By the numbers: ‘Miss Saigon’ tours the country with statue of Ho
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Chi Minh and a partial helicopter
Joyce Scherer
There are 17 semi-trucks making their way to the Orange County
Performing Arts Center packed with such items as a 15-foot, 300-pound
statue of Ho Chi Minh, a partial Huey helicopter, a 1959 Cadillac replica
and 104 chain hoists for scenery storage. But lest we forget the 450
costumes, 95 sound speakers, nine miles of electric, automation and sound
cable, 435 lighting instruments and 1,600 pounds of dry ice used each
week to create fog.
And that is only a sampling of the inventory needed to create the
award-winning “Miss Saigon,” said production manager Mahlon Kruse, who
also listed 59 automated effects for scenery, 60 guns, 22 scene shifts
and 12 computers to run the performance.
In addition, the show boasts 43 cast members, 24 traveling staff and
crew and 18 orchestra members.
“It is the fastest-moving show of its size considering we set up the
whole thing over two days and take it down in nine hours,” said Kruse,
who has been with the production on and off since its 1991 premiere at the Broadway Theater in New York. The show made its 1989 world premiere
in London and has gone on to gross more than $1 billion worldwide with
more than 25 million people seeing the show. To date, it has garnered 27
international awards.
Kruse said today’s show has been customized to play shorter runs (two
weeks) and at smaller theaters, if needed, without compromising the
artistic elements of the production.
“The first national tour had long, long engagements and could take a
couple of weeks to move a show. Of course the cost of moving at that pace
was phenomenal but the show’s long run made up for that,” Kruse said. “It
took about four years to come up with best engineering ideas to keep the
quality of the show the same but move it faster. And since we can move on
a two-week schedule, it opened up whole new market to smaller theaters.”
Some of the engineering technology, Kruse said, utilizes “dead space in
the air,” by hoisting much of the scenery and equipment 35 feet above the
stage.
“And by pushing the whole set out to the audience over the orchestra
pit -- it allows us to play smaller theaters and still have the advantage
of 17 trucks of scenery,” he said.
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