Pick a card, any card (B-Freed Photography)

USA - Magic Reinvented Nightly, magician Mat Franco’s current Las Vegas residency, is staged at the Mat Franco Arena at the LINQ Hotel+Experience.

Production lighting designer Scott Chmielewski from design studio DMDS7UDIOS was first asked to create a lighting environment for this show in 2020 when it launched. Scott has worked with creative director / producer Brian Burke on top TV shows like American Idol and America’s Got Talent and has crafted his own multidisciplinary lighting aesthetic blending the theatrical with the televisual.

The Mat Franco show – under the artistic direction of scenic designer Joe O’Neill was initially planned to run for five years – and received a quick refresh during the COVID period, followed by a full production and room re-design in February 2023. This last update brought large quantities of Robe moving lights into play, including 17 x Fortes, 16 x Spikies, eight Tetra1s and seven Tetra2s, plus two Forte FollowSpots running on two RoboSpot systems, all of which are central to the lighting plot.

Scott presented three initial design ideas for the revamped show, from which a ‘forced perspective’ look was selected and developed for the intimate 575-seat theatre space.

All the overhead / flown structures are unique, juxtaposed and related to one another in keeping with the ultimate goal of expanding the space and making it look seriously larger, a concept that dovetails neatly with the optical trickery of the show!

Mat Franco’s individual style and delivery is more that of a close-up magician as opposed to a grand illusionist, so that MO opened many possibilities for lighting. Scott also wanted to make the lighting spectacular and energetic, capturing the pace and energy of the show, creating a distinctive sense of the dramatic … rather than simply lighting a stage.

“We needed good qualities of small, bright, powerful and unique fixtures for this to work as we envisioned which led us to Robe,” explained Scott, who extensively researched available fixtures and looked at their specs, characteristics, and how they might behave before making the final choices.

He liked the fact that you can run unified effects simultaneously through both Tetras and Spikies and that it is possible to run these on the fixtures without physically revealing the source.

The Fortes are spread out across the overhead rig, with five on the downstage truss for critical key lighting, and a couple more on the balcony rail positions. All 17 of them are also capable of being used with either of the two RoboSpot BaseStations, although mostly it is two dedicated Forte FollowSpots that are used for this task.

This setup enables the lighting team to bounce between follow spots if needed while keeping up with Mat’s highly proactive show. He utilises the full stage space as he presents the show in more of a contemporary broadcast style, an environment in which he is very comfortable.

The dramatic and striking forced perspective elements derive from 12 ceiling pods outlined in LED tubes with the Fortes concealed in the roof above.

Some of the Spikies are deployed on the deck. For these positions, Scott wanted small, bright units with good effects, with more positioned along the back, together with Tetra1s along the sides.

Scott also designed the show’s production video which impacted how it was lit.

IMAG feeds are combined with playback video on the main upstage screen, plus assorted video tricks and audio interactions are integrated into the show, so all production entities must be balanced and harmonious which was a galvanizing task from the overall show design.

Two primary LED walls each 40’x12’ upstage and downstage are the primary video surfaces as well as two 10’x10’ mid-stage LED walls. All the video is automated and creates countless variations and looks for the show.

Lighting and video were programmed by Scott and are running via a grandMA3 console, with all the videos and pixel effects also triggered through the desk.


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