Digital Media Net - Your Gateway To Digital media Creation. News and information on Digital Video, VR, Animation, Visual Effects, Mac Based media. Post Production, CAD, Sound and Music
Categories: LightingNews

Claypaky Sharpy Plus Fixtures Enhance “Jack and the Beanstalk” Holiday Pantomime in South Africa

For the past seventeen years, British Lighting Designer Graham McLusky has made his way to South Africa to light the annual pantomime, or “panto,” a musical comedy family stage show based on a fairy tale or nursery rhyme and produced during the holidays.  This season “Jack and the Beanstalk” was presented at the Joburg Theatre during November and December, and it received rave reviews.  McLusky utilized the theatre’s new lighting gear, which included 12 Claypaky Sharpy Plus fixtures recently purchased from DWR Distribution.

McLusky’s history with the production dates back to when Director Janice Honeyman and Producer Bernard Jay wanted to hire an established UK panto lighting designer to launch their new production.  They consulted with UK pantomime producers Qdos, which creates and maintains spectacular stage sets and more than 100,000 costumes for an enormous portfolio of shows.  

Over the years Honeyman and Jay have adapted the well-established and successful pantos to convey a distinctly South African flavor. Honeyman weaves in aspects of South Africa’s multi-cultural and multi-lingual society that keep audiences entranced and coming back for more.

McLusky sends his lighting plots and plans for the season’s panto before arriving on site; he usually stays in South Africa for two weeks during production.  The crew has an entire week to set up the rig before the show moves into the theatre; they strip out most of the theatre’s permanent rig to accommodate McLusky’s needs. 

“Jack and the Beanstalk” marked the first time McLusky had a chance to use Claypaky’s Sharpy Plus luminaires.  “I’ve never used a Sharpy before, though other lighting designers have said I ought to try them,” he says.  “However, I usually don’t need really piercing beams of light. When I discovered that the Sharpy Plus units have gobos and an effects wheel, I thought I’d incorporate them in the show.  We also used them as special pick-ups on the stage as well as for throwing beam shapes and patterns over the audience.”

A phone call 17 years ago made McLusky part of an extended South African family for the holidays.  “Over the years, the Joburg Theatre has been incredibly accommodating.  Everybody has been marvelous, and I am welcomed back every time with open arms. When I come back it seems like I’ve only been gone a day!”



Staff

Recent Posts

Sold Out 4/20 NFT Is a Masterpiece Hiding in Plain Sight

Latest animated release from Wall Street Bulls transforms iconic NFT into ultra-rare 4/20 digital artworkNEW…

4 hours ago

Xsolla Partners With De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde to Launch a Global Publishing Platform for the Next Generation of Filipino Game Developers

Landmark MOU Gives Philippine Game Design Students a Direct Pathway to Publish, Distribute, and Compete…

11 hours ago

Vendict Launches Managed Third-Party Risk Management Solution Powered by Agentic AI to Help Security Teams Eliminate Vendor Risk Assessment Backlogs

New offering combines TPRM-specific, AI-powered analysis with deep GRC expertise and agentic workflows to manage…

17 hours ago

NetReputation to Host Free SEO and AEO Webinar on AI Search Visibility and LLM Attribution in 2026

SARASOTA, FL / ACCESS Newswire / April 20, 2026 / NetReputation, a leading online reputation…

17 hours ago

Esther Kim-Varet Closes Q1 With $1.15 Million Cash on Hand, Cementing Lead as the Strongest Democrat to Flip CA-40

New TV and Digital Ad Hits the Air as Campaign Surpasses $2.3 Million Raised This…

17 hours ago

Oshyn Debuts “Agentic DXP Development” to Deliver Enterprise-Grade Web Implementations at AI Speed

Oshyn's "Agentic" approach automates routine implementation, allowing human experts to prioritize strategy while ensuring sites…

17 hours ago