Australian National Theatre Live use Panasonic Varicam to capture great Australian theatre performances

The team from Australian National Theatre Live (ANT Live) is capturing terrific live performances with the latest Panasonic camera technology and sharing them with a wider audience, supporting their distribution and screening in cinemas around the country, including rural and regional Australia.

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It’s undeniable that Australia has a wealth of live theatre talent, with works by our world-renowned playwrights produced regularly for keen audiences in major cities around the country. It’s also undeniable that the ‘tyranny of distance’ within Australia means that many who would love the opportunity to see these performances are simply too far away.

Seeing this demand, the team from Australian National Theatre Live (ANT Live) is capturing these terrific live performances with the latest camera technology and sharing them with a wider audience, supporting their distribution and screening in cinemas around the country, including rural and regional Australia.

Most recently Panasonic Varicam and DC-GH5 cameras were used to capture two iconic plays, destined for cinema showings locally and potentially internationally – Michael Gow’s ‘Away, and Katherine Thomson’s ‘Diving for Pearls’.

The ANT Live team is Logie-winning Australian actor Grant Dodwell; actor, writer and producer, Raj Sidhu; and Peter Hiscock, a film and television producer with many years experience. ANT Live has negotiated agreements with theatre companies, writers, actors, unions, broadcasters, arts centres and cinemas around the country to film, produce and distribute high quality digital content featuring our best writers and performers.

Grant Dodwell explained: “We were aware of the vastness of this country and how people miss out unless they are on the eastern seaboard. We brought together our respective talents in film production and the theatre world to found ANT Live in 2010.” 

“We knew that technology was improving and that with our combined skills, we would be able to achieve high production values. Advancements in digital broadcast equipment meant everything was so much simpler and cheaper.”

A perspective from the Director of Photography

Experienced Australian cinematographer Con Filippidis was Director of Photography for ‘Away’, leading a talented team of camera operators – David Richardson, Aldi Godjali, Noel Evans and Louis Puli - shooting on two Varicam 35's and three Varicam LT's, with LUMIX GH5's used for locked off shots. Fujinon Cabrio lenses were used on all the Varicams. Con was also camera operator and Varicam consultant on ‘Diving for Pearls’, working with DoP Paul Howard.

Con had shot theatre performances in the past, but usually with 2/3rd inch cameras and nothing to the scale or quality of ‘Away’. He believes the primary benefit of shooting with the Varicams is their outstanding low light performance, which allowed the operators to capture the original lighting design of the theatre production. “Basically with other cameras you can’t shoot live theatre that is lit for an audience, not lit for the cameras. In previous productions, the cameras used struggled with focus in low light.”

“Varicams are the only cameras with dual native ISO of 800 and 5000. The Varicams also have a great dynamic range down to 14.5 stops. We could expose really well for low lit scenes, with increased depth of field shooting at 4000 ISO from a 5000Base ISO. At this setting we found our average exposure for a normally lit scene was T 5.6.”

Con explained that they were consistently able to reproduce the intent of the lighting designer. “For example, in Diving for Pearls, there was a sunset scene that was orange and very warm, and a bright day that was very blue.  The Varicam could handle all the colour ranges really well when set to 4300Kelvin, monitoring in a Rec 709 LUT in the viewfinder. In low lit scenes, the colours are still true and vibrant, and the Varicam reproduces skin tones very faithfully. The pictures look amazing with dark, rich blacks and subtle colours.”

Con added: “All the Varicams shot with Fujinon Cabrio zooms, which allowed us to match perfectly and are very clean and sharp. We used zoom demands to follow the action ENG style smoothly and quickly. We wanted to have the dramatic impact of a close up at the right moment, using wide shots and creating pacing through editing, but the movie still has to make the cinema audience feel they’ve gone to see a live theatre play.”

The GH5s were used for locked off shots on magic arms to provide additional perspectives such as high angles to create the ambience of a live performance. On ‘Diving for Pearls’, Con used an app to view footage on his iPad and trigger them remotely. “The GH5s are small and unobtrusive so you can put them anywhere. It was handy as they were rigged up high and not easy to access without a ladder.”

The GH5's shot in VLogL (lite), which was an excellent match for the Varicams shooting V-Log. All cameras were shooting DCI 4K 4096 x 2160 @ 24p for cinema release. Internally the Varicam35 cameras recorded 4K (4096 x 2160) AVC-Intra4K444 files, the VariCamLT cameras recorded 4K (4096 x 2160) AVC-Intra4K422 files and the DC-GH5 cameras recorded 4K (4096 x 2160) MOV 10-bit 422 files.

Con explained: “It’s important to shoot in 4K for cinema release to future-proof your work and because it’s the best quality you can record in. Making a 2K DCP from a 4K acquisition is going to be better than originating in 2K for a 2K finish. Using 4K also allows you to crop into the image in post if so desired. I’ve seen the finished result from ‘Away’ and I was blown away at the quality. The pictures were amazing, the lighting design was fantastic, and the cameras captured that lighting flawlessly. A lot of the time when you’re shooting a film, you have to bump up the levels for the cameras, otherwise they are underexposed. Not the case with the Varicams.”

"We work with the lighting designers in the theatre, but we don’t ask for adjustments from the theatrical lighting. The beauty of using the Varicam is that we don’t have to do any of that. And we have very little grading to do because all the cameras have been matched so well. The highlight for us is the amazing skin tones that no other camera can get."

A world-class offering

Grant Dodwell concluded: “We’re certainly convinced that using the Varicams is a differentiator with our product.  It’s a world-class offering.”

 “Actors say ‘do I perform for the cameras’ and in fact we say ‘no’, you do your theatrical performance. Because the cinemagoer is seeing a theatre performance, except that it’s in a cinema. We give the viewer a sense of the spatial positioning of the cast and the audience. You see levels of acting ability that you never see on film, as you are watching one performance over two hours.”

“We get a lot of positive feedback – particularly in the bush in rural and regional Australia. We’re not a replacement for theatre, we’re augmenting it, and the feedback from audiences is that it’s like being there.” 

Shooting a feature film in a day

Although technology may have progressed in leaps and bounds, the team still faces the challenge of setting up and shooting a feature-length production in a tight window to fit within a theatre company’s existing performance schedule. ANT Live treats the whole project like shooting a feature film, only in a day. In every sense it is a theatrical performance being filmed, so they capture it with an audience, just like a regular production.

The finished film must capture the original essence and energy of a live theatre performance. ANT Live makes no adjustment to the original performance while filming, and all microphones are hidden. Grant Dodwell added: “However, we are also able to capture wide shots, close ups and establishing shots. Using the Panasonic cameras, there’s a lot more work done in the edit, which makes the end result very consumer-friendly and engaging.“

ANT Live also acknowledged the role of rental houses Lemac and Videocraft in providing the equipment and vital pre-shooting technical support needed to bring ‘Away’ and ‘Diving for Pearls’ to life.

 

Achieving impressive quality

Influencing the switch to Varicam for the two productions was the fact that the ANT Live team were spending a lot of time on colour grading because some of the large sensor cameras previously used had different responses to the LED lights that are used in theatre. In addition, some models didn’t shoot continuously for longer than 30 minutes.

Grant Dodwell explained: “We work with the lighting designers in the theatre, but we don’t ask for adjustments from the theatrical lighting. The beauty of using the Varicam is that we don’t have to do any of that. And we have very little grading to do because all the cameras have been matched so well. The highlight for us is the amazing skin tones that no other camera can get.”

The team was very pleased with the Varicam’s performance in low light situations, which was essential in delivering a high-quality finished production. “We used the Varicam’s ISO capabilities to our advantage. In ‘Diving for Pearls’, there is one particular shot where our hero has doused himself in petrol. There’s only one spotlight on him and being able to capture that gives the scene an ‘operatic’ level.”

“The other big advantage from my point of view, was the depth of the black levels. In the case of the Griffin Theatre, we have cameras facing the audience with other cameras in it. When it’s finished, you don’t see the other cameras, they are lost in the black – and there are 5 cameras in the shot. I defy anyone to see the cameras. The black levels are so profoundly black that they are rendered invisible.”

The Varicam has been able to enhance two very different productions, Peter Hiscock added. “‘Diving for Pearls’ at the Griffin Theatre in Sydney has a very small stage, and we have to say that the Varicam has actually enhanced the production. When you see it on screen, you feel as if you have a front row seat. In comparison, ‘Away’ at the Malthouse theatre in Melbourne has a very big, wide stage so the Cabrio wide angle lens was used to highlight it.”

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