The State Opera of South Australia's production of Moby Dick
Australia - When scheduling conflicts prevented US lighting designer Don Holder from travelling to Australia to re-create his intricate design for The State Opera of South Australia's production of Moby Dick he quickly called on long time friend and associate Gavan Swift to oversee the process. One of Australia's most respected lighting designers, Swift first worked with Holder on the Australian production of Disney's The Lion King and later spent some time with Holder in New York as part his Mike Walsh Fellowship while he lit A Streetcar Named Desire.

Jake Heggie's Opera Moby Dick was originally commissioned by the Dallas Opera to commemorate their inaugural season in the Winspear Opera House in Dallas and consequently the production was first plotted on the house's new ETC EOS console. To make the transition as easy as possible the logical step was to use an EOS to re-create the show here.

Adelaide Festival Centre's head of lighting, Chris Searle, saw this as an opportunity to evaluate the EOS console under show conditions and asked Australian distributor Jands whether an EOS console could be made available for the short season. Jands provided an EOS 4000 console from their demo stock and Jands lighting application engineer Eddie Welsh travelled down to Adelaide on short notice to spend just a few hours with Festival Centre programmer Nathan Luscombe helping him navigate around the new board.

Despite this being his first EOS experience, Swift found the EOS easy to work with. "I have done a lot of work with Strand 500 and ETC Obsession series consoles over the years and I found the command line syntax of the EOS to be very familiar and easy to work with." "I found I could walk up to the console and get a channel up straight away. Given that this was the first time that Nathan or I had done a show on the console we were quite relieved to find it so simple to work with."

The show incorporated a complex rig including Alpha Beam 1500s, VL1000s, colour scrollers and the usual conventional array, all of which were handled easily by the powerful EOS software. The EOS performed without a glitch throughout.

(Jim Evans)


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