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Radio City Christmas Show Tours with Moving Lights, grandMA Console

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{mosimage}NEW YORK – Residents of Providence, RI, Boston, Fort Myers, FL, Jacksonville FL and Austin, TX didn't have to travel to New York to see the Radio City Christmas Spectacular featuring the high-kicking Rockettes; two touring productions brought a version of the show came to their hometowns. Each tour traveled with moving lights controlled by a grandMA console from MA Lighting. "The tours used to run two consoles each: one for moving lights and one for conventionals," said programmer Paul J. Sonnleitner.  "In July we converted all the current desk information into grandMA so one system would control all the lighting fixtures for each tour."

 

Lighting designer David Agress said that grandMA has been used on the Radio City New York Christmas Show and has "over 1,000 flawless performances" to its credit.  "It's extremely reliable. The tours are less elaborate with fewer fixtures, although they fill 20 trucks and are very theatrical.  They're very committed to moving lights."

 

Because the lights have a lot of focus positions, grandMA's xyz positioning is very important, Agress says.  "There are 13 scenes in two hours and nothing repeats, so the xyz system is essential to us.  It's flawless and easy to use – it's the best out there.  You can almost do the whole show with xyz; it saves us a lot of time on the road."

 

Since the Radio City shows feature the iconic dancing Rockettes, xyz positioning is a particularly useful tool.  "The Rockettes are always in a line, and it helps us pan the lights across the girls quickly," Sonnleitner said.  "Instead of using a pan-and-tilt effect, I can use an x-y effect and the console does all the calculating for me.  It's really cool; I don't have to tweak it.  I just say, ‘go from 30 feet stage left to 30 feet stage right' and I'm done."

 

He noted that grandMA "basically thinks in three dimensions.  With our previous desk we had to focus all the lights on four points on the stage and then have the desk calibrate it.  Since grandMA is aware of three dimensions, instead of spending three hours in each city focusing all the lights on four spots, we measure all the trims on the electrics when they go out and put this info into grandMA's 3D engine and that's all the calibration that's necessary.  It's so accurate – from 100 feet away I can light someone with a pinspot on his chest."

 

Both Agress and Sonnleitner find grandMA very user-friendly.  "The electricians running the console had no experience but were able to jump right in," said Agress.  "Paul created a universal interface, and the learning curve was so easy.  It does effects really well and fast, and the time code on the board is fantastic – easy and accurate."

 

Sonnleitner added "we use our iPhones to access moving and conventional channels on the same console; that allows the designers to see all the lighting info at the same time."

 

According to Agress, the tour with the grandMAs went "very well" and exceeded expectations. Sonnleitner credited the grandMA console as "a much cleaner and more modern system.  It's upgradable, and we don't have to keep our fingers crossed that it won't crash as we have with other systems.  It does everything we need."

 

A.C.T Lighting is the exclusive distributor of grandMA in North America.

 

For more information, please visit www.actlighting.com.