What about if you designed it, then did everything exept run the board by yourself?
What I'm talking about is the hang/focus/circuit/ ect.
Now if you made the plot, hung in, circuited it, focused it, programmed it, and then let someone else run it you are the ME and designer.
Then you are the designer. A board op is the board op, and should get credit of being the board op. In real world situations, usually the day after a show opens the designer is on a plane to the next gig, real designers never run or touch their boards.
This is the situation I am describing, Would you put Lighting by: or Lighting design by: in the program?
Not always true in the music biz. Some designers tour the show. Not all, but some.
Lol, would you care to start that again? I could keep going.
speaking from expriance there allthings?If the show is a charity event then I suggest no credit or a fictional one as you will spend the next month fending off calls from every charity in town to do their show, beware.
Who would let you?I could use a few gigs outside the school it they'd let me...
I'm not sure that's legal.You have to get permission from the head of the department and have a certain GPA within the department and outside it to work on none school shows. It's terrible...
Yeah it is. He is going to their school and participating in their program so he has to play by their rules while in it. The university I go to has the same limitations.I'm not sure that's legal.
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