Access All Areas Summer Issue | Page 16

SUMMER | REVIEW You’re a technician, Harry The projection wizardry achieved throughout the show is all triggered in real-time, as Access found out when speaking to the show’s heads of automation, video and lighting. “We don’t use timestamps,” says Joseph Sheppard, automation technician. “Everything is done by reacting to real time cues on stage, and Augmented The projection wizardry of Cirque du Soleil’s Toruk: The First Flight pushes the boundaries of how technology can interact with live performance instruction from the stage manager.” Reaction is the key word. Cirque du Soleil has gone to great lengths to ensure its technology is nimble enough to react to the dynamic movement of its performers. It has worked in collaboration with BlackTrax, a system which tracks LED diodes inside each performers’ bodysuit, in order to pick them out from the busy stage with lighting and other effects. During one forest scene, the entire stage floor is covered 16 kiters perform on is covered in projected video, and the set can be changed at the press of a button. As the show begins, a costumed narrator stands on a raised platform, and warns the audience that the moon of Pandora is covered in hazards, such as volcanoes. On cue, a wave of projected lava billows out from underneath his feet, and washes over the first few rows of the audience. ity “W e’re projecting onto a surface the size of five IMAX screens,” says Janie Mallet, part of the touring management team for Toruk: The First Flight. “And our team contains an even split of performers and technicians.” The latest show from Canada’s Cirque du Soleil, the largest theatrical producer in the world, came to London’s The O2 in June for the final leg of its worldwide tour. Toruk: The First Flight is a prequel to James Cameron’s Avatar, dreamed up under the supervision of Cameron’s own Lightstorm Entertainment. Like Avatar , Toruk makes heavy use of cutting-edge technology, despite the themes of natural mysticism that run throughout its world of Pandora. The entirety of the stage which the acrobats, puppeteers, contortionists and