Our first 10-out-of-12 hour day. We are making very good progress, and everyone is pleased with how smoothly it's going. The picture above is one I have entitled "Henry Cast and Crew in Repose." There are several more like it on my Flickr page, linked in the sidebar. This was taken while a light cue was being written.
The set is rather complicated as it's got lots of little doors that open and things that can be climbed on, which were bound to require time to get used to that just can't be prepared for in the rehearsal room. We've had to restage some things, but we have also discovered new ways to play with the set that we didn't imagine before, and none of it is taking too long. We're at our dinner break, only 9 working hours since we began tech from the top, and are through the majority of Act I. We're shooting for a run (perhaps an invited dress with some students who will be at the Guthrie) in two days, then our first preview the following night.
Most of our touring crew are here this week (some are going back to New York for a while before rejoining us for the tour), so that has been a nice reunion. Our two local backstage crew are great, and the large and valiant wardrobe crew have done a great job tracking a ridiculous number of costume changes, with the assistance of Nick's paperwork. When we're on the road, we'll have Nick, our TD, wardrobe and props supervisors, as well as a local crew of two stagehands and two wardrobe people backstage. This tech will be the final test to make sure the shows can be run by the number of people we are budgeted for.
Today we were treated to the Guthrie's traditional tech dinner, which is a homecooked buffet provided by volunteers. By some fluke of scheduling, the Guthrie is teching two shows at exactly the same time -- A Delicate Balance also started tech yesterday, so the two companies shared the enormous meal in one of the rehearsal studios. I don't think any of us have ever seen so much food. With the rest of my two hour break, I am letting my food coma wear off by sitting with my laptop in a nook of the 9th floor lobby of our theatre. It's this crazy room surrounded in yellow glass, that is cantilevered out from the side of the building -- it even has a glass floor in one spot. I have a thing for colored glass in architecture, so this has been my favorite place in the building even before I got here, when I saw it on the photo tour on the Guthrie website. You can see it from the outside in this picture, which is also my current desktop wallpaper.
At night the yellow glass casts a tint on all the lights of the cars and buildings below. It's quite cool. This picture doesn't do it justice at all. At some later time I must try to do better.
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
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