Meanwhile, more people are turning to the arts in their own living rooms. Since the pandemic began, the National Theatre’s online YouTube channels attracted more than 10 million views of its streamed shows through the end of May — and while most venues don’t have the star-studded cast that nets such a wide audience, even a fraction of that number could be meaningful and profitable for a smaller company.
It’s time for theatre, music, opera, and dance companies to reach out to this captive audience by streaming performances. The leap from live performance to streaming is not as difficult or costly as you may think. It also may pay for itself in pay-per-view fees and donations.
To understand the details for streaming video, we asked several of our designers to offer suggestions based on their experiences.
Anyone can stream
Recording a performance with the high production values today’s audiences expect used to take much more effort and technology than it does now, according to Christopher Sprague, Senior Theatre Consultant in Schuler Shook’s Chicago office.
“The process can be fairly simple,” he noted. “Before I joined Schuler Shook, some of the projects I worked on had entire live TV studio control rooms,” Sprague said. “Now a lot of this can be done in a cubicle workstation, where you can get a small video switcher that doesn’t take up much more space than a keyboard and a monitor.”
“Most people now carry video cameras in our pockets. The technology and the software and the hardware are all improving and becoming more affordable,” said Michael Burgoyne, Schuler Shook Partner in the Minneapolis office.
The key to this capability, however, is having the infrastructure in place.
“The concern is getting the cabling and the pathways where they need to go in a discreet way,” said Burgoyne. “There needs to be some sensitivity to how we include this equipment in a venue. We can be clever about how to tuck these things into corners.”
Balancing aesthetic considerations with practical requirements is not as complicated as it may seem. “You have to get the data back to the stream, so you need compatible network cable,” said Sprague. “Most video equipment has moved to category wiring. A network cable can move a lot of data these days.”
“Cameras used for recording or streaming video can be very small,” said Burgoyne. “The remote-controlled pan-tilt-zoom (PTZ) cameras are smaller and simpler to use than ever before,” he said. “It’s easier to find places to mount them — on the balcony rail, in corners of the house. They are smaller than an automated lighting fixture.”
High-quality sound is just as important as high-resolution video, points out Tim Lindstrom, principal at Thoughtful Technology Design Group. “For many venues, it may be the easiest component to capture. In the simplest sense, you can take the mix off the sound mixing board that you already have,” he said.
Audio mixing requirements for streaming are different enough that a custom mix will most likely be preferable according to Graeme Trott, Project A/V Consultant for Schuler Shook in Melbourne, Australia. “In most cases, the microphones in use for the production can be used for streaming, but some additional microphones may be desired for the stream, for example, to capture every musician or perhaps some ambient sound,” he said.
Overall, it may be faster and easier than most venues realise to add a streaming capability to their auditorium, especially if the goal is to record and edit the program before release, rather than live-streaming as it happens.
“This gives the opportunity to edit the content to make it more suitable for a screen-based audience, or to overcome technical issues,” said Trott.