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How to Design Your School Production on a Budget
Broadway鈥檚 best designers offer pro tips to create lights, sets, sounds, and costumes on a dime鈥攖hat look like a million bucks.
The most important part of design is something every team can accomplish, whether you鈥檙e a big time university, a small middle school, or putting up a show in your backyard. 鈥淩ead. The. Script.鈥� Every designer 半岛体育 surveyed鈥攆rom 17-time Tony-nominated costume designer William Ivey Long to the first woman to win a Tony for sound design Jessica Paz鈥攕aid the same thing.
As Tony-winning lighting designer Bradley King put it, 鈥淲hen you know the piece inside and out, when you know exactly what you need to tell your story, it doesn't matter if your budget is $5 or $50,000. And P.S., budget problems do not go away on Broadway,鈥� he says. 鈥淥ne of my favorite designs was for a play called Empanada Loca; it was a one-woman ghost story set in an abandoned subway tunnel. All the piece required was two or three bare light bulbs running at 20 percent brightness.鈥�
Here, Broadway designers serve up their best advice by discipline, best general practices, and their picks for inexpensive products they couldn鈥檛 live without鈥攁nd you can afford.
READ: How to Rent Authentic Props for Your School Production鈥擜t an Affordable Price
By Design
Costumes
To make a costume work multiple ways: 鈥淯se gussets. A tight fit to the body allows the most movement. Stylistically, make it in black. Black covers a multitude of sins in many areas and ways.鈥� 鈥� William Ivey Long, six-time Tony-winning costume designer (Cinderella, Grey Gardens)
For hard-to-find costume pieces: 鈥淚鈥檓 amazed by the volume of talented vendors on Etsy: knitwear, leatherwork, jewelry鈥攜ou name it, there is someone out there who can make it.鈥� 鈥� Linda Cho, Tony-winning costume designer (A Gentleman鈥檚 Guide to Love and Murder)
Sewing tip: 鈥淧attern matching! If you have patterned fabric and you match the pattern along the seams, you are using one of the tricks of high-end couture.鈥� 鈥� Linda Cho
Sound
The first step in any sound design is: 鈥淒efining what mics are needed for what actors and instruments.鈥� 鈥� Jessica Paz, Tony-winning sound designer (Hadestown)
A good sound design trick: 鈥淎 well-timed reverb in terms of pre-delay and decay time [will help] sound smoother and more professional.鈥� 鈥� Jessica Paz
Lighting
For inspiration: 鈥淕et a membership to your favorite local museum to inspire you, feed your artistic spirit, take meetings at, and decompress in!鈥� 鈥� Jen Schriever, lighting designer
鈥淔rost your lekos [ellipsoidal reflector spotlight] It turns the sharp edge beautifully soft and lets the edges of your lights blend together: put frost in your followspots! Tape some frost to the front; if it's an arc source, add some color correction (a little CTO and a little pink) to better match skin tones, and shoot for about a half body shot. That will instantly make your followspots look 100 times better.鈥� 鈥� Bradley King, two-time Tony-winning lighting designer (Hadestown, The Great Comet)
To make your lighting look more professional: 鈥淪tretch your masking! Stretch your drops! When side light hits loose fabric it can look pretty sad. Framed or stretched-tight masking and drops can make your show (and pictures) look amazing.鈥� 鈥� Jen Schriever
Best Practices
鈥淣ever erase. You made that mistake for a reason. Incorporate it.鈥� 鈥� William Ivey Long
鈥淎lways enclose the drums!鈥� 鈥� Jessica Paz
鈥淒immable house lights! Are you in a cafegymnatorium? Allocate some of your stage lighting for the audience. Or buy some simple light bulbs that you can plug into a dimmer. If you don't have control over every element of light in your show, then you can't make a conscious decision on how to employ them. If the house lights snap off because 鈥榯hat's the way they work鈥� then find a different way! Make sure you are the one in control over every element in your rig.鈥� 鈥� Bradley King
鈥淏eauty is not always the end goal, but storytelling is. As long as your design helps tell the story you are after for each character, I think that is a successful design.鈥� 鈥� Linda Cho
鈥淓xperiment! Try making every light in your show the same color! Try a show only lit with lights on the floor. Try a show with zero theatrical lighting equipment in it. But make sure it's always in service of the play and the story!鈥� 鈥� Bradley King
鈥淟earn to draw. Drawing is the foundation of design. Drawing is to designers what language is to writers, and too many aspiring designer don鈥檛 spend enough time developing really good drawing skills.鈥� 鈥� Derek McLane, Tony and Emmy鈥搘inning scenic designer (33 Variations, Hairspray Live!)
鈥淜eep a sketch book handy at all times. Nothing can replace that and your imagination.鈥� 鈥� David Korins, three-time Tony-nominated scenic designer (Beetlejuice, Hamilton)
鈥淗ave a sense of humor, have patience with yourself and others, find the joy in the room while you鈥檙e working. It doesn鈥檛 cost anything to be a supportive collaborator; it can cost everything not to be one.鈥� 鈥� Jen Schriever
READ: How Anastasia鈥檚 Costume Designer Honored What Fans Loved on Screen in a Fresh Way
Best Products
鈥淎n adjusted light source to replicate the lighting on the stage. Crucial.鈥� 鈥� William Ivey Long
鈥淎pple Mainstage has become a staple for me. I use it as a reverb host for AU plugins. All it takes is a computer and an audio interface to run it鈥攁nd if you can鈥檛 afford expensive plugins for reverb, it comes with all the same plugin that come with Logic Pro and it鈥檚 only $30.鈥� 鈥� Jessica Paz
鈥淭he RemDim (remainder dim) button on your console! This turns every light off OTHER than the one you have selected. When a scene isn't looking quite right to me, it's usually because I've turned too many lights on. Remdim instantly cleans up a muddy stage; it lets you see that beautiful shaft of light coming in through the window and lets you get back to building around that idea. When in doubt, turn everything else off.鈥� 鈥� Bradley King
鈥淚ncandescent dimmable little lights for tech tables. It can be really hard to see what you鈥檙e trying to create when the room is full of light from clip lights or desk lamps.鈥� 鈥� Jen Schriever
鈥淪cenery isn鈥檛 usually dependent on one single piece of equipment, [but] after some essential and fairly obvious safety equipment, I鈥檇 say a really good screwgun.鈥� 鈥� Derek McLane
鈥淭he app Procreate is what I use to sketch on my iPad. It work in layers, like Photoshop, but is a great program for drawing, both rough and more finished drawings, and I can quickly email them.鈥� 鈥� Derek McLane
鈥淗igh quality paint brushes will last you a very long time.鈥� 鈥� David Korins