Showing posts with label LAEP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LAEP. Show all posts

Friday, April 3, 2009

Get Set for LAEP

For 19 years volunteers have gathered a week or three prior to Easter Sunday to prepare a setting for a pageant of drama and music. Over the years the stage has grown as has the production - 3 presentations now with several hundred volunteers from set up to tear down.
Money and energy bathed in prayer for what purpose? That someone will come to understand the truth of the gospel message by seeing this visual portrayal.

Jesus came.
He lived a sinless life.
He died in my place - and yours.
He AROSE and will return for us one day. Hallelujah!
PRAISE THE LORD!

It is always exciting to watch the transformation of the sanctuary. First, pretty much everything in the front is removed including several front pews and all the chairs on the sides.

Then platforms are brought in & reassembled to extend the stage & create a walkway.






Certain sets are built, such as the tomb. You can see it is labor intensive.









I realize we APPEAR to be standing around talking. While that is true, the TOPIC is important. We are organizing, reminding ourselves & the guys how things have been placed in prior years so that everything will FIT when it is reassembled THIS year. Remembering how things have to happen in a certain order so that completed parts don't have to be undone then redone.
A tough job, but someone has to - you know.

The platform for the choir has been assembled & the scaffold for the scrim is well on its way to completion. We had great volunteers again this year. I believe the big pieces came together faster than ever before.
The choir appreciates the air flow through those silver ducts. We get hot packed onto risers dressed in period costume complete with head coverings singing our lungs out. PTL for AC!

Here is another scaffold view. Can you see the ladder stretching from the scaffold top to the stage? Imagine descending that quickly to get in place for the next scene. Sounds simple maybe? Now imagine it in the dark, wearing an ankle length robe (usually guys up there too so they aren't even used to skirts) and having to be QUIET while moving. Oh, and no falling allowed.


The baptistery will be unrecognizable once all the curtains and set decor are in place. No dunking allowed here until after Easter.







It's possible that these guys have been involved in set construction since LAEP's beginnings here. They sure know how to build & put things together.


The garden platforms have been assembled, the carpet laid and the walls put into place. These guys are working on putting together the tubing for the fog machine. There are many little details to complete the big picture.

First build the scaffold, then the choir platform, then the scrim, then lay the carpet & bring in the arches before assembling the choir risers & barriers (match the letters to assemble the in-house designed & built safety structure) but don't forget to staple on the scaffold cover cloth that goes behind the arches before bringing them up. Now we need the wall to cover the steps up to the scrim. Who has a charged drill to put the wall frame in place?

We are blessed with wonderful, talented ladies who sew all our costumes and curtains. Oh, and the banners, so beautifully designed they will bless your socks off.
See the weight hanging in front of the curtain? I'm not telling you what that's for. You will just have to come see for yourself.





We sometimes tease Scott about doing the LAEP so he can play with the big toys. He winds up being in the rafters a lot handing curtains & banners and doing all the lines so they can be raised and lowered. He looked like a spider spinning a web up there stringing banners. Then there's the lights, the ceiling mounted cameras and hanging or removing the front & side screens.

Amber laughed that she looked like she was in a wedding gown with two bridesmaids as she climbed a ladder to hang this sheeting in the back of the baptistery.






We were blessed with lunch by more volunteers and Bible Study Classes who brought food for the workers.




Scott would pray & then we'd eat.

And then we'd get back to work.
Or head to class or work (my 2 biggest guys)
Or maybe catch a quick after meal nap - but I'm naming no names.
To me, one of the more challenging aspects of set construction is that services are still held on Wednesdays & Sundays so our mess has to be cleaned up & the sanctuary usable.
Kinda goes along with the gospel doesn't it? Christ cleaning up our mess so that we can remain usable for Him. Let it be so in me, Lord Jesus!

Saturday, January 31, 2009

LAEP Contest Results

As I mentioned before, as a part of the LAEP set construction crew, I've learned how important it it to remember how the set is put together so it can be put BACK together the RIGHT way the next time that particular part of the set is constructed. I took pictures last year - worth 1000s of words, you know - so we'd have an easier time putting things together this year & thought I'd see if any of YOU could recognize what is in the photographs.

The results are in and we have a winner (drum roll please!): Stephanie!
Congratulations!
I know you are really surprised since Stephanie was the only person who played. Still a win for her! She will be receiving a cute little stationary gift.

Photo #1 does indeed show the inside of the baptistery looking toward the congregation underneath the staging for Pilot's scene.
As Steph put it in architect speak: "cantilevering over the baptistery taken from inside the pool."




Photo #2
This caused some confusion.
This is the ramp that the tomb door rolls down. Perhaps if I'd turned the photo counterclockwise it would have been easier to identify but Rachel knew what it was. Smoke is piped out of the white tube.





Photo #3


Under the scaffolding beneath the scrim ladder is a tight squeeze. We nearly always have to re-arrange HEAVY things because they are not initially placed close enough to the wall or the blocks are not sticking out the door.



Photo #4
Rachel didn't know this one either. This is the ladder that Pastor James climbs so he can perch on top of the tomb for a solo. The fan is inside the tomb. Scott asked me to photograph this specifically so that poor little upside down fan must have some important job. In this photo, all the black hanging cloths have been removed so just that corner of the tomb frame is visible.


Photo #5
On the other side of this grey wall are the choir risers so the red frame is part of the scaffold and the silver air vents are a blessing indeed to all the costumed cast & choir members. I took a couple of photos of this section that had to be redone TWICE because an older MAN (who shall remain nameless, just as well because I don't recall his name!) would not listen to the females who knew where things were supposed to go. TWICE.

No, I'm not mad upset irritated bothered by it.
Anymore.
The photos are ammunition proof. Just because we are female is not a reason to assume that we don't know what we are doing. Don't believe what we say? Just look at the pictures, buddy.
LOL!