Author Topic: SCHEDULING: load in and rehearsal schedule how to  (Read 3286 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

mizi5620

  • New to Town
  • **
  • Posts: 28
    • View Profile
  • Experience: Professional
SCHEDULING: load in and rehearsal schedule how to
« on: Aug 29, 2018, 04:34 pm »
At all the theaters I have worked at the TD has made the tech and load in schedule. I was asked to make one for the production I am working on. HELP how do you do that?

Edited to add topic tag - Maribeth
« Last Edit: Oct 07, 2018, 09:06 pm by Maribeth »

Michelle R. Wood

  • SM Expert
  • ****
  • Posts: 164
  • Gender: Female
    • View Profile
    • website
  • Affiliations: EMC, East Carolina University
  • Current Gig: Resident Stage Manager at Temple Theatre
  • Experience: Professional
Re: load in and rehearsal schedule how to
« Reply #1 on: Aug 30, 2018, 08:03 pm »
Who has been in charge of the build and gotten the set together? That would be the first person to speak to regarding what needs to be loaded in, and where I'd start the conversation. I'd also get your producer/Artistic Director involved (whoever is in charge) involved in this conversation to keep the communication channel clear to someone who can not make executive decisions, even if it's only an email to summarize the conversations.

Is there a crew for tech? If so, they need to be told when to come for load-in, and you will need to know how many you'll need. It's tempting to say "as many as possible" but depending on the skill level needed to assemble or the strength level needed to lift you may need to be more specific in your call. So far as estimating how long load-in will need, that's outside of what I've usually done, and it will depend a lot on who your crew is and how much experience they have.

For tech have a conversation with your designers and director: go over a plan of attack with them. Does the LD need full costume or not? What does sound need? Where will your tech table be? Are you going by Equity rules (breaks)? When will you eat? Do you need to order anything? Will you papertech later?
"Genius is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration." -- Thomas Edison (Harper's Magazine, 1932)

Mac Calder

  • Forum Moderators
  • *****
  • Posts: 977
  • Plan for the future, live for the now
    • View Profile
  • Affiliations: Live Performance Australia / Media Arts and Entertainment Alliance
  • Current Gig: Technical Director
  • Experience: Former SM
Re: load in and rehearsal schedule how to
« Reply #2 on: Aug 31, 2018, 04:46 am »
I break the build down into 4 types of items, Tasks, Milestones, Dependencies and Deadlines.

Everything is a task. A task can have other tasks as dependencies. A task with dependencies is a milestone.

Deadlines are things like "sitzprobe 6pm on build day 4" or "stage to be clear ready for truck 2 to unload at beginning of day 2." They have a fixed time assigned as part of the schedule

A milestone might be "Ready to lay floor", "ready to build set" and may have dependencies like "LX bar 4 flown out"

Some tasks are just tasks. They can be done at any point - for example comms might be able to be done 'whenever'.

I write a list out by by myself based on what I can forsee, then I sit down with the various heads of department and we run through it. They then pipe up with things like "I need to run a couple of mic lines across before we put the floor down" or "I need an hour to pre-rig before LX comes in". After we have sorted this list out we start to look at timing. Don't get task specific. Milestones are where it is at:
Quote
Lighting, how long will you need to complete everything on LX 4 so that they can start to build the set? 3 hours. Great. Mechs - how long to pre-rig those points? Right. So if we call LX and Mechs at 8am we can start the set build at 11:30? Great. Next milestone is ...

Handling deadlines is the same sort of thing.

Then there is just a matter of juggling a few things around to try and avoid having departments standing around with nothing to do. Again, don't bog yourself down to the task level - don't even note any small little tasks that are not time dependant - as that is up to the relevant HoD to manage. Identify the milestone tasks, their dependent tasks and the deadlines. Stick times on the milestones and the deadlines and list the dependant tasks before the milestones. Add in crew calls and you have a schedule.

If you want something to assist you - have a look at Gannt chart software - there are a bunch of free ones on line - or there are the big players like Microsoft Project.