CMU School of Drama


Sunday, October 02, 2022

NFTRW Weekly Top Five

Here are the top five comment generating posts of the past week:

As ‘Six’ Marks One Year On Broadway, Take a Glimpse Behind the Scenes of the Smash-Hit Musical

Vogue: In the two and a half years since Toby Marlow and Lucy Moss—who together wrote the book, music, and lyrics for the hit Broadway musical Six—spoke to Sarah Crompton for Vogue’s February 2020 issue, a lot has happened.

How A Fog Machine Works

spectrum.rosco.com: Since their introduction in the 1970s, fog machines have remained among the most commonly used piece of special effects equipment in the entertainment industry; including stage, film & television, and theme parks. Prior to the fog machines we use today, fog & smoke effects were created by incinerating flammable materials such as mineral oil and even used tires. Using a professional fog machine is a much safer and more effective way to create a smoke effect on set.

What My Job As a Fashion Stylist for Netflix and Atlantic Records Is Like

www.businessinsider.com: I'm a freelance stylist. I mostly style musicians, and I'm also a TikTok influencer. I style clients and then I'll also create content with them. It's cool how the two jobs intertwine. I'm from North Carolina originally. I had been living between LA and New York before I enrolled in Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT) in New York. I had only done one semester at FIT before dropping out in December.

Let It Snow: Frozen’s wintry transformation is just one of the tricks and treats of the stage show

onStage Pittsburgh: If your eyes glaze over when you see the title “production supervisor” in your theater program, here’s something that might make you wide-eyed instead: It is a production supervisor’s attention to detail that may be responsible for every harmonious moment of interaction among lighting, sound, costumes, scenery, technical wizardry – you name it, it’s on their checklist before the curtain goes up.

Bruce Willis Becomes First Celebrity to Sell Rights to Deepfake Firm

collider.com: Action movie legend Bruce Willis has just become the first Hollywood actor to sell his rights to the possibility of a "digital twin" to the US firm Deepcake, according to The Telegraph. With the use of deepfake technology, Willis has offered his likeness to be used onscreen for future projects, following his first experience with the digital media manipulation in a commercial for Russian phone service, MegaFon, last year.

 

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