Thursday, November 27, 2008

John Liipfert, FRONTRUNNER Principle, in Live Design Magazine



Live Design

How does one go about lighting the nation’s first African-American President-Elect for his first official speech, both outdoors and on television, without distracting from the historical significance of the moment?

Chicago’s Grant Park was the scene on November 4th when President-Elect Barack Obama held his presidential acceptance speech before a crowd of more than 100,000. Event producer C3 Presents lit the rally along with stage lighting rental and production company Christie Lites, who was the lighting contractor and lighting supplier for the event, with a staff of 15 onsite.

Huntly Christie, CEO of Christie Lites Orlando, notes, “It was a mixed bag of lighting. However, the most prominent fixture on the site was the Martin MAC 2000 Wash XB™. They were instrumental in making sure that the world witnessed this historic event.” LD Bob Peterson who described the evening as, “A very historical night, with a feeling of excitement, and also a sense of relief when the results were announced. I received directions from the Obama team that the lighting was to be appropriately conservative with no celebratory effects. The brief was to elegantly transfer from the exuberance of the campaign to the seriousness of the presidency.”
The MAC 2000 Wash XBs, which made up two-thirds of the automated lighting package, were spread out across three 80’ Stageco towers, a 30-foot 10-by-10 scaffold, a mobile Elevated LED Screen, and two stage backlight scaffolds. Light from the MAC 2000 Wash was used for stage backlighting, for near audience lighting, and to illuminate a stately row of trees off in the distance. Self-contained Musco mobile lighting trucks handled the far field lighting.
“As audience fill light the color temperature adjustment of the XBs allowed me to feather in the transition from the stage lighting (4800 Kelvin on President-Elect Obama) to the audience fill lighting (around 5800 Kelvin),” Peterson notes. “I was thrilled with the CT variance capacity of the XBs and delightedly shocked at the light output from them. There was a bank of trees about 1,000 feet away which they unexpectedly lit up.”
Peterson does mention challenges, which he says were all present in the “cut shot,” an important camera view from the southwest corner of the park through the President-Elect into the crowd all the way to the city skyline in the background. “The driving photographic issue was exposing to the skyline,” he says.

Opening the iris to accomplish that task created concern about the amount of uncontrolled light from the huge corps of press photographers present. “I was a bit worried that we might be required to open up the iris so much that the press lighting would be an uncontrollable competitive light source,” Peterson explains. “In the end, the hundreds of Chimeras and Kinos acted like the world’s biggest softlight, and filled his profile to that camera angle.”

Championed by Emmett Belliveau of the Obama campaign, with general field duties handled by his event producer John Liipfert, of The Obama Campaign Team, the night had a magical air to it and the event was viewed as a success on all fronts.

Christie Lites account rep Robert Roth was on the job from start to finish and recalls how the event was planned in just three short weeks: “Bob Peterson had a clear vision of the lighting and the campaign team had a clear budget they that had to adhere to,” he comments. “We then got every body on the same page as far as what was doable and Bob sketched out broad elements of the lighting for them.

“The stage wasn’t a traditional square covered stage and was expertly conceived by Bruce Rogers. It was then a question of us getting the supporting physical elements in place correctly to provide lighting positions. The XB was the primary base instrument. I’ve been using them since their launch—including at festivals this past summer—and I am very impressed with the fixture’s performance and reliability.

“A special part of this was the scale of the event and what was going to appear on the TV screen at home and in newspapers around the world the next day. That is where Bob excelled at his craft. The Obama campaign wanted a lack of visible production elements so that when the cameras looked past the President-Elect to the crowd there was not an abundance of technology showing.

“It was about the people, the skyline, the moment; Bob did a masterful job of getting it lit for still camera and television so that all the elements worked in balance with each other,” Roth concludes.

Lighting Equipment:

72 Martin MAC 2000 Wash XB™
2 grandMA 2048 Ch. Console

6 SyncroLite XLs

2 Musco Type “C” Trucks

72 Altman Focusing CYC

29 2-foot Ministrips

3 Jem ZR33 Hi-Mass™

3 DF-50 Hazer

3 Versa Fan

3 M2 2.5k Lycian Spots

4 Lycian 1293 3k Xenon Followspot

Here are a few more links to mentions in
Link other publications-

Projection, Lights, and Staging News

Total Production Magazine

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Election Night 2008 – Grant Park

Wow.

Frontrunner principal John Liipfert was called in by the Obama campaign to produce the final event of the campaign: the election night celebration in Grant
Park. As many as 250,000 people were in attendance and thousands more gathered in the surrounding blocks to watch returns and to see the first speech to the American public by the President-Elect.

Emotions were high around the park as state after state came in for Obama. We were all surprised by the early results from Pennsylvania and Ohio.

Here are a few highlights from the big show…

John’s profile is captured when he walks behind the screen projecting the returns.

The crowd welcomes our new President and family.

The cut shot.

The whole site.


Watch his historic speech from Grant Park.

Photographer John Kimp assembled some of his beautiful images with sound from the event.

Here are a few of the front pages from around the country.



What an amazing night. Congratulations to everyone who played a roll in this incredibly historic campaign. Congratulations Mr. President-Elect!

Photo Credits- Getty Images

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Michelle Obama Lights Up Vegas with 8 Days to Go!


Photo credits- Getty Images
Michelle Obama speaks at Doolittle Park during a campaign rally on October 27th in Las Vegas. The campaign and FRONTRUNNER Productions are working hard to secure this battleground state for Obama.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Obama Swings Through Nevada

Obama hits Reno and Vegas with 10 days to go, and FRONTRUNNER is there for the action.

Check out the New York Times story on Obama’s standing out West, and the beautiful cut shot from the Reno event.

Photo credit- Reuters
Photo credit- Getty Images

Monday, October 20, 2008

Clinton and Reid Glow in Vegas

When Bill Clinton toured Nevada with Senate majoity leader Harry Reid, FRONTRUNNER was there to make them glow before a enthusiastic Las Vegas audience.

U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, (D-NV) (R) introduces former U.S. President Bill Clinton during a rally for Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) at Chaparral High School October 19, 2008 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Early voting for the 2008 general election in the battleground state began on October 18.


All photos Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Sunday, October 19, 2008

FRONTRUNNER Puts Joe Biden in a New Light



FRONTRUNNER principle Paul Tisa made Sen. Joe Biden shine before a Nevada crowd. Staff traveling with the Senator agreed it was the best lighting of any event they had done so far. We at FRONTRUNNER appreciate the compliment!

HENDERSON, NV - OCTOBER 17: Democratic vice presidential candidate U.S. Senator Joe Biden(D-DE) speaks during a rally at Morrell Park October 17, 2008 in Henderson, Nevada. Early voting for the 2008 general elections in the battleground state begins on October 18.

Saturday, October 4, 2008

FRONTRUNNER Adds Punch to Boxing Promotional Tour


When boxing giant Oscar De La Hoya brought his nationwide tour promoting his upcoming fight with Manny Pacquiao to the Bay Area, he called on
FRONTRUNNER PRODUCTIONS to get the job done. The afternoon event brought boxing fans from all over the Bay Area and Northern California to see the world famous athletes in action. While no punches were thrown, verbal sparring delighted reporters and fans alike as the teams tried their best to rattle their opponent. FRONTRUNNER built the event at Historic Fort Mason Park on the waterfront, featuring the Golden Gate bridge as the backdrop, which lent a sense of place to the nationwide tour. Despite a precarious forecast, the weather cooperated, resulting in a a stunning event. Producer Leigh Simons, with Oscar's firm Goldenboy Promotions, called the event "the smoothest and most successful event of the tour." Boxing PR specialist Kelly Swanson described the set that FRONTRUNNER built as "stately... gorgeous!" FRONTRUNNER was later called upon to consult on the remaining event of the tour in Los Angeles.

PHOTO CREDIT: Tom Hogan–Hoganphotos/Golden Boy Promotions





Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Obama in Reno: FRONTRUNNER Covers all the Angles

An enthusiastic crowd of 12,000 Washoe County residents came out to support Senator Obama at the University of NV, Reno. FRONTRUNNER worked with the Obama advance team to make sure that every angle was covered from the Senator’s entrance through exit. Advance man Tim Hartz did an amazing job. The Reno design model has become the template for Obama’s for public events across the country.









Saturday, July 26, 2008

Blowout in Berlin

On July 24, 2008, FRONTRUNNER principal John Liipfert was fortunate to join Senator Obama's advance team in producing his speech in Berlin, Germany before a crowd of 250,000 people. John spent 12 days putting this monster festival-like event together with a huge team of staff. The crowd stretched for one mile between the Siegessaule ("Victory Column") and the Brandenberg Gate. It was a stunning experience to say the least.

Here's video coverage of the event:
http://www.breitbart.tv/html/138183.html

The advance team's every move was covered by the German Media: http://www.spiegel.de/video/video-33409.html

We got some great newspaper photos as well:







The setting was intended to be presidential and elegant. That's a 500' crane in the background. German television brought it in for a special establishing shot.

John labored over the design of the site for a week, then we had a day and a half to build it.
The massive press riser and broadcast center took an entire day to build.


The catwalk was 180' long.

We employed the 2nd biggest portable LED screen in the world.

Several columnists covering the story remarked at the remarkable quality lighting for the event. Obama took the stage at the so-called "Magic Hour."

FRONTRUNNER principal John Liipfert greeting Senator Obama with a "pound" before he takes the stage.

The view from backstage was glorious!

Thanks to the crew at Mediapool for all their help.

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

KJ Heads into a Runoff for Mayor


Kevin Johnson forced a runoff election for mayor against Heather Fargo. Fargo is the incumbent 2-term Mayor. Johnson leads Mayor Heather Fargo 47% to 40%. 5 other candidates split the rest of the vote.
Johnson held his election night celebration in the heart of Oak Park at 40 Acres Art Gallery. Johnson was joined by supporters from all over Sacramento. FRONTRUNNER Productions was there for the inspirational event, providing audio, lighting and staging.

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Highlights from the Primary - From 7,000 to 75,000

Since the announcement of his candidacy, Barack Obama's presidential campaign has regularly tapped FRONTRUNNER principal John Liipfert to produce some of their largest and most significant events. Here are some photos that capture some of these moments along the way in Obama's quest for the Democratic nomination.


Photo Credit: Obama for America
February 11, 2007- Barack announces his candidacy before a crowd of 7,000 on a snowy day in Ames, Iowa.



Photo Credit: AP
March 17, 2007- Barack speaks to a capacity crowd in front of Oakland, CA City Hall.


Photo Credit: Gerry Broome/AP
September 27, 2007- Obama speaks to a 25,000 crowd assembled in New York City's Washington Square Park.


Photo Credit:Emmett Beliveau
December 9, 2007- Oprah joins Obama for a cross country tour. John produced this event in Columbia, SC that drew a then record crowd of 30,000 to USC's Williams Brice Football Stadium. This event had to be moved from an 18,000 person area because of overwhelming demand.


Photo Credit: Emmanuel Dunand/Getty Images
January 10, 2008- Senator John Kerry endorses Obama at the College of Charleston. Liipfert also spent two years on the road producing events for Senator Kerry during his run for the presidency.


Photo Credit: Rock Bowmer/AP

February 19, 2008- Obama celebrates his victory in the Wisconsin Democratic Primary in Houston, TX before an overflow crowd of 22,000.


Photo Credit: Reuters
March 24, 2008- Obama receives the endorsement of New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson at the Rose Quarter Arena in Portland, Oregon.

Photo Credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
April 18, 2008- Obama breaks another record as 75,000 Oregonians attend his rally in Portland, Oregon ahead of the Oregon primary. This was the last giant rally of the primary cycle, as the Senator then embarked on a series of smaller town hall events through the summer before clinching the nomination. What a long way we've come!