Awards Show Production
The name. Called.
The room. Held.
Awards show production in Los Angeles for industry galas, professional society honors, corporate recognition nights, and broadcast-ready ceremonies that have to read on camera the moment a winner stands up.
Broadcast-quality multi-cam, redundant audio routing on every microphone, calibrated key light tuned for skin and trophy, and show control that lets the moment land before the cut moves on.
What scales with you.
The same crew that runs a 350-person nonprofit honors evening with a satellite broadcast runs a 1,200-person corporate gala with a global stream. The variables change — the discipline does not. Two mixes. Multi-cam ISO record. Cue stack tied to running order. Three hours, locked.
Awards show production in Los Angeles is the discipline of holding three hours of audience attention while a name gets called, a trophy gets handed off, and a producer in the truck has to make a decision every twelve seconds. The cut has to know who is standing. The mic has to be open before the speech starts. The lighting has to be on the recipient before the announcer finishes the name. Everything else is just being prepared enough that none of that has to be a guess.
For a 480-person Beverly Hills gala with 32 categories and a private broadcast feed, that is typically a 4-camera Sony FX9 package, a Yamaha Rivage PM7 console with two parallel mixes, ETC Source Four LED Profile front light tuned at 3,200K with a 5,600K trophy key, Shure Axient Digital RF on all presenters, a grandMA3 cue stack with timecode anchors on every category, and a stage manager calling on closed comms across audio, lighting, video, and floor PA.
For a sports league year-end awards on a private soundstage with no live broadcast, the rig flexes smaller — but the cue stack discipline does not. Same multi-cam ISO record, same parallel mixes, same calibrated lighting. The recipient still stands. The trophy still gets handed off. The moment still has to land. The deliverable is just an edited package instead of a live cut.
Questions before the brief.
What makes an awards show production different from a regular gala?
A gala can be flexible — the awards moment is rigid. Every category has a winner, a stage walk, a speech, an exit, and a transition to the next category. The cue stack has to be locked at every transition because the next category is already loading. Audience lighting, trophy lighting, and broadcast lighting are three different lighting designs from the same desk, all coexisting in the same room across three hours.
How do you handle winners who are not in the room?
A pre-recorded acceptance from the winner is loaded into the cue stack with the running order. If the acceptance is live remote — typically over Zoom or a private SRT feed — we land it on a dedicated channel with its own audio routing, its own lower-third, and its own camera angle (a screen-side wide). The director calls it like another camera. The remote talent does not feel like a phone call interrupting the show.
What does broadcast quality mean on an awards show?
Sony FX9 or Sony Venice 2 multi-cam, calibrated lighting at consistent color temperature for the full three-hour show, a Yamaha Rivage PM7 audio package with parallel house and broadcast mixes, Shure Axient Digital RF on every presenter and recipient, multi-track ISO record on every input, and a director cutting in a truck on a Ross Carbonite or Blackmagic ATEM Constellation switcher.
Can you handle the after-party and the rehearsal day, not just the show?
Yes. Rehearsal day and after-party live in the same gear footprint with smaller crew complements. Rehearsal is essentially a dress run — same cue stack, same talent, same mics, same lighting — so the actual show is not the first time the cue stack runs end-to-end. After-party flexes the rig down to a single room mix and walk-around lighting, same crew, no break.
How do we start a conversation?
Email hello@anydaylive.com with venue or city, date or date window, category count, presenter list status (locked vs. moving), and a one-paragraph brief on the audience and the format. We come back inside one business day with questions, a draft run-of-show concept, a draft scope, and the names of the people who will actually be in the truck.