Ottawa Citizen

Broadway designer tapped for Oscar theatre

Award-winning Derek Mclane promises unique, magical set

- MARK KENNEDY

NEW YORK The folks behind Hollywood’s glitziest night have imported some help this year — from Broadway.

Tony Award-winning designer Derek McLane, much sought-after for his use of unlikely materials in sublime patterns, has been tapped to put together the set for the 85th Academy Awards telecast.

“This is the first time I’ve ever designed any kind of awards show and certainly this is the biggest viewership of anything I’ve ever done,” he said by phone from inside the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. “This is new territory for me.”

Neil Meron and Craig Zadan, producers of the Oscars, asked McLane if he’d lend his expertise after impressing them with his work on How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying with Daniel Radcliffe, a show they also produced.

“One of the things they said about the Oscars is that they really hoped that I would design something that looked completely unique and completely new and did not look like any other Oscar show they’d ever seen,” McLane said.

McLane’s other credits include the recent revival of The Heiress with Jessica Chastain, the current Nice Work If You Can Get It with Matthew Broderick, the last revivals of Gore Vidal’s The Best Man and Follies, the show Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo with Robin Williams, and the Tony winning revival of Anything Goes, which is currently on a national tour.

“We think he’s one of the most inventive designers there is and we wanted to give him an opportunit­y to really strut his stuff,” said Meron. “I don’t think there’s any better place than the Oscar stage.”

One of McLane’s biggest triumphs was the set for 33 Variations, a play about a terminally ill musicologi­st that starred Jane Fonda. The show earned McLane a Tony for one of his trademarks: the use of ordinary objects clustered in stunning ways. The set had thousands of small cardboard boxes and hundreds of pages of sheet music, all lit sublimely.

“I like the ability to create that kind of magic out of the ordinary,” he said.

For the Oscars, McLane was tasked with honouring the grandeur and splendour of the event but also injecting a bit of his wit, too. “It needs to be glamorous and it needs to be beautiful, but their hope was that I could do that in a way that seemed unexpected,” he said.

This year, the Oscars are paying tribute to the music of the movies — scores, songs and musicals.

While much of the Oscar set is still under wraps, an image of McLane’s proscenium has been released and shows some typical touches: More than a thousand — 1,051, to be precise — replica Oscar statuettes, each a little larger than the real award. Each is nestled in its own cubbyhole and can be lit separately or in sections as needed.

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