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Renegade Designs Eddie Izzard Tour

Eddie Izzard Force Majeure arena tour

Nick Gray of London-based creative visual design company Renegade worked on the latest Eddie Izzard Force Majeure arena tour which has just finished an intensive three month tour around the UK and Europe.

It's the first time that Gray, known for his work in the fashion world and as lighting designer for rockers Kasabian, has designed lighting for the "surrealist" funny-man, a task on which he collaborated closely with Izzard's artistic director, Sarah Townsend.

The stylistic theme for the tour included flourishes of classic 1960s Avengers and Austin Powers, and another important aesthetic starting point was the large portrait format LED screen onstage. This all needed careful and thoughtful lighting.

Gray wanted to introduce depth and architecture into the performance space and also make large arena spaces with one person onstage look and feel interesting and intimate. He also sought to frame the LED screen and accentuate its role in the show as a vehicle for Izzard to communicate with his audience. His delivery involves a lot of concentration and quick thinking by the crowd to keep pace with his cerebral, off-the-wall humor.

Gray created a triple shrinking perspective trussing layout loosely based on pylon shapes, that neatly incorporated the two side IMAG projection screens, linking them on to the onstage LED screen. This unified the space, giving it definition and a proper 3D feel.

The onstage screen was flanked by two custom built towers, also continuing on the pylon theme, which were used for additional tighter lighting positions. Fixed to the back of the two masts were flexible video strips, fed by content stored on two Catalyst media servers supplied by XL Video, together with the screens.

At the back of Izzard's center marks was a gently elevated checkerboard scenic piece to break up the void behind the main front-on camera shot and give the two front-of-house cameras additional perspective.

Gray chose his lighting fixtures with great precision and attention to detail, based on their small size and features.

The design also featured plenty of floor lights that brought a touch of rock 'n' roll cool to the space, which was fitting for Izzard's all-action, fast delivery, and hyper-quick thinking, and to accentuate the tallness of the set.

Anything on the floor had to be really unobtrusive, so he opted for 12 Clay Paky Sharpy Washes dotted around the stage, plus 12 Sharpy beam fixtures that were used to create nice beams and slices of defined light at ground level. "These were ideal" explains Gray, adding that lighting contractor Neg Earth -- with whom he regularly works -- pulled out all the stops out to get the new Sharpy Washes in time for the tour.

WWWwww.renegadedesign.co.uk


(14 June 2013)

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