The Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) is
using an IPTV network to relay live performance footage across its theatre and
offices in Stratford-upon-Avon.
The performance group has secured more than £100m funding for the redesign of
the Royal Shakespeare Theatre, which will eventually cater for 1,030 audience
members. The project also involves the relocation of staff, but the use of IP
video will prevent a breakdown in communication.
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“People who used to have a very strong link with what was going on in the
building are now spread over a number of sites,” said Simon Harper, deputy
project director at the RSC.
“As our core work is what we put on stage, it is very important to us that
the people based in satellite offices do not lose that involvement.”
A closed IP network streams video from a camera based in the central
auditorium to eight digital screens, situated around the RSC’s Chapel Lane
offices. Deployment of the technology was completed at Christmas and is now
being used by the theatre’s staff.
The next stage of the scheme will be to link the system with the RSC’s
network, allowing footage to be viewed from any connected computer. And the
versatile nature of IP will help the company to stay flexible in the information
it shares, said Harper.
“We wanted something that could take live images and any other content we
wished to generate, so that we could communicate with staff,” he said.
“It was also important that the network could support several channels,
because while we are only running one theatre now, there will be three by the
time this project is completed.”
The theatre has long used video as a means to keep backstage workers in touch
with the progress of live performances, but the rise of unified communications
has opened new possibilities, said Harper.
“Before, we had a very rudimentary system that would broadcast pictures to
the back-of-house areas, to those directly involved with a production. This is a
more accessible setup,” he said.
The RSC’s IPTV system is provided by supplier
Exterity.
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