LD Sherry Coenen incorporated the Festoon fixture into her lighting concept to provide dynamic looks
UK - After over half a century of memorable theatrical productions, education programmes and workshops dedicated to upholding the art form of puppetry, it’s perhaps little wonder that the Little Angel Theatre in Islington, London, was championed by Time Out in 2016 as "nothing less than an icon of north London childhood”.
For the theatre’s latest show - a puppet adaptation of the children’s picture book, The Singing Mermaid - LD Sherry Coenen incorporated Chauvet DJ’s Festoon fixture into her lighting concept to provide dynamic looks.
Coenen utilised the fully pixel mappable LED Festoon to provide visual support for the lyrical picture book adaptation, which tells the story of a singing mermaid who is tempted away from her home at Silversands to join the circus.
“The theatre required a solution which would give us a great deal of flexibility but also provide specific circus and underwater inspired looks for the new production of The Singing Mermaid,” comments Coenen. “After hearing about the Festoon from a Chauvet rep at Showlight, I was really keen to try it in my design. The looks it’s capable of creating left me deeply impressed, and it ended up being the lynchpin of the lighting concept.”
Positioned in a three-stringed formation fanning out over the audience just out of reach above audience head height, the Festoon creates a circus feel throughout the room, whilst at the same time offering pixel-mapping technology to enliven the theatre’s productions.
“The Festoon gave me the audience interaction I needed and loads of flexibility on a show with minimal dimmers,” says Coenen. “They are so versatile, I used them for everything.”
During the performance of The Singing Mermaid, Festoons are utilised for all manner of purposes. In addition to creating water effects such as waves under the sea, the warm illumination of Festoon provides a number of effects such as sunlight and fire.
Adding to the impact of the show, Coenen was also able to use the fixture to create an 83-second sunrise that starts with all Festoons in blue and then, working from USC, changes through whites, peaches, pinks, oranges and finally settles into sunny yellow in a cascading fade-out over the audience, allowing them to accompany the mermaid on her handwalking escape.
After the overwhelmingly positive reception to the fixture from audiences, the theatre decided to purchase the Festoon for the venue’s stock. “The reaction has been amazing,” adds Coenen. “It’s great that the theatre decided to permanently add digital Festoons to the venue’s equipment list so it can be available to other designers. I’m sure it will be a welcome addition to future shows.”
(Jim Evans)

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