So You Think You Can Dance
South Africa - Robe's latest LED moving lights are being used in great style to light the current series of So You Think You Can Dance in South Africa, which is being recorded at the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC)'s Renaissance Centre venue in downtown Johannesburg.

Lighting is designed by Robert Grobler from Gearhouse South Africa (GHSA). The 24 x Robe DLX Spot and 24 x DLF Wash fixtures being used on the show are part of a new investment in Robe's latest technology by GHSA, the country's largest rental and full technical production facility. This is their first show.

Using these, plus other Robe LED luminaires, has reduced the power requirements by a third form the previous series - as a result they have dropped from a 300 to a 200 KVA generator for lighting power. It's also the first TV show in SA to feature an almost all LED moving light rig.

The popular series is produced in SA by Rapid Blue and modelled on the original American concept. It is presented by Sinazo Yolwa and gives SA's most exciting dancers the chance to strut their natural flair across multiple genres from Latin to hip-hop in front of the judges and the public during a live Saturday night prime-time broadcast.

A series of overhead trusses are installed in the venue to provide stage lighting positions and large areas of the set - derived from the original series - are also lit with Robe colour changing LED fixtures. Grobler began by looking at all the camera positions and then selected the lighting fixtures from there.

The full Robe count includes 24 x DLF Washes and 24 DLX Spots, 12 LEDWash 600s - all from the Robin series, plus 20 x ColorSpot 2500E ATs, 16 CitySkape Xtremes, 14 x CitySkape 48s which are ensconced around the set lighting the stage and 12 x LEDForce 18 PARs.

The DLFs are used on the front trusses as key lighting for the cameras and for washing across the stage. The DLXs are filling 'holes' in some of the specific camera wide shots as well as being used for specials and to colour and texture the stage with gobos.

The lightshow is run from a grandMA full size console. GHSA is also supplying video, audio, power and rigging for the series.

(Jim Evans)


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