James Beard Foundation
Women in
food were in the spotlight at this year’s James Beard Foundation Awards and
Unlimited Visibility Lighting Design (UVLD) helped put them there.
The
annual awards ceremony and chef-filled gala reception, held May 4 in Lincoln
Center’s Avery Fisher Hall, drew about 1,700 people to celebrate one of the
most prestigious honors in the food industry. The Women in Food
theme was reinforced by an all-female roster of 23 chefs plus women
mixologists, winemakers, cheesemakers and other food producers who dished out bites of their signature dishes throughout the lobby and upstairs
in the grand promenade.
“With such
a high-profile affair there was a lot of pressure intrinsic to the event, yet
working at Avery Fisher Hall was an absolute pleasure,” says UVLD lighting
designer Gregory Cohen. “They have
an in-house lighting package which we supplemented with additional fixtures
rented from Scharff Weisberg.” The
producer of the event, David Bowen, of Bowen and Company, and his technical
producer, Megan Reynolds, of Extraordinary Event provided the creative
brief: “They wanted the look of a
polished modern awards show,” notes Cohen, “so we brought in a moving-light package to add animation and
some glitz to the awards.”
UVLD was
tasked with turning around the lighting the same day, beginning the load in at
6 am for the 6 pm event and running a fair amount of cable to power up tables
in the VIP seating area. There was
no set inside the room, just a large 16x9 screen, so UVLD decided to uplight
and crosslight the venue’s architecture to add interest. “We colored and textured the warm wood
walls so the look became about the architecture of the room rather than about a
cyc or scenic element,” Cohen explains.
Megan
Reynolds chose technical director Marty Goldenberg of Marlyn Productions to
manage the staging aspects of the event, who then in turn brought in UVLD. “Working with Megan and Marty was a
real treat,” notes Cohen. “The program itself is world class, and they were
able to get the information and guidance we needed from the end client. We knew what they wanted going in, so
there wasn’t the traditional last-minute scramble before the doors open.”
The
awards were cohosted by Cat Cora, Emeril Lagasse and Stanley Tucci, who plays
Julia Child’s husband Paul in the new movie, “Julie & Julia,” due for
release this summer. Julia Child
was a friend of James Beard and a founding member of the organization.
Sal
Restuccia severed as production electrician for UVLD, and Cameron Yeary was the
programmer.