Skip to content
Clay Paky Fixtures Shine During TV Tribute to the Ladies of the Ice
Year
2012
Lighting Designer
Christien Methot
Related Products

Clay Paky fixtures lit up the ice and turned on the glamour when production and lighting designer Christien Methot of design one employed a complement of Sharpy and Alpha Spot HPE 1500s on “Caesars Tribute II: A Salute to the Ladies of the Ice,” which aired on NBC on New Year’s Day. 

The figure skating extravaganza features a roster of American Olympic medalists, including Nancy Kerrigan, Tara Lipinksi and Sarah Hughes as well as an international contingent, among them current world champion Miki Ando.  The event, held at Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, comes on the heels of last year’s figure skating tribute for which Methot handled production design. 

Methot devised a circular motif for the show using thee circular video screens and a circular main stage with clean, simple lines.  He mounted a circular truss above the ice with 16 Clay Paky Sharpy fixtures suspended on it. 

“At the beginning of the program the truss was almost touching the ice.  As the opening light show began, it rose up and shot light everywhere,” he explains.  “Then some fabric was released and hung from the truss, Kabuki-style, in the shape of icicles.  The skaters interacted with the fabric and skated around it as the truss lifted and became a scenic element, another surface to play off the lighting like metallic chiffon.” 

“I’ve used Sharpys before and think they’re the best thing since sliced bread,” says Methot.  “In a light show scenario, their bang for the buck is outrageous, and you can see the light for miles!  The only light that could do that used to be a 7000-watt lamp.  Plus, they are so small and easy to handle – a crew member can carry two at a time.” 

The lighting designer positioned 12 more Sharpys on the ground to supplement 20 Alpha Spot HPE 1500s, which served as “work horse” fixtures.  “They were the main wash/template wash that really lit up the ice,” he reports.  “I wanted to find the brightest light with the most choice of templates and effects.  The 1500s were fantastic – extremely bright, wonderfully crisp, accurate and very fast for a light that size.” 

Methot took advantage of the Dyna-Cue effect, which is unique to Clay Paky fixtures “You tell a light that it’s part of a group of ten lights, then it does some of the smarts that you would otherwise have to do on a console,” he points out.  “Thanks to the macro effect, we used some effects that we might not have otherwise thought to light.” 

Previsualization for the show was done at A.C.T Lighting; A.C.T is the distributor of Clay Paky lighting and grandMA consoles in North America. 

“A.C.T was very helpful in pointing out some of these features during the previs on the grandMA 3D,” says Methot.  “That allowed us to have a head start when we got to the venue.”
For the salute to the figure-skating champions Methot ran two full-size grandMA 2 desks networked together.  Robert Bloom was the programmer. 

Francesco Romagnoli, Clay Paky Area Manager for North and Latin America, adds, “We’re pleased that the our lights were able to so capably meet the needs of this event. Our gratitude goes out to Mr. Methot for choosing our lights and our partner, A.C.T Lighting, for working with them.”