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Wednesday, September 12, 2012
J-O-B Media
Head Projection Technician - Yale School of Drama/Yale Repertory Theatre seeks a Head Projection Technician. Working in an environment of graduate students and professionals, responsibilities include installation and maintenance of video and projection systems for up to 14 productions per season. Position will occasionally serve as the projection operator and may work with other production departments. Opportunity to audit MFA level courses while expanding professional resume credits.
Knowledge of current projection equipment, video signals, and both Macintosh and Windows computer systems required; experience with Watchout, Isadora & QLab software preferred. Salary range: $725 - $800/wk. plus Yale University benefits package. Full-time, eight-month renewable position (September through mid-May), start date negotiable. Review of applications will continue until the position is filled.
Visit our website at www.yale.edu/jobs and go to SEARCH OPENINGS. To find this position, look for the STARS Requisition number field, enter 18047BR, scroll to the bottom of the screen and press SEARCH. If you are interested in the position, press the blue “Apply to Job(s)” button. Make sure to upload your resume (which includes 3 references), and include a cover letter referencing position 18047BR.
Yale University is an affirmative action/equal opportunity employer. Yale values diversity in its faculty, staff, and students and strongly encourages applications from women and members of underrepresented minority groups.
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A few years ago, I worked on a production of Our Town, where the set was a couple of kitchen furniture pieces and three massive boxes that rolled painted grey. We used 3 projectors and projected images from our town(s) from 200-300 years prior, and then moved the boxes to create textural elements in the set. And then last year, during Pippin, we used projection and fire extinguishers with several birdies to create a fire effect for our fire box. Projections really can provide an excellent layer of complexity to a show, and, of done correctly, can enhance the emotions of a particular piece, similar to the projection banner in War Horse, at least the production at the Lincoln Center.
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