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I knew I wanted to be a stage and lighting designer while I was still in high school. I actually made my first prop when I was 12 and my older sister played the part of a maid in the senior class play. Our school auditorium was built in 1920 with old lumber and mining money and rivaled any movie palace complete with 1425 seats, intricate plasterwork, huge chandeliers, and a large fly system. I was always building things like a guillotine for Halloween that scared so many kids away my mom got mad at me. I had little or no encouragement with these projects until my drama teacher encouraged me to leave for the University of Minnesota--which I did 12 hours after graduating from high school. My joke was there wasn't an earlier bus. Basically, there is a path for lighting and set design in the theatre through college. Learning construction techniques, painting, sewing and even courses in make-up, fencing, history,theory and all sorts of background courses gives a basic and fundamental background for design. Adding art and architectural history and college is a way to learn the basics. However, there is no substitute for the actual DOING.
The same is true, of course, in film design. While I've never actually had a film class, there are obviously film schools--but they are more devoted to the making of films, directing, editing and basic production techniques. I doubt that there would be a degree in production design or set decorating or being a gaffer or grip. Film and TV work is more based on "doing" than learning methodology, history, etc. There is actually a hierarchy in most departments to begin in a lower capacity and work your way up. I think you will find that most decorators or designers have had some sort of design background training either in the academic or professional world.
Ironically after putting myself through 7 years of college primarily by being an outside designer, no one has ever asked me if I'd graduated from high school.
Personally I think it would be very difficult for someone who hasn't been trained in stage design and certainly in lighting design to function on any higher level of design for the theatre. Yes there are famous artists like David Hockney doing things like faxing thousands of sheets of paper that are then assembled into "art backdrops" for opera, but this isn't practical for most stage productions. There is a certain "design vocabulary" that is involved with stage design that doesn't really exist in production design. A VERY large percentage of film and TV design are based on duplicating a modern (or period) realistic set. Yes, there is creativity, yes the set can say something about the character, but most of the looks you see are realistic and contemporary or sometimes realistic and period. Yes, there are exceptions, but they are the minority by far.
I went to dinner one night here with the production designer of the Flintstone movie. He had to design the silverware, housing, cars, and basically everything to fit the "prehistoric" look of the movie. This concept is very rare and unique in the business and he was nominated for an Academy Award for his creativity. So was "The Madness of King George" that year--and it won the award. The joke was that all that the "George" designer had to do was take down the rest room signs at Windsor Castle and collect his award! I'm sure he probably had to do a little more than that, but certainly nowhere near the creativity and uniqueness that went into the Flintstones--which brings me to a somewhat controversial topic.
In general, there is the feeling that theatre "stage sets" are more flimsy, phony, and "artistic" and somewhat looked down on by film/TV designers. Stage sets are seen from a distance, look fake, are less detailed and are not really taken seriously. In defense of that misconception, stage sets often have to last for years and certainly for months at a time. Film/TV sets often only last a matter of hours and can be just as phony--but look "real" and have Will Smith or Jennifer Aniston in front of them. Personally, I always felt that this "competition" or attitude of superiority was ridiculous. The two art forms are very different and no different than an apple looking down on an orange--yet it is still there and exists. I referred earlier in a posting to the "secret society" of theatre people who work within the film industry. In my observation, a film/TV person would certainly boast of their "famous" background in that industry if working in a theatre environment, but a stage designer would not do the same in the film industry. Obviously there are exceptions, but I know for a fact that one of the designers on "That Show I Can't Talk About" had his stage background held against him. I certainly never mentioned mine. So basically it would be much easier for a stage designer to become a set decorator or production designer than the reverse. It is much easier for a well connected production designer with little talent to surround themselves with a team of talented art directors, set designers, and assistants along with a talented set decorator and become "famous" for their big features. I know of this personally. However, you better know what you are doing when working in the theatre 'cause it's just going to be you for the most part.
As a final note to this PhD thesis, the trend more and more in professional theatre design is toward "engineered design" than the more traditional design forms. If you have seen any broadway shows or the larger touring productions, it's becoming more about turntables, lifts, cantilevers, mechanics, and special effects that will "wow" and justify your $120 ticket.
Even within my career as a stage designer you can see the range of design in that medium. The 2nd show I did (and first musical) for the last theatre I worked for as resident designer was for "Follies." It was a fantasy plot about some old vaudevillians who meet the night before their old theatre was about to be torn down and relive their past lives, loves, and performances. It was a chance to create the crumbling theatre proscenium of an earlier time and use some traditional design forms like "drop and wings" in "Loveland" If you look closely that the raised relief design around the proscenium you will notice some clothes hanger shapes. That's because they ARE decorative clothes hangers that literally fell off a truck on the freeway. The truck kept going, but I stopped, risked my life, and picked them up--and there they are!
The last show I did before leaving the theatre to work on "Magnum, P.I." was "Deathtrap." You can see the difference in design, realism, and details with all of the set pieces. I personally carved the fireplace and most of the beams in styrofoam, did all of the scene painting, found all of the set dressing items, and was also the lighting designer (and set designer, of course). To be honest, working on "Magnum" was a big step down in the creative design department, but a major increase in the paycheck department. That's life.........
Aloha, Rick
P.S. The woman in the black pant suit lower right was Sue Gerben, the mother of Kevin McCollum who went on to produce rent and other Broadway hits. She knew she had cancer and went off to Paris to die. Kevin was 8 years old. If I'd never met the guy next to her, Wally White assistant to Buck Henshaw, I would never have worked on Magnum.