From rock to opera: Robe at Saaremaa Opera Festival 2024

The Saaremaa Opera Festival crew. Photo: Louise Stickland

Kuressaare Castle on the island of Saaremaa, Estonia, provided a magical backdrop for the 2024 Saaremaa Opera Festival, staged in a 68m-long 29m-wide 2,000-capacity temporary arena.

This year’s host company, Fundació Òpera Catalunya (The Catalan Opera) from Spain produced a week of special back-to-back opera shows and related events, with lighting equipment and crew supplied by Tallinn-based rental specialist E&T, comprising almost all Robe luminaires.

The Robe moving lights included eight MMX Blades, 23 LEDWash 800s, 16 MMX Spots and four LEDBeam 350s, joined by 24 ParFect 100 SWs, all rigged and tech’d by a crew of five led by Andres Sarv working closely with the Catalan Opera’s Lighting Designer, David Galvez.

Catalan Opera’s Technical Manager, Raul Vilasis was also integral to the mix, together with the festival’s organisers Eesti Kontsert, whose production team was led by Arno Jevgrafov.

The critically acclaimed festival is the largest such event in the Baltic region and its ambitious rock ’n’ roll style schedule – a format developed by Eesti Kontsert CEO, Kertu Orro and her team – is delivered by a different company each year. This year, the five full scale operas over five days were Puccini’s Tosca and Manon Lescaut; a flamenco ballet version of Bizet’s Carmen, Verdi’s Il trovatore, plus a gala evening.

E&T has supplied the event for the past nine years. As its inventory includes many Robe moving lights, Galvez’s lighting scheme was based around these. Four LEDBeam 350s were on LX bar four where they were perfect for working the mid-stage area as a wash – thanks to the zoom – and a beam.

Everything over the stage was Robe apart from two fixtures, and while just over 50 moving lights was not a huge rig for the complexity of each production, the features and functionality meant there was plenty of scope to achieve everything Galvez needed to create the requisite dynamics for the different performances. “Robe has been my reference and go-to brand for some time, mainly as the kit is very reliable and the fixtures are excellent and have beautiful colours,” he commented.

The biggest design challenges were creating a lighting plot to cover a very diverse selection of shows, on which Galvez had started work several months previously. He initially produced 3D visualisations and worked closely with Set Designer, Jordi Galobart.

Once onsite, several elements had to be modified and everything needed finessing, with time extremely tight for Galvez and Lighting Assistant, Arnau Sala, who programmed furiously against the clock. The 8m trim height above the stage was a reasonable height for a tented venue, and there were some LED screen elements that were used very subtly for visual enhancement.

Time was also easily the biggest challenge for Sarv and his team, with lighting getting in only two days before opening night. In addition to the stage lighting, the E&T crew were responsible for an amount of architectural and environmental lighting around the site, including the illumination show cars from Mercedes, one of the main sponsors, for which they also used Robe ParFects 100s.

Production values have always been high on the agenda since Eesti Kontsert took over organising the event in 2008, and Orro notes – with a big smile – that they have “the very best technical production partners” involved in delivering this event to truly world class standards.

As production director, Jevgrafov has his work cut out keeping everything co-ordinated on site and onstage – from the toilets to the green rooms, from the stage to the quick-change areas, from the scaffolding to the seating together with around 60 crew over the week!  He has worked for Eesti Kontsert for 19 years – and runs the four venues that they manage across Estonia, with SOF being one of his favourite events each year.

“Finding solid and dependable partners and suppliers is essential,” he noted, adding that the long-term relationship with E&T is “excellent” and Sarv – who also works as head of lighting at Vanemuine Theatre in Tartu, Estonia’s largest theatre – “fully understands the needs and nuances of opera.”

“Together with these Robe lights which are so flexible and reliable, it’s a great combination,” Jevgrafov concluded.

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