Dinner with Friends

Dinner with Friends is Donald Margulies’ Pulitzer Prize-winning work about a couple that re-evaluates their relationship after the the dissolution of their closest friends’ marriage. This production was put on by the Dreamweavers Troupe in Napa, a non-profit, volunteer run theatre company dedicated to producing quality shows in the Napa Valley.

The lighting at Dreamweavers has made it one of my favorite theaters in which to shoot; powerful and plentiful. And after remedying some storage shortages mentioned in a previous post, I was free to be as trigger happy as I wanted with the shutter. Which brings me to one of the main things that I try to practice: capturing the emotional height of a moment. Photographing a theatrical production requires a great deal of anticipation–trying to be where the puck is going to be as Wayne Gretzky puts it.

Even though I do make liberal use of the 7D’s eight frames per second, I only really use it as a safety mechanism so that I can choose from the single best shot of a series–not so I can show off all 30 frames from a burst. It helps me to make sure that I capture the moment–the moment that illustrates a special connection between actors, the moment where the action is at it’s peak. And in a play where movement is constant, and an inch of movement can mean losing multiple stops of light, that moment can literally be a fraction of a second. Eight frames per second helps, but it won’t move you to where the puck is going to be.

See the whole set here.

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  1. Mike – We at Dreamweavers LOVE your photos!! We use them on our website all the time. The difference between the shots you have taken and those we have taken ourselves is tremendous! Yours clearly shine. Thanks so much!

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