Super Bowl XLIX Halftime Show Glitters with Clay Paky Lighting Fixtures.

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Clay Paky
fixtures dominated the lighting rig for Katy Perry’s glittering halftime show
at Super Bowl XLIX in the University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale,
Arizona.  Lighting designer Bob Barnhart
of LA-based Full Flood chose a large array of Clay Paky Sharpy, Mythos and
A.leda B-EYE K20 fixtures for the 12-minute show.    

Super Bowl
XLIX marked Barnhart’s seventeenth big game and his fifth as the primary or
sole lighting designer.  He served as
lighting designer on last year’s Bruno Mars halftime show at Met Life Stadium
in Rutherford, New Jersey. For Super
Bowl XLIX Barnhart deployed 140 Sharpys, 120 new Mythos fixtures and 94 B-EYE
K20s, all provided by PRG.    

Even before
the halftime talent is selected, the venue sets the scene for the production
and lighting design.  “It all depends on
what creative options the stadium offers,” says Barnhart.  “If the University of Phoenix Stadium didn’t
have a roof we couldn’t have done the projection, for example.  Potential weather conditions are also a
factor.    

“The Super
Bowl is different from anything else I do. The halftime show had an amazing
entrance and exit and a lot of different things happening in between – all in
12 minutes stuck in the middle of the world’s largest sporting event,” he
says.  “The first two-and-a-half minutes
featured 600 glowing orbs, a giant lion and a moving chessboard.  That was a lot of eye candy that kept viewers
wondering where it all was headed.  We
went from end zone to end zone twice: Katy started in the north end zone,
joined Lenny Kravitz & Missy Elliott in the south end zone then went back
to the north end zone for the flying rig. 
The show was physically very large and very ambitious in all areas – the
production design team did a great job; it was quite amazing!”   

Barnhart
positioned 140 Sharpys on the upstage side of the 400-level rail and the south
end zone rail and deployed several on a cart behind the lion puppet to add some
light and texture behind the giant creature as it moved through the dark.  The Sharpy has been used in Super Bowl rigs
since the fixture made its debut in the US.   

“Sharpys are
great for their white-hot beams; they’re really good for giving air graphics in
a large-format venue.  And they’re nice
and small, too,” he says.   

David Grill,
one of the show’s lighting directors, notes that one of “coolest things” about
the three Clay Paky fixtures  is “the
amount of light it generates compared to the amount of power it consumes.  Gone are the days of using vast quantities of
power.  Power has huge implications on a
production: paying for it, acquiring / generating it, and the quantity of
cables required to connect a cart.  With
the chosen fixtures we  had 14 fixtures
on a cart with only one power connection. 
We don’t need to plug in three cables when we’re moving fast and every
second saved helps you.”   

Barnhart was
introduced to Clay Paky’s new Mythos hybrid fixture at a demo at A.C.T
Lighting’s LA office.  “I saw a great
high-powered beam, then they zoomed it out,” he recalls.  “I knew right away that this kind of
versatility could be very useful to me.”

  

Grill was
also impressed by the Mythos as well. 
“Their brightness, ability to color fade, their gobos and unique beam
spread – Mythos had everything we needed,” he says.    

“We knew the
manufacturer and A.C.T Lighting stood behind Mythos, so we had none of the
worries that can accompany the use of a new fixture on a big show,” Grill adds.  

Barnhart
points out that the halftime stage set posed a unique lighting challenge.  “It was a projection surface, but it had a
lot of dancers on it.  I had to light
them but not the surface.  And when there
were no dancers, I wanted to provide dynamic air graphics.  I positioned the Mythos fixtures around the
perimeter of the projection surface on giant rolling carts so I could light the
dancers and fill the air with beams of light. 
I had custom gobos to use like shutters and cut off the field.”  

The B-EYE
K20s made their Super Bowl debut last year when they were new to the market,
says Barnhart.  This time he upped the
quantity significantly, dimmed the fixtures to seven percent and used them in
conjunction with the Mythos fixtures on carts. 
“They provided more eye candy for the background and made the perimeter
set glow.  

Their color and pattern
movement added tempo and activity to the camera shot,” he explains.  

Lighting
Director Pete Radice controlled the 1340-plus channel moving light system.    

Bruce
Rodgers did the production design for the halftime show, Baz Halpin was
creative director for Katy Perry, Lightborne designed the video content and
Michael Curry Design crafted the giant lion. 

Francesco
Romagnoli, Clay Paky Area Manager for North and Latin America, added, “It’s an
honor to be involved in so many Super Bowls and the lights looked amazing.  I was proud when I watched the game and so
thrilled to be working with such great designers as Mr. Barnhart and Mr.
Grill.” 

http://www.claypaky.it

 

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