Imero Fiorentino
Imero Fiorentino | |
---|---|
Born | July 12, 1928 Brooklyn, New York |
Died | October 1, 2013 New York City, New York, U.S. | (aged 85)
Known for | Lighting designer and consultant, television lighting |
Imero (Immie) Fiorentino (July 12, 1928 – October 1, 2013) was an American lighting designer, considered one of the most respected pioneers and leaders in the American entertainment industry.[1][2][3] Beginning his career as a lighting designer in the Golden Age of Television, he designed productions for such celebrated series as Omnibus, U.S. Steel Hour, Pulitzer Prize Playhouse and Kraft Television Theatre.[4] Fiorentino's expertise was often called upon by industry professionals throughout the world to consult on the planning and development of major productions, exhibits, museums and architectural projects;[5] from the Republican National Convention and Democratic National Convention and numerous United States presidential election debates, major concert tours and television specials to the environmental lighting for Epcot’s World Showcase at Walt Disney World.[6] His consulting work on major corporate events with clients included: Anheuser-Busch,[7] Michelin, Electrolux, American Express and Xerox.
Early life and education[]
Fiorentino was born in Brooklyn, New York, the son of Sicilian parents Margaret Viola (a doll dress maker who later worked for a real estate agency) and Dominick Fiorentino (an artist who painted the faces on the Dy-Dee Dolls), who met in New York. As a young boy, he enjoyed trips to Radio City Music Hall with his uncle as he became more and more fascinated with theatre, especially lighting and set design. He turned to books to learn everything he could on the art. In junior high school and later at Lafayette High School in Brooklyn, he joined the stage squad and did the lighting and set design for plays. In high school he was encouraged by a wonderful teacher, Florence Druss, who understood immediately his aptitude for lighting design and encouraged him to pursue it as a career and to go on to college. In his junior year, his life’s plan was mapped out for him and he was accepted to Carnegie Tech, now Carnegie Mellon University. In the year prior to his high school graduation, however, he had a horrible accident and lost one eye. He felt his great plans were in shambles now because, without depth perception, he thought it would be impossible to design lighting. However, his high school teacher and mentor came to the hospital and told him that no one would know he only had one eye and he “would still be the best lighting designer ever.” The teacher saw the course the young man needed to be on and convinced him to continue on with his plans so, with great sacrifice from his family, Fiorentino attended Carnegie Tech majoring in theatre.[8]
After graduation, his plans to teach and design at Indiana State University the following fall were circumvented by the loss of his father. He undertook the new role as breadwinner for his family. He made the rounds at NBC, DuMont and ABC looking for immediate employment. When interviewed for a position with ABC, Fiorentino admitted he knew nothing about television lighting to which the interviewer replied, “So what? Nobody does.” Television was a new medium in 1950 and everything was a learning curve. Fiorentino recalls, “The man called back later and said, ‘I can hire you as a lighting director for television.’ I said, ‘Who's going to teach me?’ He said, ‘Nobody's going to teach you.’ I said, ‘Well, how will I know if it's right?’ He said, ‘If it looks good, remember how you did it.’ I started the next day.”[8]
Career[]
ABC Lighting Designer[]
Fiorentino’s lighting career began during the “Golden Age” of television, when his TV credits included Omnibus, U.S. Steel Hour, The Voice of Firestone, Pulitzer Prize Playhouse, and the Bolshoi Ballet’s first televised appearance in the U.S.[9] Broadcasts were still in black and white. There was no videotape or retakes. Everything was done “live.” Early television images required an intense amount of light in order for transmission of an image to appear on the screen and often employed banks of fluorescent lights. Coming from a theatre background, however, Fiorentino stayed away from the fluorescents and selected lighting instruments that would give a more modeled effect. Word got around quickly that his technique was artistic and directors began requesting his services. Fiorentino worked with such directors in those early years of television as Sidney Lumet, John Frankenheimer, Charles Dubin and Alex Segal. Lighting directors that worked on those early television programs invented lighting techniques as they went. For ten years Fiorentino worked as an ABC lighting designer as one of a small circle of lighting pioneers at other networks including Bob Barry and Greg Harney.
Imero Fiorentino Associates[]
In 1960 Immie left ABC to form Imero Fiorentino Associates (IFA.) As the television industry expanded, Fiorentino foresaw the need of independent production companies producing much of the networks' content and their need for experienced lighting designers. Before long IFA became the go-to company for freelance lighting designers. Lighting designers from various networks came to work at IFA such as Fred McKinnon, George Reisenberger, Ken Palius, Leard Davis, William Knight, William Klages, Greg Brunton, Carl Vitelli, Richard Weiss, Carl Gibson, Stig Edgren, Tony DiGirolamo, Alan Adelman, Robert Dickinson, Vince Cilurzo, Jim Tetlow, Marilyn Lowey, John Conti, Jeff Calderon, and Jeff Engle. Over time the business expanded to provide both lighting and set design, production, staging and technical supervision for television and live events; everything from Broadway productions to political conventions, educational seminars to architectural lighting consultation.[10]
Fiorentino actively participated in the artistic as well as company management, leadership and direction and took great pride in helping to guide the many unique projects that came through their doors.
Fiorentino's creativity was evidenced by his participation as leader of the IFA team serving as design and lighting consultants for fourteen Democratic and Republican National Conventions.
He led the team that designed the environmental lighting for the World Showcase Pavilions at Walt Disney World's Epcot in Orlando, Florida; the exhibition lighting and staging of the famous Howard Hughes Flying Boat "Spruce Goose" aircraft in Long Beach, CA.; Neil Diamond international concert tours and television specials for which he received two Emmy Award nominations; he also lit the legendary industrial show extravaganza (the granddaddy of corporate theater), The Milliken Breakfast Show for 21 years.
Fiorentino was also responsible for spearheading IFA's role as designers and consultants for many large television facilities around the country. He headed the IFA team that redesigned the lighting during the 1991 renovation of Madison Square Garden and designed the WaMu Theater housed in the Garden.
Additionally, his credits include: Frank Sinatra - The Main Event, televised live from Madison Square Garden, El Cordobes: The Bullfight of the Century, transmitted live from Spain to 28 countries via satellite, the historic mass audience rock concert event, California Jam and the Broadway show, The Night That Made America Famous. He has served as consultant to every U.S. President since Dwight D. Eisenhower,[9] and to a multitude of major political candidates in television appearances and campaigns, as well as numerous Presidential Debates. He was hired to do the television lighting the day after the first Kennedy-Nixon debate where Nixon looked awful as the bright studio lighting exaggerated his jowls and sunken eyes. He lit the first-ever pictures that were transmitted to outer space and back to Earth via “Telstar 1” in 1962.[9] Fiorentino and William Knight were the lighting designers for the historic Barbra Streisand - A Happening in Central Park, Sept. 16, 1968.
Post-IFA[]
In 1996, Caribiner International acquired IFA and Imero Fiorentino joined the global communications company as Senior Vice President. Caribiner was subsequently acquired by Jack Morton Worldwide where he continued in the same capacity. During the 2000 and 2008 political conventions, Fiorentino was the overall lighting designer for the Fox News coverage.[11] In 2002, he entered the latest phase of his career as an independent lighting and production consultant.[citation needed]
Family[]
Fiorentino was married to Carole Hamer from 1953 to 1963 and they had one daughter, Linda. He married Angela Linsell, an artist, in 1970. His daughter Linda, a minister, is married to Ken Crabbs. They have a son, Christian Imero Fiorentino Crabbs.
Death[]
He died in New York City on October 1, 2013.[12]
Bibliography[]
- Fiorentino, Imero (2017). Let There Be Light, An Illuminating Life. Xlibris. ISBN 9781543424195.
At the time of his death, Fiorentino had been working on his memoir. His wife, Angela, completed it and Let There Be Light, An Illuminating Life, was published in 2017.
Associations[]
- National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences: served on the Board of Governors of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences and was its Vice President from 1971 to 1975
- Illuminating Engineering Society
- International Tape Association
- International Industrial Television Association
- International Teleproduction Society
- International Radio and Television Society
Awards and recognitions[]
- 2012 Wally Lifetime Achievement Award[13]
- U.S. Institute Of Theatre Technology Award[14]
- 1992 Silver Circle Honoree, National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences
- Art Directors Club Award
- Illuminating Engineering Society:
- Award Of Merit
- Section Award
- Award Of Excellence
- Lumen Award
- Carnegie Mellon University:
- Merit Award
- Distinguished Alumni Award
- L. Blair Award Of Excellence
- Emmy Award Nominations (3)
- VPA Pioneer Award
- USITT Distinguished Lighting Designer Award
Notes[]
- ^ Media Marvels for Hire, "New York Magazine," April 19, 1976,
- ^ "Q&A: Imero Fiorentino, independent Lighting Designer." StudioDaily.com. August 22, 2006. Retrieved on 4 December 2008.
- ^ Management, Imero Fiorentino, "On Location," March/April, 1978
- ^ [1] Kraft Television Theater-Credited as Lighting Director for unknown episodes
- ^ Vogel, David B (20 April 2007). "Are Schools Adequately Training Technical Directors for Professional Careers? Archived 2008-08-30 at the Wayback Machine" USITT. Retrieved on 4 December 2008.
- ^ Lampert-Gréaux, Ellen (11 June 2002). "Imero Fiorentino, James C. Fuller, and John McGraw, 2002 Wally Nominees." LiveDesign Online. Retrieved on 4 December 2008.
- ^ Command Performance: Producing an Affair for Blacktie and Beer, "Video Systems," April, 1979, Suzanne Mead
- ^ Jump up to: a b Spiller, Marshall (1 November 2002). "History Project: Imero Fiorentino." LiveDesign Online. Retrieved on 4 December 2008.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c "Great Masters Series: Award-Winning Lighting Designer Imero Fiorentino," New York Women in Film. 15 April 2005. Retrieved on 4 December 2008.
- ^ Fiorentino Keeps His Designs Simple, "Record World," September 15, 1979, Joseph Ianello
- ^ Steinberg, David (9 October 2008). "Scharff Weisberg Supports The Wolf Productions With Lighting Packages For Democratic And Republican National Convention Coverage By Fox News." The Briefing Room. Retrieved on 4 December 2008.
- ^ "Imero Fiorentino Passes Away". Livedesignonline.com. 2013-10-03. Retrieved 2013-10-10.
- ^ Ellen Lampert-Gréaux (2012-10-14). "2012 Wally Awards Announced | News content from Live Design Magazine". Livedesignonline.com. Retrieved 2013-10-10.
- ^ "USITT Award Archived 2008-12-02 at the Wayback Machine." United States Institute for Theatre Technology. Retrieved on 4 December 2008.
References[]
- Breaking into Video, Fireside (June 3, 1985) by Marjorie Costello & Cynthia Katz, pages 29, 40, 46.
External links[]
- 1928 births
- American lighting designers
- Carnegie Mellon University College of Fine Arts alumni
- People from Brooklyn
- American people of Italian descent
- 2013 deaths
- Carnegie Mellon University alumni
- Lafayette High School (New York City) alumni