Annie Live was broadcast to a TV audience of over 5m with 350 watching in the NBC studio
USA - TV Network NBC recently ran a star-studded, live broadcast of the hit musical Annie. Annie Live was broadcast to a TV audience of over 5m with 350 watching in the NBC studio.
Award-winning lighting designer Bob Barnhart lit the production, evoking mood, atmosphere, and a vivid sense of time and place. Having previously worked on NBC’s live broadcast of The Sound of Music, Barnhart knew that he required a lighting fixture with maximum technical and creative potential. To that end he selected the VL2600 Profile from Vari-Lite.
“I wanted a ‘Swiss Army Knife’ luminaire. A fixture that can perform multiple tasks, without compromising on creativity,” he explains. “Live television specials can be like uncaged animals. Even with the most basic shows, we can face multiple challenges. We’re often short on time and in this case we only had four days for camera rehearsals.”
Productions like this can also be tight on budget and Barnhart was looking for a multipurpose fixture that can deal with every possible lighting task, including scenic dressing, key lighting of characters, mood-setting washes and direct face lighting for camera close ups. Space was also a constraint: “Instead of four lighting rigs, each dedicated to the individual scenes, I had to use one very tightly packed rig to light them all in turn. This naturally had an impact on the time I had with each.”
In response, Barnhart designed a lighting rig packed with over 350 VL2600 Profile luminaires: “I like to keep my lighting plots simple,” he explains. “Annie Live was a three-hour marathon, and, over the course of the show, each individual light had at least 20 different jobs to do. When it came to level and colour, the scenic elements had to look the same in close ups as they did in wider and 360-degree panning shots. The VL2600s performed impeccably – we didn’t have a single failure.”
Barnhart only had one full run-through of the show before the live broadcast. This was his main opportunity to ensure that every shot made sense in terms of environmental and atmospheric continuity, angle and level. From the earthy darker colours of the orphanage to the rich opulence of the mansion, the live broadcast oozed drama and theatricality. Every shot evoked a sense of place, time and mood, seducing the TV audience with Annie’s charming story.
Pre-programming opportunities were also limited: “As with all creative pursuits, performer blocking and camera positions change during the process. This means I need an adaptable fixture that is small, yet powerful enough to give me as many options as possible,” Barnhart explains. “Finding the right key light at the appropriate angle for every shot, with the right level of softness, looking as good in close-up as in a wide shot, while maintaining continuity can be a complex balancing act.”
For this reason, Barnhart always consults the programmers he works with before choosing a fixture. “We want to know if a fixture is easy to programme. Does it move fast enough? Does it return to its programmed focus and position with precision every time? The fact that the shutter goes all the way across the beam was a welcome time-saver as we were focusing to scenic elements fast.”
Another significant consideration for Barnhart was setting the white balance with the cameras. “I prefer to use an LED fixture that features a single white source with an onboard dichroic colour mix system. We achieved better intensity and less pixilation than mixing colour using a multi-colour LED Engine. From a television standpoint we will always correct the light, but it doesn’t take much to do that with the VL2600, so I don’t lose output there either.
“You don’t always need a fiesta platter of gear in your rig to achieve a dynamic, versatile lighting design. You just need the right size-to-output ratio in the fixture and enough flexibility in its capability to cover all bases. The VL2600 Profile does exactly that.”

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