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Production Performance Lesson 1 - Staging and Interacting with Talent. Broadcast/Video Production II. Production Staging and Interacting with Talent. Objectives Define foreground, middle ground, and background Explain the function and importance of the vector line in camera staging
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Production Performance Lesson 1 - Staging and Interacting with Talent Broadcast/Video Production II
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Objectives • Define foreground, middle ground, and background • Explain the function and importance of the vector line in camera staging • Differentiate between a jump cut and an error in continuity • Differentiate between a dramatic aside and ad-libbing • List three things that production staff members must remember when working with non-professional talent
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Important Terms • Ad-Libbing • Background • Camera Line • Cross-Camera Shooting • Cutaway • Dramatic Aside • Error in Continuity • Foreground • Jump Cut
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Important Terms • Middle Ground • Staging • Teleprompter • Vector Line
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • This lesson discusses the placement of furniture, props, and talent in front of the camera • Staging: the arrangement of items, such as furniture, props, and talent, in a shot • Theater production staging refers to the movement instructions given to the performers by the director • Video Production staging also applies to the placement and movement of cameras
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • This lesson will present guidelines and methods of effective staging for television production
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Areas on a Set • The television screen is a flat piece of glass • All images displayed on the screen are two-dimensional • An important goal in production is to create the illusion of three dimensions in order to increase the realism of television images • The effective use of the areas on the set creates three-dimensionality on the television screen
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Areas on a Set • Foreground: the area on a set that lies between the talent and the camera • Middle Ground: the area on a set where the most important items in a picture are usually positioned. This is the area in which the action of the program typically takes place. • Background: the material or object(s) on a set that are placed behind the talent in a shot
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Areas on a Set • Foreground • Placing areas in the foreground is a good way to create three-dimensionality • Novice camera operators often ignore the foreground area of a set when framing a shot • This is an important area for staging to create a realistic image for the viewer
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Areas on a Set • Middle ground • This is the area where the most important items in a picture are positioned. This is the area in which the talent performs and the action of the program usually takes place.
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Areas on a Set • Background • This is the material or object(s) behind the talent in a shot. The distance between the talent and the background, if properly lit, greatly contributes to creating three-dimensionality.
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Areas on a Set - Example • If the set depicts the interior of a living room: • A back wall and partial left and right walls are placed in the background • A couch facing the cameras is placed in the middle ground • A coffee table or chair is placed in the foreground
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Camera Staging • If using multiple cameras for a production, each camera is assigned a number • Industry convention numbers the cameras from the camera operator’s point of view from left to right • Camera 1 Camera 2 Camera 3
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Camera Staging • The images from the cameras are displayed on monitors in the control room that are also arranges from left to right • Camera 1 Camera 2 Camera 3
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Camera Staging • Stage directions, however, are given from the performer’s point of view.
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Camera Staging • Cross-camera shooting: a two-camera shooting technique in which the camera on the left shoots the person on the right side of the set and the camera on the right shoots the person on the left side of the set.
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Vector Line: an imaginary line, parallel to the camera, which bisects a set into a foreground and a background. Also called a camera line. • It is extremely important that all cameras remain of the same side of the vector during shooting • If the program cuts to the image of a camera on the opposite side of the vector line, all items in the picture are reversed • This is a grave production error
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • VISUALIZE THIS • Shooting a basketball game example
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Vector Line • Creative use of the vector line may result in savings in the production budget • Shooting a train from Arizona to Oklahoma and returning from Oklahoma to Arizona example • The train runs once and two scenes are accomplished with one take
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Cutaways • Cutaway: a shot that is not a key element in the action. It is commonly used to bridge what would otherwise be a jump cut.
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Cutaways • When a cutaway is used, the audience should not feel that the shot is jarring or out of place • A cutaway shot should not include an integral action or moment in the scene • One of the most common uses of cutaways is to bridge what would otherwise be a jump cut • Teacher and student example
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Cutaways • Other Uses • Adding interest to a slow-paced program • Showing the reaction of other characters to events or dialog • Providing nod shots for an interview format program • Providing charts, graphs, text, or video to supplement the speaker • Covering audio editing of a long-winded speaker
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • The Jump Cut • Jump cut: a sequence of shots that constitutes an error in editing. This error occurs during production when cutting between camera shots and results in an on-screen object or character appearing to jump from one side of the screen to the other. • Error in continuity: an error that occurs during editing where a sequence of shots in the finished product contains physically impossible actions or items
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Jump Cut • Found too often in television programs because it is a very easy mistake to make • Sometimes, incorrectly, called an error in continuity • Error in Continuity • Occurs when the finished product contains physically impossible actions or items • Jump Cut example
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Errors in Continuity • Occur during the editing process • A hat disappears off an actor’s head from one scene to the next • Wounds look severe in one shot and almost healed in the next shot • A glass is one-quarter full of soda in one camera angle and three-quarters full when the scene cuts to another camera angle
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • VISUALIZE THIS • Woman and man on a date example
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • How to Avoid Errors in Continuity • When performers are eating, show the audience before and after shots of the items on the table • On large shoots, a person in charge of continuity constantly snaps photographs of all the on-screen elements in a shot. The next time the scene is shot, everything is returned to its exact position.
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Production Equipment in the Shot • In dramatic programming, it is not acceptable to see production in a shot because the director tries to simulate real life • Viewers may see a microphone boom dip into the top of the picture or catch the boom shadow on the background flats • Microphones and cameras should never be seen in a completed dramatic program
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Production Equipment in the Shot • The only exception is if the dramatic production is set in an environment that naturally includes production equipment, then seeing these items in a shot is okay • For example, a television drama about a television station would probably have non-functioning equipment on the set that serves as props or set dressing • It is okay for the audience to see production gear ( i.e. cameras, mics, and lights) in news programs, talk shows, and game shows
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Talent Placement • All cultures have acceptable “bubbles” of personal space • For example, Far Eastern and some European countries have virtually no personal space as the cultural norm. Western cultures have a larger “bubble” of personal space as a norm. • We are comfortable in our bubble of personal space and become uncomfortable when others enter this space uninvited • Close friendships and romances have smaller or nonexistent bubbles
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Talent Placement • When performing on television, people must be placed much closer to each other than is considered normal in Western culture • Placing performers as if they are in real life makes the distance appear much greater on the television screen • Therefore, all performers on television must adjust their personal space to allow them to be very close to others
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Talent Placement • This lack of personal space is a bit of a shock to an actor performing and reciting lines in front of television cameras for the first time • The ultimate goal is a good television picture • Everyone on the production team must contribute to this effort and realize that things that look or feel a bit unusual in real life, often make a good picture on the camera
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • PRODUCTION NOTE • Placing performers appropriately on the set example
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Dramatic Programming • In most dramatic programming, the talent cannot look directly at the camera
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Dramatic Programming • The exceptions to this are: • If the camera is used as a subjective camera. When the camera is shooting from the viewpoint of one of the program’s characters, it is natural for the other cast members to look directly at the character/camera. • In the case of a dramatic aside • Dramatic Aside: when a performer steps out of character and directly addresses the audience
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Dramatic Programming • Dramatic asides are not regularly used in television programming
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Dramatic Programming • Ad-Libbing: when talent speaks lines or performs actions that are not in the script or have not been rehearsed • Ad-libbing can be a disaster on television because the script involves more than just the actor’s dialog • The TD follows the script exactly and uses certain words as cues to cut to shots from a different camera
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Dramatic Programming • Ad-libbing can be a disaster on television because the script involves more than just the actor’s dialog • The TD follows the script exactly and uses certain words as cues to cut to shots from a different camera • If the word or line is not recited, the TD does not cut to the scripted shot • Camera operators cannot follow the shot sheets
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Dramatic Programming • Once a script has been finalized during the camera rehearsal or dry run, it is in the best interest of the entire production for everyone to follow that script during the shoot
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Non-Dramatic Programming • In non-dramatic programs, such as game shows, news, documentaries, sports programs, and talk shows, the talent may look at the camera at any time because addressing the audience is part of the very nature of the program • For example, a news anchor tells the audience about current events, and therefore, looks directly at the lens to speak to the audience
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • VISUALIZE THIS • Network news broadcast anchor looks at the ceiling example
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Non-Dramatic Programming • In non-dramatic programs, the talent should directly address the audience/television camera • There are two exceptions to this rule • Talent may look down at their notes • An anchor may look to the side at a co-anchor, but only is the co-anchor is included in a two-shot that immediately follows
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Non-Dramatic Programming • News anchors and talk show hosts commonly read their lines from a teleprompter • Teleprompter: a computer screen positioned in front of the camera lens that displays dialog text in large letters, which allows the talent to look directly at the lens of the camera and read the text
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Non-Dramatic Programming • The camera shoots right through the screen at the end of the lens, without seeing the dialog displayed • If the camera zooms in too closely on the talent, the audience can see the talent’s eyes moving from left to right as they read the teleprompter • Because of this, the tightest shot of anchors on news programming is usually between a mid-shot and a medium close-up
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Non-Dramatic Programming • It is common to see a small pile of papers on the desk in front of news anchors • These papers are usually props to keep the talents hands from moving around • Many people uses their hands when they speak, but this is distracting to a television audience • The audience assumes that the papers are a script, so it does not appear out of place
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Non-Dramatic Programming • Ad-libbing is a more common occurrence in non-dramatic programming • In some formats, like talk shows, very few things are actually scripted • A comment from an audience member or guest may provoke an unplanned course of discussion • This does not cause a great disruption, as it might in a dramatic program • An experienced TD can easily follow the conversation
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Staff and Talent Interaction • This affects the success of the production process and is an important topic when learning television production • Every member of the production staff has the opportunity to interact with the program’s talent at some point • Professional behavior in a studio can be friendly and jovial at times • But when guests are present, more serious and professional behavior is a must
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Managing Guest Talent • Guest talent are naturally uncomfortable when entering the studio • The environment is strange and they know very little about studio activities • They see strangers in semi-darkness and many of them are afraid about being placed under bright lights • A nervous guest will not look good in front of the camera • So it is a good policy to help them relax
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • Review the Talent Information Sheet
Production Staging and Interacting with Talent • To Help Guest Talent Relax • Prepare them for the experience before they arrive. Explain what they should expect, provide suggestions for clothing and makeup selection, and offer some information on what is expected from them during the production process • Designate a staff member to greet the guest upon arrival and be their friendly guide during the production process