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Emmy
Award-winning scenic designer John Iacovelli
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John Iacovelli
has designed over 300 theatre productions across the US. He won
a prestigious Emmy Award for the A&E
broadcast version of Broadway’s Peter Pan starring
Tony nominee Cathy Rigby. He has been honored with the Los Angeles
Drama Critics Circle Lifetime Achievement Award, 14 Drama-Logue
Awards, the Bay Area Drama Critics Circle Award, and Backstage
West Garland Award.
Always on the innovative front of integrated digital
art direction, he has designed extensively for film and television,
including as art director on Honey, I Shrunk the Kids! and The
Cosby Show; supervising art director for Telemundo Network’s
West Coast operations; and production designer for The Wild
West and National Lampoon, among others. Some of his
other credits are NBC’s The Book of Daniel,
the syndicated TV show Ripley’s Believe It or Not! and
TNT’s Babylon 5, as well as industrial designs
for NASA, Disney World, and for the Atlanta Olympics.
One of the master scenic designer’s most recent
projects was, in his own words, “a unique challenge,” that
is, creating an exciting world (literally!) for Loving the
Silent Tears: The Musical.
Let’s trace some of Mr. Iacovelli’s career highlights
and the wonderful creativity he brought to the Loving the
Silent Tears production.
Scenic designer John Iacovelli's Emmy-winning creations for Broadway
musical Peter Pan
Q: You
designed the fantastic 1999 revival of Peter Pan.
Then you were honored
in 2001 with an Emmy Award for your art direction of the A&E
broadcast of Peter Pan.
John Iacovelli: In
my career, I’ve been very lucky to work on a Broadway musical
that was iconographic in the Broadway kind of idea. And Peter
Pan that I designed with Cathy Rigby, which was Tony-nominated,
that is one of those shows that you think that it’s a magical
place. You know, that was a surprise in a way, winning an Emmy
for Peter Pan because Peter Pan, let’s face
it, was a Broadway show that went on tour. I was very lucky that
year…. I was up against a Cirque du Soleil show, and The
Grammys and The Oscars, and I feel what set Peter Pan apart
was again the storytelling. It was a great honor and I feel that
it was a great thing for me because it was the intersection of
my two careers in theatre and in television. And it was like
a theatre thing that then got a television award. How weird is
that, but how wonderful!
Q: Tell us about
some of your most interesting TV design work.
John
Iacovelli: I
started on a TV show called Babylon 5 about 15
years ago now. It was a sci-fi show set in the future, and we
were the first show to take advantage of computer-generated graphics
and the idea of immersing characters into the backgrounds.
Set
designs for science fiction TV series Babylon 5 |
Disney
film Honey,
I Shrunk the Kids! |
Working on The Cosby Show was really fun. It
really was the number one show at the time. The cast was so wonderful.
I think that changed all of America and really the world. I mean,
when I was in Mexico working on Honey, I Shrunk the Kids!,
I remember looking at the television one time and it was a re-run
of The Cosby Show, dubbed into Spanish… it was so
universal. And that was the joy of working on that show and it
was a beautiful show to work on.
Q: It's said
that production designers create dreams and exciting places.
What do you think?
John Iacovelli: Really,
a lot of making those dreams is the practical. So it's sort of
the marriage of taking the idea of the play or the show or the
script, and trying to transport the audience into a magical or
a new world. If it’s a written story, like in this case
[of Loving the Silent Tears], it's a series of poems that
are webbed together by kind of a wonderful journey.
Q: What
has it been like working on Loving the Silent Tears?
Scale
model of the set design for
Loving the Silent
Tears
Sketches
by John Iacovelli
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The
magical gliding train, brought to life |
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At a Loving
the Silent Tears
creative
team meeting |
John
Iacovelli: Loving
the Silent Tears is a unique challenge because the energy
of the show is it’s a one-time event. And to get it right
with only one shot, it’s hard. We started out with working
with these beautiful poems. Vincent has taken the idea with
the writers of a journey on a train. And it’s a kind
of journey that is of the imagination and of a spiritual level.
So what we’ve done is I’ve come up with a beautiful
curvilinear set that things can glide on and glide off. We
have a train car like maybe in that movie Hugo or in
other fantasy movies where the train is not combined to the
tracks.
We have a beautiful curved shape for the opening,
these feathery, kind of gauze portals, and a beautiful projectable
screen in the back.
Then also distilling down different cultures and ideas
into something graphic – for example, the Chinese section
will have big red lanterns – and things that are sort of
emotionally tied to these different cultures.
Q: That’s
fascinating! Tell us more about the magical train.
John Iacovelli: Style-wise,
I took the old 19th century kind of steam locomotive and the
1930s sort of art modern, streamlined thing, kind of smooshed
them together, a little bit of sci-fi thrown in there for the
skeletal version of it, so that it should feel like this really
cool train journey that you would want to take.
Q: The
musical is based on the poem collection, Silent
Tears, by Supreme
Master Ching Hai. Have you been drawing ideas or inspiration
from the poetry?
John
Iacovelli: These
are beautiful poems and that is the inspiration for the whole
show. The cool thing about the poems is they do tell a journey.
I think you go into this kind of dreamlike state in these poems,
where they appeal to you on a deeper level than just reading
them. I find every time I read them, it’s like, “Oh,
I didn’t realize that.” So that’s good poetry,
when poetry speaks to us on a level that is not surface.
Q: The
poet, Supreme Master Ching Hai, will also be honored at the
musical’s
world premiere for her worldwide humanitarian contributions. John
Iacovelli: Supreme
Master, and, for me, someone that sacrifices so much of their
own personal life, I put them right up there with anyone in the
great service of people, because basically they have taken their
life and put it over to a greater good. And so for me that’s
the message: is that we all can do that at a certain level. You
know, I think that’s her message to me. It’s about
how do you make the world a better place. I am really excited
about the idea of getting to know these poems better and this
teaching better, and I think that by being able to manifest it
in this work of art, it will have a life after the show. And
that’s what is going to be exciting.
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