes, more than 350 moving lights and nearly 1000 LED fixtures, including six ETC Selador Desire Ice™ luminaires. An ETC Eos control board is at the head of the massive lighting system.

“People are surprised that we have a show this size on Eos,” says Bring It On Lighting Programmer Tim Rogers. Lighting Designer Jason Lyons agrees: “Every time I talk about it with people, they doubt that Eos can handle it, because they’ve only known Eos as a theater desk. But it’s really a moving-light console. We can put everything on one desk, so programmers aren’t working from different consoles. Eos gives us the ability to eliminate the two-console system, making everything tighter and cleaner.” Eos also allows them to use MIDI to trigger the watch-out video server to control four video screens.

Bring It On’s lighting plot includes a grid of LED fixtures covering the back- and sidewalls that is used at times to replicate stadium lighting. The show was used as a beta test for the pixel-mapping feature on Eos, and the lighting team used this feature to map the entire stage. “Pixel mapping led us to where the show needed to go,” says Lyons, “because it allowed us to think differently about how we could light. The director enjoyed it because he could suggest things and see them right away on stage. If something needed to be changed, we could push it out immediately, while instantaneously backing it up on the show file. We never had to deal with content structure, which was really helpful. Even if you’re just dealing with a strip of LEDs, it’s an easy way to do effects. If you want just a sweep of lights, you can say ‘here’s my block of lights’ and move it left to right. Writing an explosion that starts in the center and moves outward is easier. Before you’d need to program it all as a chase and now you can just set it up on pixel mapping. As this show was being built, we had a lot of questions about how the pixel mapping would work, but it all came together.”

“Since Bring It On, I’ve been using pixel mapping on everything, even a simple cyc,” explains Rogers. Whether I think I’ll use it or not, I set it up, and so far I always end up using it.”

“With Eos,” describes Lyons, “we weren’t tied into pixel mapping or effects, but could do both. We can use the same effects we use on moving lights on pixel mapping. We can have video playing and move it around and do zoom, pan and tilt effects.”

Despite the size and complexity of the lighting system, Eos made programming and touring a breeze. “Everyone was nervous about the time it would take to load in and focus so many fixtures,” says Rogers. “Between all of the planning and how we were able to organize the show on Eos, everything was quick and came together flawlessly.”

“There are a lot of specific focuses in the show,” continues Lyons. “We loaded the show on the desk and everything went to cue and was perfect. It was amazing that all the focus information was perfect in the show file. Everything had to be updated quickly, and Eos allowed us to do that cleanly and quickly.”

Lyons attributes the success of Eos to the fact that it speaks the language of lighting designers: “Sometimes console developers understand what a console needs to do, but not what it’s like to be in the hot seat. With the Eos console, ETC understands what the best way to get from A to B is because they’ve been there with us for years. A lot of attention has been paid to the people who use the systems.”

In addition to its great feature-set, Eos is also backed up by ETC’s renowned service. Says Rogers: “I haven’t worried about anything, because I always have support. No matter where I am in the world, I can always call and get help. For Bring It On, ETC has been quick to help us out. There was a fix or help right away.”

Lyons has been using Eos-family control boards almost exclusively for the last six years, including on Broadway and regional tryouts such as Rock of Ages, White Noise, and Toxic Avenger. “A console is a programmer’s tool,” says Rogers, “and for these shows, it was the right tool for the job.”

“Eos is not just viable, but good. It doesn’t just handle a show, it goes above and beyond,” says Lyons. “It can take anything we throw at it. This time, we threw a huge show at Eos and it performed flawlessly.”

Bring It On first hit the stage to rave reviews in Atlanta, and then opened on Broadway at the St. James Theater in August. After the show closes on December 30th, 2012, the crew will pack their gear up to go on tour.

Installation

Bring It On, New York City, New York

Product List

Quotable

“Eos is not just viable, but good. It doesn’t just handle a show, it goes above and beyond. It can take anything we throw at it. This time, we threw a huge show at Eos and it performed flawlessly.” – Jason Lyons, lighting designer for Bring It On


Other Theatrical Installations

Bring It On, New York City, New York“Eos is not just viable, but good. It doesn’t just handle a show, it goes above and beyond. It can take anything we throw at it. This time, we threw a huge show at Eos and it performed flawlessly.” – Jason Lyons, lighting designer for Bring It On
View this installation >

Theater of Nations, Moscow, RussiaFew theaters around the world have such a long, rich and tumultuous history as the State Theater of Nations in Moscow, Russia. It stands as a testament to the importance of the arts, having survived many challenges. A recent large-scale renovation means the theater’s tough times are a thing of the past, and an equipment upgrade – including a new lighting system starring an ETC Eos® lighting control console and Source Four® fixtures – prepares the Theater of Nations for its promising future.
View this installation >

Chance Theater, Anaheim, CaliforniaThousands of venues around the globe have staged West Side Story, but none have approached the musical like the 49-seat Chance Theater in Anaheim, California. The theater is doing West Side Story with a modern lighting twist: an all-LED rig, featuring ETC’s latest lighting innovations. The goal of the show is to demonstrate how to use ETC LED fixtures to achieve the look of a conventionally-lit show – with full-spectrum color and naturally-rendered flesh tones – while achieving huge energy savings in a small theater.
View this installation >

Palilula Cultural Centre, Belgrade, SerbiaETC’s Serbian distributor Studio Berar installed and commissioned the latest generation of lighting at the Palilula Cultural Centre and theater in Belgrade, complete with ETC lighting, dimming and control.
View this installation >

Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland, OregonOregon’s Portland Center for the Performing Arts (PCPA) recently upgraded the lighting system in its Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall with 36 ETC Selador Classic Vivid-R™ LED luminaires. By installing the fixtures, the venue expanded its color capabilities, reduced its energy usage and earned cash incentives from Energy Trust of Oregon to put toward the fixtures’ purchase.
View this installation >

Bolshoi Theater, Moscow, RussiaAfter six years of construction, Russia’s Bolshoi Theater – one of the world’s preeminent cultural meccas for opera and ballet – has finally reopened its doors to newfound glory. The massive renovation project was focused on preserving the architectural and artistic features of the building while adding modern necessities and installing state-of-the-art technology in the theater’s historic main hall, including a completely new lighting system controlled by an ETC Eos® lighting control system.
View this installation >

Theatre Bonn, GermanyTheatre Bonn, a large repertory venue in the former German capital, has taken delivery of 50 of ETC’s newest LED fixture – Selador Desire™ – and 10 Selador Classic Lustr™ LED units as part of a massive refurbishment project. The fixtures complement around 900 fluorescent fixtures in various sizes and colors, 900 PAR cans, 70 moving lights, and 50 HMIs with shutters and scrollers.
View this installation >

Phantom of the Opera, London, UKThe multi-award-winning show Phantom of the Opera celebrated its 25th anniversary with a dazzling TV and live performance at London’s Royal Albert Hall, supported by ETC and its official dealer PRG.
View this installation >

Moscow Art Theater Named for Chekhov, RussiaThe Moscow Art Theater named for A.P. Chekhov has been a staple of Russian theater in some form since its first performance in 1898. With a repertoire of both foreign classics and Russian favorites, the Moscow Art Theater also stays true to its namesake, staging the highest caliber productions of Chekhov’s works. To ensure the lighting for the shows shines as brightly as the stars on stage, the Moscow Art Theater employs an ETC lighting system.
View this installation >

Gothenburg City Theatre, SwedenWhen Gothenburg City Theatre in Sweden received funding from the regional government to spend on energy-saving measures, the first thing the technicians thought of replacing was their energy-hungry cyclorama lighting. With the help of Peter Wikström, project manager at One Two Sales in Gothenburg, the technicians quickly realized that not only would ETC’s Selador Vivid™-R LED fixtures provide the quality and power of light they needed while saving a huge amount of energy, the theater would also gain some 15 feet of stage depth. Previously, a large gap had to be kept between the luminaires and the cyc wall itself. The Selador fixture, which can be mounted on the last flying bar, allows a greater area of stage to be used.
View this installation >

Sharon Lynne Wilson Center for the Arts, WIThe Sharon Lynne Wilson Center for the Arts in Brookfield, Wisconsin – a venue that supports arts programs in area schools, as well as local artists – has employed ETC lighting solutions in its theater spaces for the last decade. The complex caters to a broad range of events, from high school musicals and student orchestra recitals, to dance productions and cabaret acts. To provide the best possible lighting for each performance or special event, the technical staff uses a range of ETC lighting control consoles, including Element™, SmartFade® ML, and Congo jr™. The Wilson Center also became the first venue to use ETC’s newest lighting control console, Congo Kid.
View this installation >

Guangzhou Opera House, ChinaOne of the three largest performance venues in China (along with Shanghai’s Grand Theater and Beijing’s National Centre For The Performing Arts), the new Guangzhou Opera House made its world premiere this May, with ETC entertainment and architectural lighting systems in control. The permanent ETC equipment has now helped light the production-packed 9th China Arts Festival (May 10th-25th, 2010), the most prestigious platform for the nation’s top talent, and for which Guangzhou was the headlining venue.
View this installation >

Bournemouth Pavilion Dance Centre, UKThe Pavilion Dance Centre in the southern coastal city of Bournemouth, England, has just opened with new lighting equipment from ETC, including six Selador® Vivid-R™ LED fixtures. The gear, which was supplied by Audio Light Systems, also includes an ETC Congo® jr lighting control console with fader wing, Source Four® Zoom spotlights, two Sensor®+ dimmer racks, and a non-dim control panel custom built for the project by ETC.
View this installation >

Royal Ballet, O2 Arena, London, EnglandGreat Britain’s renowned Royal Ballet recently staged Romeo and Juliet for an audience of 12,000, not at their home venue at Covent Garden, but at London’s vast O2 arena. The bold spatial experiment was a great success. And behind the scenes of the complex production was an ETC Eos lighting control system.
View this installation >

5th Avenue Theatre, Seattle, WashingtonSeattle’s 5th Avenue Theatre is renowned for its high-caliber live performances, music revivals and Broadway shows. In 2008, 5th Avenue upgraded the lighting system in its 2,115-seat proscenium theater in order to keep pace with the changing world of theatrical lighting – productions adding more moving lights and special effects, and a faster turnaround time between shows. Says Head Electrician Sean Callahan: “We were looking for one console that could control everything that we normally use and could deal with the future expansion of our system.” They chose ETC’s flagship Eos control system.
View this installation >

Bradford Theatres, West Yorkshire, UKETC and Northern Stage Services completed the commissioning of Sensor dimming and Unison® Paradigm control systems at the three venues that make up Bradford Theatres in northern England.
View this installation >

Opéra Garnier, Paris, FranceLike many theater-technology professionals, Pascal Boulanger, the lighting chief at Paris’s Opéra Garnier, has an increasing number of jobs to do and fewer people to help. Boulanger decided that pre-programmable moving lights would be a labor-saving solution. But he was also concerned about introducing fixture noise into an acoustically-purist opera environment.
View this installation >

American Idiot, Berkeley Rep, CAAmerican Idiot, the GRAMMY®-winning album by rock icons Green Day, is now thrilling audiences as a poignant and high-octane rock-opera at the Berkeley Repertory Theatre. In American Idiot, the cast takes show-goers on a journey as tormented youth finding their way in the twenty-first century. The dynamic musical also incorporates aspects from concert- and theatrical-lighting and impressive special effects. To control the high-energy lighting, American Idiot Lighting Designer Kevin Adams uses an ETC Eos® lighting control system.
View this installation >

Kentucky Center, Louisville, KYThe Kentucky Center for the Performing Arts (KC) produces more than 700 shows a year, from ballet to symphony, Broadway to opera and much more. That means a show virtually every day in their performance spaces, which include the 2,406-seat Robert S. Whitney Hall, the 619-seat Moritz von Bomhard Theater and the 139-seat Boyd Martin Experimental Theater (Mex). When KC had the opportunity in 2009 to upgrade its lighting equipment, they chose a complete ETC package, with controls, dimming and fixtures.
View this installation >

Byrnes Auditorium, Rockhill, SCBuilt at the end of the Great Depression as a WPA project, the majestic Byrnes Auditorium at Winthrop University in Rockhill, South Carolina, is a classic 1930’s theater.
View this installation >

English National Ballet, UKETC has supplied a range of lighting and control equipment to English National Ballet, including an Eos and an Ion control desk through new console dealer London Light Production Services.
View this installation >

Fox Theatre, Oakland, CAThe historic Oakland Fox Theatre in Oakland, California, has reopened its doors to popular acclaim, painstakingly restored to its former glory after years of neglect and abandonment. Integral to the stunning visual impact of the restoration is the unique architectural-lighting accent solution, designed around ETC's Selador Series LED fixtures.
View this installation >

Aida, San Diego, CAOur ETC Source Four® fixtures are popular instruments at operas and theaters worldwide – prized for their lighting punch, green efficiency, cool beam, and optical precision. When the San Diego Opera staged Giusseppe Verdi's renowned Aida in their 2008 season, they used a big rig of Source Fours to achieve their scenic impact
View this installation >

Schouwburg Theater, Almere, the NetherlandsThe Schouwburg Theater in the Dutch city of Almere has won the Installation Europe Award 2007 for best auditorium project, with its ETC IES Matrix™ Mk II SineWave dimming receiving special praise from the judges.
View this installation >

Det Norske Teatret, Oslo, NorwayFollowing major technical refurbishments, Det Norske Teatret (literally, The Norwegian Theater) in Oslo has specified ETC’s most technically advanced theater lighting console, Eos, as well as ETC Sensor® and Sine Wave™ dimming and an ETC Unison® architectural control system.
View this installation >

Teatro Ribeiragrandense, São Miguel, AzoresThe Teatro Ribeiragrandense (Ribeira Grande civic theater) in the Azores island of São Miguel has recently been restored to its former glory with help from ETC's lighting systems. Portuguese dealer Luzeiro was the consultant on this project and specified an ETC Congo® jr lighting control console with Master Playback Wing for the installation.
View this installation >

Royal Danish Playhouse, Copenhagen, DenmarkETC, through distributor Bico Professionel A/S, has installed lighting and dimming at the newly built 750–seat Royal Danish Playhouse, part of the Royal Danish Theatre in Copenhagen, Denmark. The Theatre used to hold performances across town, at the Stærekassen (New Stage) but now all dramatic performances under the auspices of the Royal Danish Theatre are held at the Playhouse.
View this installation >

South Pacific, New York City, NYThe 2008 Broadway revival of Rodgers and Hammerstein's South Pacific has become a critically–acclaimed success, following in the footsteps of the record-setting 1949 production. Like the original, the revival swept the Tony Awards®, coming away with seven wins, including the Tony for Best Lighting Design of a Musical. To help create his award–winning lighting, South Pacific's designer Donald Holder enlisted the award–winning ETC Eos® control console.
View this installation >

Young Frankenstein, New York City, New YorkIn that electrifyingly hilarious moment when the monster is shocked to life in the current Broadway production of Young Frankenstein, no effect is spared in Peter Kaczorowski’s lighting design. The stage visuals are achieved by a creative combination of projection, conventional and moving lights, with the elaborate automated rig controlled by an ETC Eos® system.
View this installation >

Icelandic NCCC, Reykjavik, IcelandThrough distributor and systems-integration specialist Exton, ETC will supply its Congo® lighting control consoles, Sensor®+ dimmers and Source Four® fixtures to the Icelandic National Concert and Conference Centre, which is set to open at the end of next year.
View this installation >

OCPAC, Costa Mesa, CABehind the near acre of undulating panes of glass that give California’s new Segerstrom Center for the Arts its singular architectural look, lies an equally bold statement inside about theater technology.
View this installation >

Royal Festival Hall, London, UKSince 1951, London's Royal Festival Hall (RFH) has attracted one of the most diverse audiences of any UK venue. For over 50 years it has hosted a wide-ranging program of classical and world music, rock, pop, jazz, and dance. Designed and built in just three years, following World War II, the Royal Festival Hall is part of the South Bank Centre, not far from the Tate Modern and Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre.
View this installation >

Maly Theater, Moscow, RussiaOn September 4, 2006, the Maly Theater in Moscow, Russia celebrated its troupe’s 250th anniversary, making it the oldest troupe in the country. The theater had even more reason to celebrate this milestone, as it got to show off the first completed phase of a $5.5 million renovation, which includes some of the latest lighting technology from ETC.
View this installation >

Munich Kammerspiele, GermanyA lighting position over the audience had remained vacant since the Munich Kammerspiele’s reopening in 2003, because none of the automated luminaires on the market complied with the restored theater’s noise restrictions. Kammerspiele’s Max Keller says, “Only with the introduction of ETC’s Source Four Revolution could this position finally be equipped with fixtures. The fan and motor noise were so minimized that we could now place a moving light in the audience area of our theater.”
View this installation >

Holland Performing Arts Center, Omaha, NEThe new Holland Performing Arts Center in Omaha, NE, is one of the first venues in the U.S. to own ETC’s Congo® lighting control. Able to handle intricate lighting plots with automated and conventional fixtures, Congo was an easy choice for the complex. The Holland Center is also one of the first venues to use ETC Congo Client™ wireless control and a Congo Radio Remote Focus Unit (cRRFU).
View this installation >

Copenhagen Opera House, Copenhagen, DenmarkThe Copenhagen Opera House employs ETC’s IES sine wave technology. The Opera utilizes 1008 channels of ETC Sensor+ CEM+ dimming, plus 300 channels of IES sine wave dimming and 120 channels of IES switch bars. An ETC Emphasis® 2D system is used for houselight control and is networked using ETCNet2™. An ETC Unison® architectural system is used to control foyer and outdoor lighting.
View this installation >