Behind the Epic, Tony-Nominated Beetlejuice Lighting Design | 半岛体育

半岛体育

Video Behind the Epic, Tony-Nominated Beetlejuice Lighting Design Watch how the Broadway set radically transforms thanks to some ghoulishly imaginative lighting and projection effects.

鈥淭here鈥檚 something deceptive about technology,鈥� says projection designer Peter Nigrini, one half of the duo currently nominated for a Tony Award for Beetlejuice鈥檚 lighting design. 鈥淭here鈥檚 actually an incredible amount of technology involved in oil painting: What are all the colors, what are all the pigments, what are all the varnishes? But we don鈥檛 think of oil painting as being a technological art form.鈥� And yet, that鈥檚 exactly what projection and lighting design are.

And while set designer David Korins deservedly earned a Tony nomination for his work on Beetlejuice, the difference between the set with and without the lighting and projections is startling. That's why 半岛体育 stopped by the Winter Garden recently to watch the full range of Nigrini and Kenneth Posner's work.

As storytellers, Nigrini and lighting designer Posner use their technological art to create and support the narrative of the titular demon caught between the living world and the Netherworld, and the sorrow-filled teen who might be desperate enough to help him.

Responsible for setting the tone and creating the world of Beetlejuice, Posner and Nigrini鈥檚 work begins before any characters step onstage. Posner bathes the Winter Garden theatre in a toxic green glow and projection highlights the drop curtain, welcoming audiences to a funhouse. It鈥檚 perfect combination of wacky fun and uneasiness that signals to the audience they're in for a wild ride.

When it comes to onstage, 鈥淧eter and I start from the black space and we carve into it,鈥� says Posner. 鈥淧eter鈥檚 tools all come from the front. Peter鈥檚 magic is that he can animate. What I can do is really bring out the texture in scenery and really sculpt and give dimension.鈥�

The purple and orange hues beaming from the wings鈥攖hat鈥檚 Posner generating the eerie and ribald world of Beetlejuice; the flashing projections on the sandworm that bobs in and out of the walls鈥攖hat鈥檚 Nigrini devising a crawling effect for the creature.

The design functions only in tandem as the two collaborate in a visual conversation to guide the audience.

鈥淣inety percent of the time what we鈥檙e doing is making sure people know where to look, which is ultimately a cinematic function. In cinema you point the camera in the right direction,鈥� Nigrini explains. 鈥淚n the theatre, the way we craft gaze is lighting and now also projection鈥攃reating those shapes that direct your eye where to look.鈥�

Which is why 鈥渨e鈥檙e constantly aware of where every object is on stage at all times,鈥� says Nigrini. Collectively, the lighting and projection establish the rules of the world and then directs audiences through it.

Once they capture that focus, they mold an ethos tailored to the story and the score. 鈥淲hen you see large shafts of light, it really is about emotion and the power of music and the power of performance,鈥� says Posner. 鈥淏eams of light add focus and drama. Height is dramatic, height is energy, so a big shaft of light, back-lighting an actor is a very emotional way to end a number and build musically.鈥�

Then again, sometimes lighting needs to be subtle, like with the homey air of the Maitlands at the top of Beetlejuice. Other times, it鈥檚 a smorgasbord of color, texture, and flash to reveal 鈥渢his house that鈥檚 been consumed and taken over by this character Beetlejuice,鈥� says Nigrini.

A Look at Beetlejuice on Broadway

 
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