A.D. Drumm Images, LLC – Landscape, Portrait, and Fine Art Photography in Rochester MN Photography

August 2, 2013

Monty Python’s Spamalot at Summerset Theatre

Filed under: Theatre — Tony Drumm @ 2:43 pm

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When Lindsey told me about a year ago they were hoping to produce Spamalot as the big Summerset Theatre musical in 2013, I thought, “how cool is that?” Summerset Theatre is in Austin, MN, the home of Hormel Foods making it the home of SPAM.

For the uninitiated, Spamalot is the musical theatre adaptation of the whacky movie, Monty Python and the Holy Grail. That was the first movie by the British comedy group who created the TV series Monty Python’s Flying Circus. It was home to several folks who went on to star in many movies: Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, and Michael Palin. Wikipedia has a nice article about the group here.

It was a low-budget film, but it includes a couple songs that make it into the musical. Always Look on the Bright Side of Life written by Eric Idle for their film, Life of Brian, shows up along with many songs written specifically for this show. Most of the gags from the movie made the transition, so fans of the movie will be happy to see them.

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Summerset adds a few extra Hormel references which are fun and very appropriate. We attended a special preview performance and fundraiser the other night with some fun hors d’oeuvres containing SPAM. They were really quite tasty, too!

Spamalot is one of two shows we’ve seen on Broadway. It was fun to revisit the show, remembering some of the gags right before they happen. As I’ve mentioned here before, though, I get caught up in shooting and making good images leading to me missing dialog. Knowing the show, I can sort this out, but it’s not really my focus anyway.

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For this shoot, I had a helper along. Michaela is the daughter of good friends (I was going to say, old friends, but decided not to!). She’s an awesome dancer and high school student. She’s unbelievably passionate about and devoted to dance while still maintaining great grades in school. I don’t know how she does it, but I’m sure this work ethic will pay off whether as a professional dancer or whatever she ends up doing.

She’s expressed an interest in design and was looking for some opportunities to intern or get some first hand experience around the visual arts. I offered to take her along for a shoot. We met beforehand for me to explain how the shoot would go, what I’d be doing. And, I decided if she was going to be there, I’d give her my backup camera and put her to work. So, I also gave her a crash course in photography and in using the 5DMkII. Not only that, but I explained that shooting theatre is just tough to do with auto exposure, so I set her into my preferred manual mode. Yeah – here’s a camera, here’s how it works, now you get to set shutter speed and aperture on the fly.

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For this rehearsal, Lindsey pulled Michaela into a little audience-participation bit, and you can see how uncomfortable she is on stage. Right. Her dad shoots Olympus, so I was happy to have this photo of her with a pro-level Canon around her neck!

As I look at this photo, it’s amazing to me that this is shot live and not staged. The cast was pretty great as you can see – they are just having a ton of fun with the show, and it was great to be there the next night when they finally had an audience to react to all the lines.

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I had to include one of Michaela’s shots. I slapped the 50mm f/1.4 lens on her camera and let her have at it. Here you go folks – a high school student using an adjustable camera for the first time, shooting in manual, and very few of her shots didn’t have a good exposure. She stopped by again after the shoot, and we went through some my post-production workflow. She caught on quickly. If her dad has questions about Adobe Lightroom, I think he has a good resource in the house now!

The shoot was fun, the show was fun, and having a student was fun. What a great week!

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