26 Feb, 2020 | ApexPro News
Dear Valued Clients and Suppliers,
Our big move has started, and we are relocating our Johannesburg Offices from Hillfox Centre, to Unit A6, Northlands Deco Park Phase 2, New Market Road, Northriding.
Unfortunately, this will result in interrupted service from Thursday, 27.02.2020 to Monday, 02.03.2020.
Obviously we will do our best to minimise any impact this may have.
Should you require urgent assistance during this period, please see the contact details below:
Andre Buys: +27 (0) 83 680 4585
Justin Acres: +27 (0) 82 960 0134
Mark Malherbe: +27 (0) 83 779 6550
Buyiswa Mgedezi: +27 (0) 82 904 6552
Brendan Venter: +27 (0) 72 206 1576
We thank you for your continued support.
Our website and email address remain unchanged.
Thank you.
ApexPro
9 Jan, 2020 | ApexPro News
A change is as good as a rest, or so they say!
After 10 years at The Hillfox Centre, ApexPro has decided that a move is required.
Although
Hillfox has been our home for over a decade, recent changes to the Centre have
given us an opportunity to rethink our requirements and location.
So, during
January and February we will be relocating to our newly designed premises, A6
Deco Park Northlands.
We apologise in advance for any delayed communications as our phone lines and overall connectivity will definitely be disrupted during this period. We will be issuing direct cell phone numbers soonest to minimise the impact.
Our new premises will include dedicated showroom and training spaces with dedicated service and project environments.
We are
seriously looking forward to the change and welcoming you to our new world
during March 2020.
Thank you
for your understanding.
25 Sep, 2019 | ApexPro News, ETC
Winner of six Tonys, two Oliviers, one Grammy, two Baftas and
six Academy Awards, Chicago is the longest-running musical revival in
Broadway history and ETC was selected to light the show for its
International Tour 2018-2019.
ETECH spoke to head of lighting department, Glenn Duncan to find out
more of the technology he used to bring this all-South African
production to the international stage.
The world famous Chicago musical has landed in Montecasino Teatro,
South Africa after performing in New Zealand and China to critical
acclaim. Programmed and run on ETC’s Eos family of consoles, the
Johannesburg run has used the Ion XE 20 – provided by South African
distributor ApexPro to Splitbeam, the Technical supplier for the South
African season.
Mathew Lewis of ApexPro said, “We are always happy to assist where needed with service, as support is a major priority for us at ApexPro.”
The control side is not the only part that features ETC products: the
production is beautifully lit using a combination of standard Source
Four Tungsten profiles along with the acclaimed Source Four LED Series 2
Lustrs, which create stunning scenes. “With such a high standard of LED
technology available, it is no wonder that productions all over the
world include ETC fixtures as their go-to choice.”
Head of the lighting department for Chicago’s International Tour
2018-2019, Glenn Duncan, discusses more about his experience with the
technology used to bring this colorful production to the stage.
“Having the bigger programming surfaces and more displays on the
flagship consoles is great for programming, while the smaller, compact
desks make life much easier on the road. Seamless networking also allows
us to program and update from whichever console happens to be nearest
to the action, and gives us a backup system which can be relied on.”
According to Duncan, using ETC’s Eos family for a touring production
is useful as you can program on one of the larger consoles and then run
the show on a more compact member of the Eos family. “The ETC Eos family
is just that – a family,” says Duncan. “It’s a big plus that our show
will run on any of the consoles in the family without modification. At
various points on tour, we’ve used an Eos, two Gios, three Ions and an
Ion XE, and the showfile has always been perfectly portable between the
desks.”
Duncan previously worked on the original production, which used
scrollers. ETECH asked him how using the ETC Lustrs changed the show for
him – do they measure up in the typical tungsten environment of theatre?
“A great deal of very precise and detailed work was done by Ken Billington and Associates to match the colors and outputs to the original design – and the fact that the Lustr units have been able to fully replace the scroller versions is a testament to the quality of their output,” comments Duncan.
He goes on to explain: “The switch to LED has made for a rig that is
easier to tour and more robust on the long, bumpy journeys between
cities in China. Recently, I heard a comment regarding one scene, saying
how good the all-tungsten picture looked. I later realized that there
were actually a few Source Four Lustr units in that picture, too, and
one simply could not tell the difference.” He adds that “on a show like
Chicago, where the lighting is all about precision, achieving those
matches [must have been time-consuming], but I’m certainly impressed
with the results.”
Glenn has worked with gear from a variety of hire companies on tour but maintained consistency with his use of ETC gear. “We’ve worked with three different suppliers so far on tour, and the ETC equipment has always been reliable and consistent. I think it helps that the ETC gear is clearly named and you always know what you’re getting after presenting a spec. Rather than a plethora of similar-but-not-identical models, it’s good to know that a Source Four is a Source Four, a given lens will always give you the same optics, and a Lustr will always do what it says on the tin. The RDM features of the LED units are helpful too – if there is a discrepancy in dimmer curve, mode, color mix or DMX response on the supplied gear, we don’t have to climb ladders to put it right.”
“We’ve had very little reason to contact support or ask for help on
this tour, which in itself has been a pleasure. The equipment simply
gets on with the job – we can all take a lesson from it! In the past,
however, I’ve always been able to get the help I need from ETC, from the
silliest questions to the deepest code-level nitpicking.”
Lastly, ETECH asked Glenn why, as a touring lighting HOD, he would
choose ETC products for a show. “A busy tour can be hard work for crew
and equipment alike. The ETC equipment is robust and consistent, easy to
work with and always leaves us with a great-looking final product. If I
sign up for a tour and see that the rig is ETC-based, I know that the
gear will perform. It saves a whole lot of worry and fault-finding when
you know the equipment will deliver.”
In Duncan’s words, ‘Chicago the Musical’ continues to deliver, night
after night – and city after city. It continues to be one of the most
successful international musical hits of all time and thanks to the hard
work behind the scenes, the audience can sit back knowing that the
lighting experience will be as stunning as the show’s signature piano
riffs.
20 Sep, 2019 | ApexPro News, ETC
In the foyer of the Fugard Theatre,
a cardboard cut-out has been set up so that audience members can take a
photo of themselves ‘wearing’ the thigh-high glittery red boots so
prominent in the production and its marketing materials. The fact that
even this small show-related attraction has such a long queue on
performance nights says a lot about the production’s runaway success.
Since its opening in June of this year, Kinky Boots has been playing to rapturous full houses.
Now Kinky Boots will continue sashaying and strutting its stuff across the boards of the Fugard Theatre until 27 October.
The lighting for the show was designed by seasoned UK veteran Tim Mitchell and programmed by Mathew Lewis. “Programming for Kinky Boots made me fall in love with the Eos consoles all over again,” said Lewis, who is also the ETC product manager at ApexPro. “The lovely thing about Eos is whether you’re using your laptop or you’re using the big flagship console, it’s all the same software. So it’s all compatible and works together. It’s such an easy console because it speaks the same language the designer speaks to a programmer.”
According to Lewis, the lead product developer on Eos, Anne
Valentino, actually went and sat in theatres while they were programing
and listened to how the designers talked to the programmers. She then
developed the syntax from there, so as to keep it simple and
comprehensible. The Eos Ti was born from these efforts, and it is the
console Lewis worked on for the production. His love for the console is
contagious and, according to him, “There’s not a show on Broadway that’s
not on Eos.” Lighting Designer Tim Mitchell echoes the sentiment by
saying that “Eos consoles make average programmers look brilliant.”
The Eos Titanium (or Eos Ti) is ETC’s flagship lighting control console, with powerful hardware, easy-to-navigate software, and the right tools to realise art within the tight timetable of professional productions. The desk’s common-sense syntax is consistent and predictable so anyone – novices and professionals alike – can get down to business. You can work from an abstract concept of a design to a straightforward command sequence, thinking less about the mechanics of the system and more about the look of your show. All of this with an award-winning colour engine.
Another ETC flagship is prominent
in the lighting rig for the show: the Source Four LED Series 2 Lustr,
ETC’s flagship lighting fixture. Leading the pack of LED theatre
lighting, the Lustr uses ETC’s x7 Color System with the addition of a
lime-green LED emitter and more red, to create a deeper, richer colour
spectrum that fills in the gaps that ordinary LEDs leave behind. This
cutting edge technology lends the production a world-class sheen, as
various spaces are created and enhanced by lighting wizardry.
The biggest lighting challenge and goal, per Lewis, was contrasting
the “boring old world” of the shoe factory with the glitz of Lola’s neon
nightclub lifestyle. “The way that LED technology has come along, made
it much easier to be able to switch between these states. Especially the
Lustrs that can render tungsten-like looks all the way through to bold,
saturated colour. Couple that with the power of Eos, particularly the
colour mixing engine, and the whole process becomes a lot easier.”
Kinky Boots is a foot-stomper, and had the audience on its feet by the rousing show-stopping finale. Book now to avoid disappointment – and remember to get your own kinky-booted selfie during interval!
Article from: www.entertainment-tech.co.za