The Vanemuine Theatre in Tartu, Estonia, has just premiered its own fabulous new production of the epic Andrew Lloyd Webber musical, Phantom of The Opera.

It is only the third instance in over 25 years of this amazing work that a producing house has been granted the right to produce a new version of the show adding elements of their own interpretation. It’s also the first time that the worldwide hit Phantom has been produced in the Baltic states and former eastern Europe – all of these facts an immense honour for Vanemuine.

The production is directed by Georg Malvius with a lighting design by Palle Palme using more than 100 Robe moving lights.

The two – both Swedish but constantly working internationally – have collaborated on many previous projects. They enjoy a great working relationship and creative chemistry, and both also have a long history at Vanemuine, one of the most prolific and acclaimed producing houses in Estonia.

They are joined on the Phantom creative production team by musical director Martin Sildos, scenic designer Iir Hermeliin and costume designer Ellen Cairnes.

Palme was able to take full advantage of the extensive Robe moving light rig installed at the 900-seat Big House at Vanemuine as part of an extensive technical upgrade to all Estonia’s state theatres in 2012.

Phantom is using 100 moving lights, including 50 x LEDWash 1200s, 20 x LEDWash 600s and 24 x MMX Spots and eight ROBIN 600E Spots all from Robe’s ROBIN series, together with four Robe DigitalSpot 7000 DTs which are used highly effectively for projecting mapped video onto the various scenic pieces.

The show – accompanied by the full Vanemuine Symphony Orchestra playing the score live and bringing additional resonance and depth to the work – is a beautifully fluid collage of colour, drama and emotion which brings a new and different perspective to a classic narrative.

In bringing this potent story to life, Malvius was keen to make it “more interesting’ than just a love story. Setting it in 1945 he introduced a subtle and intelligent anti-war message implying that the Phantom’s disfigurement and consequent ostracism originated during battlefield conflict. His past experiences and loss drive him to being hyper-protective towards heroine Christine.

“It’s important to show the ugliness as well as the beauty of the world,’ he comments.
Palme’s starting point for lighting included multiple discussions with Malvius, and developing a strong dichotomy between the “real’ world and the Phantom’s world. Making the Phantom’s lights and stage looks have a mystical quality was crucial to his aesthetic explains the lighting designer.

The LEDWash 1200s and 600s are used as front and back lights and for selected scenery illumination. In the theatre, these fixtures are rigged on the house bars so they can also be used for the other two productions that are rotating in repertoire with Phantom.

The 600E Spots are used as specials on the various principal actors. Four fixtures are rigged on a bar above the orchestra pit and another four are around the stage. Two are dedicated to the Phantom’s boat ride across the bridge, several metres up in the air.

The 24 x MMXs are the real workhorses of the show. They are dotted around everywhere on the over-stage bars and some at FOH, and are used as backlights, specials, set washers, and effects. He uses them highly effectively for lots of gobo work and texturing on the floor and scenery.

The MMX is his favourite light on this rig and he comments that he is looking forward to using Robe’s new BMFL Spots on a show like this someday.

There is a lot of colour in Phantom, and both Palme and Malvius like to use colour to set the ambience, change the location and constantly affect the emotionality of the audience, reinforcing the actors onstage.

They both have similar tastes when it comes to lighting an environment and dramatic action. Malvius will come up with basic lighting “building block’ cues for a show at the start of a work, to which Palme adds his own and develops and refines throughout an intense programming process.

The large side and upstage set pieces changed location, shape and context via the mapped video which is loaded into the heads of the DigitalSpots and also run through the Hog 3 console operated by Vanemuine’s Kasper Aus.

This mapping and the close proximity of the actors to the scenery entailed Palme being extra cautious with the type of lighting used and its focus, as he had to ensure that it didn’t interfere with the video projections.