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‘American Horror Story’ Leans on Lectrosonics

Christian Wissmuller • Supplier Scene • June 2, 2020

“American Horror Story” has become one of the most awarded series on cable television. Its signature is a core cast that returns each season as new characters facing (or being) new menaces. This ensemble has included such luminaries as Jessica Lange, Kathy Bates, Lady Gaga, and the show’s most recurring star Sarah Paulson, who has played ten distinct roles so far.

Paulson, who is proactive about the role of audio in capturing an ideal performance, brings her personal Lectrosonics SSM Digital Hybrid Wireless transmitter to every shoot. Production mixer Brendan Beebe CAS  gave us a peek behind the scares of AHS, which also employs SMV and HMa transmitters, UCR411a receivers, and the IFB-T4 and IFB-R1B pairing for monitoring.

“I first encountered Lectrosonics in, I think, 1996 or ’97,” Beebe reminisces. “Warner Brothers used it exclusively, and with each new generation, it just got better. Then the digital hybrid technology just changed the whole game — it became the gold standard in Hollywood.”

According to Beebe, the first factor that makes Lectrosonics the gold standard for AHS is its dynamic range. “There are intimate scenes that explode into big drama on a dime,” he explains. “Sarah Paulson and Evan Peters might be the two most dynamic actors I’ve ever recorded in that respect — they can go from a whisper to a loud scream very naturally. But thanks to the gain range and the 30dB limiters on the transmitters, I rarely if ever run into issues with clipping. Sarah carries her own SSM everywhere, as did Lady Gaga on the Hotel season.”

Lady Gaga’s prowess as a singer directly informed her turn as the vampire queen of a haunted hotel, and to record it all, Beebe got creative. “There was one scene going down a hallway where I asked her, ‘Are you going to whisper or scream here?’” he recalls. “She looked at me slyly and said, ‘You never know!’ That’s legit — an actor might decide right in the moment what works best for that scene. So, we flew two booms above her, each with an HMa plug-on transmitter on the mic. I set the gain on one between 40 and 45 for whispering, and the other between 12 and 18 to get any screaming. It was flawless. One mic or the other always had a signal the editors in post could use, so that became our way of working with her for a lot of scenes.”

When Beebe needs output power to punch through a difficult environment, he reaches for his SMV belt-pack transmitters. “I always try to coordinate with other productions that might be in the same area,” he says, “but in L.A., we’ve gotten squeezed into pretty much the A1 frequency range, about 470 to 537MHz. Now, combine that with the fact that AHS is pretty much a three-camera shoot all the time. Each camera has a Wi-Fi video transmitter on it, working around 1.9GHz. These send picture to the monitors for the focus pullers. Then we have IFBs and comms, so it’s just this saturated field of RF before we record the first word of dialogue. If the 50-milliwatt setting on the SMVs isn’t getting me what I need, 100mW usually does. If things get really crazy, their ability to go up to a quarter-watt always saves the day.”

Also crucial is that such adjustments can be made remotely. “We all have the LectroRM control app on our phones,” notes Beebe. “If anything squelches the signal, I can bump up the output power without interrupting the scene to reposition the SMV on an actor’s body. When Sarah shows up on set, her first stop is our department. She soundchecks whispers, screams, and everything in between, and then goes on to rehearse dialogue. When she’s done shooting, we put her SSM to sleep using the app. We do the same with Jennifer Love Hewitt on 9-1-1. I want to mention that it’s refreshing to work with an actor who’s so aware of audio. Sarah always tries to make sure we get what we need, and she even had the wardrobe department make little silk transmitter pouches that match her clothing, so the SSM totally disappears.”

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