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

March 2, 2014

Loving Lorna Doone in Stewartville

Filed under: Theatre — Tony Drumm @ 10:02 am

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It sometimes happens that multiple shows are opening around the same time. This week, I shot two and I have another coming in a couple weeks. This was the first time I shot for Stewartville Community Theatre. I thought it was time to expand my reach a bit, and to offer my services to another community. We’re fortunate in southeastern Minnesota to have several theatres and many dedicated performers.

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Theatre-goers then have many opportunities to attend fun productions with a pretty wide variety of shows. And, being theatre, even two productions of the same show can be quite different.

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Stewartville is producing the locally created Loving Lorna Doone. The show was written and is being directed by Aaron Rocklyn. I think it’s the second time he’s produced the show – previously at the Rep. (Music was written by Jaymi Wilson and Anthony Knutson.)

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It’s a period piece – lots of fun costumes which make for some cool photos. There is also quite a bit of action which is a challenge to capture but rewarding when you make it work.

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SCT uses the local high school for their staging. It’s a pretty nice little theatre, and the stage is huge. They have a lot of room to block the show, and they used it pretty effectively. I didn’t wander backstage to see what they have for space there.

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This has been an incredibly difficult month for theatre rehearsals. Of the three shows I’ve shot or will be shooting soon, all are musicals. Musicals generally have larger casts and have musicians as well as the actors. They typically have larger crews. And they have longer rehearsals to cover the songs and the choreography as well as the acting and blocking.

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When the rehearsals are planned, there’s an assumption folks will attend the rehearsals. But, this past month has been particularly tough with snow storms coming with seeming regularity. Then, the most recent big storm left a layer of icy snow in its wake. Travel has been horrific. Since that storm, over a week ago, we’ve seen temperatures not even approaching the freezing mark.

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It’s been more often below zero F or thereabouts. Roads are only slowly improving. This means rehearsals have been canceled or have proceeded without some of the folks who need to be there. I was impressed when shooting both of the shows I photographed this week to see how well the people involved have coped with this challenge. Adversity is nothing new in theatre, but it’s still great to watch people overcome it.

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I’ll write up some words on the Riverland show, The Drowsy Chaperone, soon. For now, I hope you enjoy this selection of images from Lorna Doone. Hopefully, the cast and crew will enjoy the photos as well.

I’ve been considering offering my services to local school productions, so if you know of any who might benefit from what I provide, let me know! It’s certainly something I enjoy!

January 31, 2014

How I Became a Pirate at RCT

Filed under: Rochester Civic Theatre,Theatre — Tony Drumm @ 3:07 pm

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The current production – opening this evening – at Rochester Civic Theatre is the musical How I Became a Pirate. I attended the final dress rehearsal without an audience the other night to shoot the show photos.

It’s a fun and very fast-paced show. The energy of the cast is contagious, and the songs are catchy as well. While I was focused on taking photos, I still enjoyed it a lot. Somehow, it’s a nice counterpoint to the snowy and very cold weather we’ve been dealing with this winter.

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From a photographer’s point of view, there are some arrangements of the actors that I love to see. I know they will provide a great composition. This show had tons of them. The costumes are not vivid colors like some shows, but they worked well against the set and the splashes of red are nice. There are also several scenes with fun lighting.

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As I culled through my shots, I found there were many that I really like. I have to give props to the director and choreographer for the blocking that worked so well.

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It was also fun to see Mari, who has worked at the theatre for quite some time finally up on stage. She was great as a singing and dancing pirate!

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Except for Logan, who plays Jeremy Jacob, the cast is adults and young adults. But Logan is the center of attention, all the action surrounding him. And, he does a wonderful job in the role. I can’t possibly imagine having his confidence and abilities at this age.

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This is a show I’d not heard of before the RCT season was announced, and I didn’t have much idea what to expect. Generally, musicals provide more photo opportunities than a straight play. There’s that singing and dancing thing – usually a lot of movement, a lot going on, and not a lot of just sitting and talking. But I didn’t know if that’s what this show would be like.

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It was quite so. I took a ton of shots, and there was always something else going on now or soon. It keeps me on my toes, for sure.

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As I’ve become more of a theatre geek, I’m slowly growing my knowledge of shows. There are so many, of course. Part of the problem of producing live theatre is a public who shy away from shows they don’t know or haven’t heard of. I guess that happens with motion pictures, too – witness the plethora of sequels. But, it’s very worthwhile to go see new shows. They can be fun, they can make you laugh or cry, they can make you think. And we all need to exercise that bundle of nerves in our heads.

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How I Became a Pirate opens tonight at RCT. We’ll be there for the opening performance. It’s a terrific way to spend a Friday evening.

Meanwhile, I have now shot my first show of 2014! Hopefully, many more to come.

 

December 7, 2013

Shows at Riverland and RCT

Filed under: Rochester Civic Theatre,Theatre — Tony Drumm @ 12:19 pm

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I recently shot two shows, one each at Riverland Community College and Rochester Civic Theatre. Both shows were shot live just a few days apart.

Riverland’s show was Boeing Boeing, a French farce taking place in the early 1960s as a fellow arranges to be “engaged” to three different women, all of them flight attendants. He is confident they will all remain ignorant of the others because they are in town on tightly scheduled days. But, they all inform him of the new Boeing jetliners that will make traveling so much faster and give them so much more time together. The typical farce activities then ensue.

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The show is staged in the fellow’s flat, so there’s a box set with bright walls and the lighting was, for the most part, nice and bright. There’s a lot of fast paced action, so having good light and being able to use faster shutter speeds was a plus.

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I think the name of the game for shooting a show like this is to watch for good expressions and gestures. Shooting a show like Rocky Horror, Riverland’s recent show, is in some ways easier. You have more extravagant costumes and sets, and there’s just more there visually to work with.

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Here, you have to be on your game and watching for the reactions. It’s really has to be more about the people, the characters. Otherwise you have only a couch or a table and a wall. Big musicals deserve to be about the characters as well, but the environment is entirely different, and one can make good looking photos without as much thinking. Of course, the great shots use that environment just to fill the frame and draw us to the characters.

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Over at Rochester Civic Theatre, they are producing Winter Wonderettes. This is a follow-on of Marvelous Wonderettes, a show they did early last season. It’s basically a show filled with 1960s period songs, in this case holiday songs, with a plot loosely woven through it. There’s a band on stage, up stage of the action, and four women actors/singers.

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A show like this, more of a musical review than a more typical musical (and RCT’s last show was Les Misérables), is more about finding the moments than the story. While I have shots showing the story along the way, it’s the “moments” photos that I like best.

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This show has some nice lighting effects to capture in photos. They help to draw us to a particular person, our subject for the photo. There were plenty of solos that have the lead singer in the spotlight, and the others together either watching or, more often, singing backup. Nice moments.

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Then, there are whacky moments. It’s an entertaining show, and it’s filled with many of these.

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Technically, the lower light and contrast-causing spotlights make this sort of show more challenging than the box set farce. But the latter, as I said earlier, has its own challenges – more from a compositional and art point of view.

For me, the diversity is fun. While I can categorize each show photo shoot to some degree, they are all different, and the differences keep the photography enjoyable.

Winter Wonderettes is still in production at RCT. I’ll be there again tonight. It can be a great way to spend a cold December night in Rochester!

October 16, 2013

Les Misérables at RCT

Filed under: Rochester Civic Theatre,Theatre — Tony Drumm @ 3:44 pm

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Rochester Civic Theatre’s opening production for the 2013-2014 season was the spectacular Les Misérables. This is a show the theatre has wanted to produce for some time, but you have to wait for the owners of the show to make it available. It’s a huge show – nearly 40 cast members and a full orchestra of 30 or so. It’s also hugely popular for both theatre-goers and actors.

The auditions were swamped with people, and the final cast list included many new faces. That’s great for the vibrancy of the theatre with many fine actors and great voices. Hopefully, many will return for shows in the future. With the show opening in early September, rehearsals consumed the latter half of summer, so you can imagine how much everyone wanted to do this show.

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It was important for the theatre to do this up right with costumes, set, and lighting fit for the show. I was excited to see the show on opening night, and the photographer in me was paying close attention to the lighting. Ben Hain, the technical director at the RCTC theatre, designed the lighting. I loved it and couldn’t wait to do the show photos.

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I wrote a post about a live dance event I shot out at RCTC a while back (click here to see it). Ben did that lighting as well. So my expectations were high. Although we stage the shots at RCT (versus live shooting I do elsewhere), we use the lighting program for the scene we’re shooting. There were only one or two times we bumped a light a tad for the photo, perhaps when we want to move the actor(s) a bit for composition. All of these shots were taken using the designed lighting as is.

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I think some of my favorite shots involved the barricade (assembled by the young rebels to ward off the king’s army). The crew created a very convincing barricade. Particularly in the darker, moodier lights, it just looked great. It made a wonderful backdrop for the actors. The barricade scenes are emotional and powerful, so the photos needed to be, too.

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The lighting played an important role, the actors did their part, and I just had to find the picture.

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I’m able to move around and find the shot, and the stage and house setup at RCT allows me to get a low vantage point from just in front of the stage, or move up a few rows for a more direct or slightly down-looking viewpoint.

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Of course, the dim light in some scenes makes shooting somewhat trickier. Even with the good low-light capability of my camera, I still try to keep the ISO (which controls the light sensitivity) at a setting I know will produce good quality shots. Then I need to balance my exposure settings and hold the camera still. Not always easy, and sometimes the actors are moving, as well. That’s less of a problem here than doing a live shoot, but people do move.

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One advantage of doing staged shots is the ability to create just the look Greg, the director, wants. We can move folks around at will. Being actors, they give us believable expressions, but they also have a habit of breaking each other up. Then you wait for everyone to stop laughing so you can get the photo. Actors!

The RCT schedule for this season include five shows, four of them musicals. Should be an interesting year. They are already in rehearsals for the next show. One more show at Riverland in what’s left of 2013, too. Since late summer, I’ve shot Spamalot, The Rocky Horror Show, The Wizard of Oz, and Les Misérables. All I can say is, wow! Great fun, for sure.

October 9, 2013

Riverland’s Rocky Horror Show

Filed under: Theatre — Tony Drumm @ 4:23 pm

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Some shows are more visual than others. They have engaging lighting and colorful costumes. Musicals, by and large, tend to fall into the more visual category. And then, there are those that sort of explode with color and lights and smoke and all things dynamic.

Photographing such a show is always fun. But it is still challenging in a different way than, say, an intense drama in a single, evenly lit, box set.

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It’s sort of like shooting the Grand Canyon. How can you not take a good photo? But, how can you create an engaging image that works through the visual buffet line and pulls out a story?

Riverland Community College is currently producing The Rocky Horror Show, the cult show that later became a classic cult movie. By it’s nature, it demands to be big, boisterous, and over the top. And, so it is!

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I’ve not seen the show (or the movie) since RCT produced it as their summer show a few seasons ago. It’s fun and I enjoy it, but I’m not one of those who has memorized all the songs and lines and audience come-backs. So, it was actually a lot of fun hearing the beginning of a song and having it click in my head – yeah, I remember this!

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I’ve been looking forward to shooting this show since I saw it in the list of shows Riverland is doing this school year. It was as much fun as I expected. I think I was able to capture some of its essence in the photos.

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Lighting was great and, from a shooting point of view, lit in a way that worked pretty well for the photos. Some shows have very contrasty lighting – think of follow spotlights firing on an actor on a dark stage. Those are especially challenging since our cameras just don’t handle that well. We have to push and pull in postprocessing to make something reasonable.

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This show had only a little of that. It was generally well within the 5DIII’s capabilities.

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That let me capture photos like this where I can highlight one character while still showing a relationship to others. When Frank N. Furter moved down stage right, I knew that’s where I needed to be. He sat on the stage and I was ready. I love when a plan comes together!

The show runs until Saturday. Several folks here in Rochester are going Saturday night, and I think we’ll have a blast!

October 1, 2013

The Wizard of Oz in Plainview

Filed under: Theatre — Tony Drumm @ 3:56 pm

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I am in the middle of a couple busy weeks especially with theatre shoots. Here are a few images from Plainview Community Theater’s production of The Wizard of Oz, the first of three shows I’m shooting over this period. I also just did some promo shots for an upcoming event – I’m collaborating with the wonderful designer and costumer, Marann Faget, of Creative Costumes and Clothing to photograph folks who’d like to dress up for their Christmas and holiday cards making their cards really stand out. It’s going to be a hoot, and I’ll be posting lots more details here – soon – as we get the them sorted out.

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Plainview Community Theater puts on one musical a year. This is the second year in a row they’ve asked me to photograph their show. They seem to really involve their small town in their productions. About a month or two ago, I attended a fundraiser luncheon that had terrific attendance – in the middle of the day on a work day – at least while I was there. The local support was great. Theatre provides an important outlet for many people with support and fellowship, and it draws folks from all walks of life.

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Wizard has a huge cast with many children playing the roles of Munchkins and flying monkeys. Big musicals like this take a good deal of work and time to put together. I didn’t include a shot that shows the entire “yellow brick road” here, but it’s big. The orchestra sits below it, and it forms a bridge with symmetric ramps leading up from the stage. This little theatre group is using the Jon Hassler Theater space, so they must construct and assemble their sets rather quickly.

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The show is based on the Judy Garland classic movie. Most of the musical numbers are familiar if you’ve seen the film. Some are extended a bit and the jitterbug piece which was cut from the movie is included.

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It’s interesting working in different venues with different layouts. Here, the stage is below all the seats. It’s at floor level, and the seats rise up from there. I do have the ability to move left and right quite a ways to get the angles I want. For larger groups, I end up shooting more or less downward.

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There’s a bit more humor infused into the script of the stage musical than we saw in the movie. Somehow, the Cowardly Lion is the focus for many of the funny moments.

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There are the same principal roles as the movie: Dorothy and her friends, the Wicked Witch of the West, and the wizard. My friend, Anthony, had the role of the Scarecrow. It was fun to see his performance. I met Anthony at Rochester Civic Theatre, and I believe it was as a cast member for The Wizard of Oz!

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I enjoyed shooting the show, adding my point of view to the images, and hoping they are enjoyed by the cast and crew and serve them well on their web site. I’ve shot many shows, and I am still learning! But that’s how I view photography in general – there’s always something to learn, a new way to look at things. Like all art, I think. Including theatre.

Tomorrow, I’ll be shooting The Rocky Horror Show at Riverland and Saturday is Les Misérables at Rochester Civic Theatre. Both should be fun shoots, and I’m hoping to come away with plenty of good photos. And I’ll probably learn a thing or two!

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