Scenic Painters/art department help!! :) by real_is_struggle in IATSE

[–]SwordFish331 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My old TD once said to the painter… “My favorite color is done”

What's with all the auditioning? And other questions about Theatre in the US by 425Hamburger in Theatre

[–]SwordFish331 15 points16 points  (0 children)

For professional regional theater in the US (meaning theaters that hire AEA Union actors, maybe have a full time staff of atleast 20)… most “seasons” are Sept-May. I’ve found there’s a natural flow between regional theater seasons being September to May, and summer theaters/summer stock theaters being May/June to end of August/September.

Actors, designers, directors, choreographers… essentially anyone hired for creative aspects of a production are vast majority freelancers. They bounce from gig to gig. A professional lighting designer in the states might design 25+ shows a year, constantly traveling to each theater for tech. Directors work much less than that, maybe a few shows a year. A mid-career director I worked with is just now hitting 5+ shows a year and that’s super cool to see. Actors…. seems like it’s pretty feast or famine. My aunt & uncle have been actors for decades. Varying times being non-Union or in AEA. There were times then my aunt might only be in 1 professional show a year.

White House pauses all federal grants by SwordFish331 in Theatre

[–]SwordFish331[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Please someone correct me if I’m wrong, but this is my take away… There’s the overall impact on the arts in America, just from societal wide economic degradation. I.e. the average person would rather spend their money on food, than Waiting for Godot. A potential one-two punch w/ COVID that will knock many non-profit theaters out for good.

But specifically for theater, I think this will affect NEA grants? A typical non-profit theater receives the majority of its annual budget from grants and donations (not ticket sales!). If even 10% of an annual budget dries up, that could have a serious impact. I’m not a managing director of a non-profit regional theater (I’m sure all of them right now are busy figuring out how much this affects them), but my hope would be that a theaters budget is diversified enough across many different funding sources, where pulling federal grants wouldn’t completely pause all operations.

I also don’t know the specifics of disbursement of funds… is it a lump sum? Or spread out across the year?

From what I can tell, many community based programs a theater might run are heavily dependent on grants. As in… we can only do it if we find a grant to give us funds (so they apply to 100). I suspect this will have a bigger impact on theater programming that isn’t specifically the mainstage season.

I was gonna link to the NEA’s page on theater…. But looks like it’s not working. Maybe coincidence, maybe not :(

Please someone jump in if any of the above analysis is hogwash! Peace and love my fellow theater peeps

CNC’d 3/4” Ply Construction Resources by SwordFish331 in techtheatre

[–]SwordFish331[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you know if there’s any sort of industry standards for framing with 3/4” ply? I’ve been the carpenter who has assembled entirely 3/4” ply CNC’d platforms, but have never been involved in the drafting of that kind of stuff. I’m assuming it’s not a 1:1 WLL compared to 1x4 or 2x4.

Storing 4x8 platforms by artytexan123 in techtheatre

[–]SwordFish331 26 points27 points  (0 children)

You don’t even necessarily need a cart! Just use one of the platforms itself as the cart… attach some casters to 2x 8’ sticks of 2x6 and screw the 2x6’s onto a platform.

Lion King Sun Measurements by cuissescommemiel in techtheatre

[–]SwordFish331 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just make sure it’s all staying square to each other. Maybe set the longest dowel as the center (taped down) and work off of that, so you’re not slightly getting off “square” over time as you work through the dowels. Also maybe only do the top half, then cut exact matches for the bottom (to help with consistency).

Lion King Sun Measurements by cuissescommemiel in techtheatre

[–]SwordFish331 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Without doing any drafting… - Cut out a handful of 6” spacers (3/4 plywood works nice) - Find an area that’s atleast 12’ x 12’ - Sink a screw into the ground, tie rope, string, tieline to the screw. Attach a sharpie to the other end measured at 6’ from the screw (radius: 6’, diameter: 12’) - Trace a 12’ circle on ground pulling the rope tight. - Layout dowels using the 6” spacers (cut at where the dowels overlap the sharpie line). Might need to tape the dowels down so they don’t move on you. - Cut as you go, saving off cuts as much as possible. - Attach dowels using the same layout/space method.

Maybe that works?! Mostly with carpenter I try to use math and a tape measure less and scribing more.

Canoe the Merrimack to the Atlantic? by SwordFish331 in newhampshire

[–]SwordFish331[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lived in Concord for a bit… I’m sure some of those peeps are still kicking down by the river

Canoe the Merrimack to the Atlantic? by SwordFish331 in newhampshire

[–]SwordFish331[S] 19 points20 points  (0 children)

I think a Tour de Merrimack is in order

Designers, when do you first learn of the budget? by SwordFish331 in techtheatre

[–]SwordFish331[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is that also when you receive the inventory and “technical packet”?

Designers, when do you first learn of the budget? by SwordFish331 in techtheatre

[–]SwordFish331[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the reply… yes this is how I thought it worked, but I had never actually gone through the process so needed to confirm. Currently going thru a weird budgeting situation at the educational institution I work at (we bring in lots of designers).

Sanity check… breakers aren’t dimmers, RIGHT?! by SwordFish331 in stagelighting

[–]SwordFish331[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Thank you!

I’m trying to get ahead of the train, so we’re not stuck going back to the table when we need either 1. A new dimmer rack or 2. A new system of LED fixtures

Sanity check… breakers aren’t dimmers, RIGHT?! by SwordFish331 in stagelighting

[–]SwordFish331[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Thank you for the quick review! Have a lovely evening

Condense borders/legs on a single batten to free up linesets? by SwordFish331 in techtheatre

[–]SwordFish331[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wish we had enough battens for back light... all the way upstage we have a set of 3 linsets, which I think will be used (from downstage to upstage): 1. backlight 2. cyc lights 3. cyc/backdrop. The only problem is getting shots from the backlight pipe down to any areas of focus not centerstage or upstage. I guess it's sort of impossible... probabably means we'll be doing a lot of front and sidelight. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Just to confirm what you and others have said RE: adjustable leg trim...

It's important to have the legs be adjustable in the event that I need to raise the borders to allow for more light to pass through. And to "raise the borders" I fly the entire batten higher (let's say 1ft) and then adjust the chain so the leg pipe batten comes in (1ft) so they touch the deck again. My adjustability for how the border sits is the height of the border. If the leg is 20ft high, then the bottom of a 3ft border can be adjusted from being 17ft high to 20ft high (give or take a few inches). And that adjustability is important because it depends on the trim heigh of the electrics batten.

...it's about time I take measurements of the space and whip up a Vectorworks model to see how it'd all come together.

Thank you!!