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Corona: Peachy Productions delivers food and lighting art

Philip French of UK technical production company Peachy Productions has just relocated to Wiltshire after being based in the Surrey city of Guildford for eight years, however, during the coronavirus crisis he is making the journey back twice a week to volunteer for the Surrey Drive Campaign. This is a locally-based crowd-funded initiative that delivers around 2,500 meals each week for hardworking staff at the Royal Surrey NHS Foundation Trust hospital.

 

Having furloughed all his staff while the UK continues in a largely restricted lockdown scenario with no live shows and events, Philip French volunteered for some Surrey Drive driving/delivery slots and has been part of this operation ever since. One day whilst dropping off meals at the Surrey Royal he was gazing at the city’s famous cathedral opposite and thought it would be amazing if it were lit up at night to show support for everyone. He thought that this could tie in with the nationwide ‘Clap for Carers’ action every Thursday evening.

 

“Worldwide people are sending messages of goodwill and support using the medium of light to everyone battling and dealing with the pandemic,” he comments, “and I thought that this could also happen in Guildford.” He approached the Anglican Cathedral’s administrators and elicited their agreement to illuminate the Gothic revival-style building which is the seat of the Bishop of Guildford.

 

French used his technical expertise to choose suitable fixtures, which included 12 x Robe Pointes and 16 x Robe LEDBeam 150s together with additional LED PARs and other exterior LED wash lights, utilising around 80 fixtures in total. The Pointes were used to highlight the top of the Cathedral’s 160 ft tower, and everything else deployed on the ground around the building.

 

French, his co-director Ryan Howard and two volunteers - carefully observing social distancing - ran cables all around the Cathedral, hooking into various PD outlets and running back to a master 63A 3-phase supply at the front. French estimates they use around a kilometre and a half of cable. Due to the scale and size of the building, they decided not to use a desk or DMX control. All programming was done beforehand in the warehouse and the lights are manually focussed on-site each week.

 

The Cathedral has been lit in blue every Thursday since the start of April, then church authorities approached French and asked if it would be possible to light it green for - what would have been - Visit Surrey day on 2nd May, which he and his team were happy to do. French himself then suggested doing a red, white, and blue lighting scheme the following week in commemoration of the 75th anniversary of VE Day which signalled the end of the Second World War in Europe. On this occasion, French added one of Peachy Productions’ Christie 30K projectors to the spectacle to beam artwork and graphics onto the Cathedral’s front facade.

 

(Photos: Alex Turner/Steve Parsons/PA Media)

 

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