IPS debut Proteus Excalibur at Seattle New Year’s Eve show

Seattle New Year’s Eve show.
Illuminate Production Services (IPS) debuts Elation Professional Proteus Excalibur moving heads on the Seattle Space Needle New Year’s Eve show. Photo: Sigma Sreedharan

The Seattle Space Needles’s New Year’s Eve fireworks and light show is arguably the most iconic NYE celebration on the U.S. West Coast. This year, in spite of a recently upgraded lighting system, organisers called upon Illuminate Production Services (IPS) and Elation Professional products to illuminate the legendary NYE show once again.

IPS were the first worldwide to debut Elation’s new Proteus Excalibur beam moving head as part of a larger Elation lighting package and were excited for the opportunity. “We received the first 12 units in the country and put them to use two days later,” said IPS President, Rick Franke. “Supply chain issues caused it to be a close connection between product arrival, QC and deployment but Eric Loader and his team at Elation made it happen. We could not ask for a better partner.”

After two years of cancellations – high winds in 2019/20 and COVID-19 last year – the Space Needle New Year’s Eve show was back in a big way. Illuminate Production Services was responsible for the lighting aspect of the event, again collaborating with Pyro Spectaculars, as well as fireworks designer Alberto Navarro. Rick Franke managed the lighting project and the IPS team. Caleb Franke, head of IPS’s newly established design company, Illuminate Creative Entertainment (ICE), served as lighting designer.

On a project of this magnitude there are always engineering and show challenges to overcome and the biggest challenge this year, according to Rick Franke, had to do with the elements. “It had snowed six inches the day prior to load in and the high all that week was around 25°. The ice and freezing temperatures were a major challenge for the crew. It actually turned out to be the coldest week in Seattle in more than 30 years.”

In other words, ideal conditions for Elation’s all-weather Proteus.

IPS turned to several luminaires in the award-winning Proteus line positioning six Proteus Maximus, 12 Proteus Hybrid and 24 Proteus Beam fixtures at multiple positions from the top of the 605ft structure all the way down to the ground. The 12 new Proteus Excalibur fixtures lined the Space Needle’s distinctive saucer roof and were central to the light show.

“We wanted the visual impact of a powerful beam, something that could be seen both live and on camera, and the Excalibur’s beam is huge,” said Rick Franke, who explains that the Excaliburs replaced Proteus Hybrids on the saucer, workhorse fixtures that were reallocated to other levels. “With the Excalibur’s wide lens [260mm] and beam expander feature they created a wider, fatter beam that could be seen better from a great distance. The speed of the fixture is great for its size and of course being IP rated was absolutely necessary.”

The 20,000-lumen Excalibur features an extremely narrow 0.8° beam that can be widened to 3.5° using an expander lens. Powered by a long-life Philips Platinum 500 FLEX lamp (550W), it houses CMY colour mixing plus additional colours and offers a wide array of gobos and prism overlays. “They paired well with the other members of the Proteus family and were definitely the exclamation point on the lighting portion of the show,” Franke said.

T-Mobile, the legacy sponsor of the Space Needle NYE show, was so impressed with the brightness and saturation of the T-Mobile signature magenta, Franke relates that they told Space Needle management, somewhat tongue in check, that “You could see it from Canada!” A light show prior to the New Year’s countdown allowed the lighting an exclusive stage on which to build excitement.

Other Elation Professional fixtures used on the Space Needle NYE show included IP65-rated Paladin wash/strobe/blinders mounted inside the stair rail along the three sides of the Space Needle’s core (10 fixtures per side). 12 Cuepix 16 IP LED matrix panels colour washed the top of the saucer while 24 Dyna Drums from sister company Acclaim were used to light the core. All of the lighting for the show was designed and preprogrammed using Capture design software.

With an elevator that only stopped at three levels, IPS workers were often required to negotiate two sets of 960+ exposed stairs that run from top to bottom of the structure, just one obstacle of many that the IPS crew had to overcome. “This crew is the best in the business,” Franke said of his team. “They weathered the elements and pushed through for a fantastic show. Given the amount of ice, the freezing temperatures and the amount of work to do in a relatively short amount of time, they were incredible. They lead with more heart and determination than one can imagine.”

He concluded with a word of thanks. “Special thanks to Elation Professional for allowing us to debut the Excaliburs, and also a special thank you to Pyro Spectaculars of Sacramento and the Space Needle Team.”

www.elationlighting.com