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| STX7
and STX5L
cabinets recessed into the theater’s ice walls are
covered by white cloth in normal use. The centre cluster
is set into the stage roof. |
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By Mike Lethby and Sarah James |
| Renkus-Heinz at The
Ice Globe Theatre |
| The
Ice hotel at Jukkasjärvi in Lapland, northern Sweden,
home of Santa Claus, has become a legend in its 13-year lifetime.
Built of 4,000 tonnes of ice ‘borrowed’ from the
adjacent Torne river and 30,000 tonnes of snow, it melts every
spring and is reborn in the autumn.
Highlights include 25 designer ice suites in which ice beds
softened by reindeer hides are surrounded by uplit ice sculptures.
The temperature, whether it’s minus 5 or minus 35 degrees
outside, remains at a fairly constant minus 5 inside.
The stunning effect is made more intense still by the enfolding
silence, any sound muffled by the rough ice walls and soft
snow underfoot.
Take a walk outside after a long day’s sleigh riding,
snowmobiling and cross-country skiing to take in the Northern
Lights’ shimmering beauty, and you can see why it’s
become one of the hippest – not to say coldest –
adventure holiday destinations in the world. |
This year, visitors found
themselves with another remarkable ice building to savour.
Inspired by Swedish actor and former theater manager Rolf
Degerlund, a full scale replica of Shakespeare’s
Globe Theatre in London has been built between the hotel and
the frozen river – in ice.
The London version may have taken Sam Wanamaker 27 years to
bring to life, but at Jukkasjärvi, with just three months
of commercial activity at the hotel available, between the
end of construction and the arrival of spring warmth, the
theater rose from virgin snow to completion last autumn, and
saw its first production – Hamlet, performed in Saami,
the language of Lapland – in January.
TTS Scandinavia, appointed last autumn as
Swedish distributors for Renkus-Heinz were asked to provide
the sound technology for this subzero, open-air theater. Temperatures
through the winter months drop as low as –40C, and audiences
are outfitted with serious snow suits, so this was not going
to be a regular
project. |
Like the original and the
London replica, the 500-capacity Ice Globe is in-the-round,
with a
half-circle of audience tiers facing the proscenium stage
and open to the skies. Above and behind them, the outer wall
of the theater has ring of roofed seating boxes.
The whole edifice, with a beautifully carved façade
mimicking the Elizabethan timbers of the Globe and adorned
with a stylish line embossing of Shakespeare’s face,
is built almost entirely of snow and ice. The few concessions
to modern materials are of course technology and safety related:
the proscenium arch stage is roofed and conceals steel supports
from which a lighting grid flown from four parallel trusses.
The audio requirement was simple enough in delivery terms
– a versatile system to handle the spoken word (Hamlet
et al) and a wide variety of musical performances. Intelligibility,
musicality and enough power from a small system, and the ability
for it to perform flawlessly at very low temperatures, were
the design requirements.
| Theater manager Rolf Degerlund |
Rolf Degerlund, is manager and artistic director
of the Ice Globe, and he explains how it came to fruition.
“ I was a theater manager for 13 years, then
went back to acting in TV and movies, and I followed the rebuilding
of the Globe in London. One day, on a plane back to Sweden
in 1997, I was dreaming about it and I thought, one day I
want to see actors saying lines from Shakespeare with steam
coming from their mouths. Maybe we could do an Ice Globe?
So when I got home I did a painting of this dream. In November
2001 I had to make a speech in big meeting about arts in Europe
and I took the painting with me. I showed the audience the
painting and told them of my dream to be the first ice theater
manager in the world. When I left the stage, a man came up
and introduced himself as the president of Ice hotel Jukkasjärvi,
and said ‘I will build your Ice Globe for you’.
Despite the cold, Ice Globe functions in the same way as an
ordinary theater: “ Except we’re outside
and it can be minus eight and sometimes minus 35. The colder
the better.” The reaction of artists when they’re
first approached to perform at the Ice Globe is initial incomprehension:
‘ So the audience are in the cold; but is it
warm on the stage?’ ‘ No, it’s
minus 35.’
| Arja Saijonmaa sings Mikis Theodorakis |
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Then
the telephone and see the theater, they understand…it’s
all outside! It’s a big thing for them to stand there
and look out on the ice boxes under the stars.”
| Shakespeare on ice: the open air Ice
Globe |
Degerlund says the high technology is essential: “ You
must have good sound for this standard of performers. We have
very good sound from Renkus-Heinz.” The main
left and right proscenium system comprises a pair each of
STX7
and STX5L
cabinets, while a centre pair of STX2
and six Reflex RFX121
full-range loudspeakers – two installed at the rear
atop the perimeter wall for surround sound and four as stage
monitors – complete the system. In normal use the front
speakers are covered by white cloth to blend in with the ice.
It’s all powered by Renkus-Heinz P3500
and P2950
amplifiers Theodorakis and controlled by a D26
loudspeaker processor. The microphones consist of Shure UHF
Mark 2 wireless systems, mixed on a Soundcraft Spirit 324
digital console.
Unexpectedly, the theater’s acoustics are remarkably
good. Freshly fallen snow covers a large proportion of the
ice blocks’ surfaces, softening reverberation to a pleasant
but still ‘live’ level.
The installation itself is also unique, with the left-and-right
loudspeaker arrays recessed into the ice wall to either side
of the stage and the amplifier rack housed in an ice ‘cupboard’
in the side of the backstage artists’ entrance tunnel.
Sten Nyhlen is sound operator at the Ice
Globe and, in conjunction with TTS and Renkus-Heinz,
designed the audio system. With previous experience of low-temperature
installations, he comments that the unique installation required
a degree of careful thinking at the design stage.
“ The conditions and materials are very unusual
for a theater sound system, but they figured out how to make
it work. At minus 35 there is no problem with the sound system,
just some frost on the loudspeakers, but there are certain
special things we have to do to make sure it keeps working.”
According to Anders Lindstedt of TTS
Scandinavia, these ‘special things’ include
running the system 24 hours a day with audio to prevent the
loudspeaker drivers freezing. Similarly, the Shure wireless
systems perform perfectly in the cold but the crucial aspect
is keeping the batteries warm – belt packs must be worn
very close to the body, and the receivers must also be powered
up 24 hours a day.
“ It’s only a few weeks into our first
season,” adds Degerlund, “ but
on our opening night there were 200 members of the international
press and the media attention has been intense ever since.
Artists are realizing what a special and exciting theater
this is to play.” |
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