Wendall Keehn Harrington is an American theatrical projection designer and head of projection design at Yale School of Drama,[1] sometimes referred to as 'The Queen of Projections’.[2][3] She has been considered the nation's leading projection designer for more than three decades.
Credits include over 35 Broadway shows, and numerous awards for her designs.
"In many ways, the modern era of projections on Broadway — and, by extension, in the rest of the theatre — began with Wendall K. Harrington, who designed a number of productions that proved to be technological and aesthetic milestones... It was Harrington's work on the 1992 musical The Who's Tommy that arguably set the stage for the modern projections era."[4]
In 1978 she founded Luminous! Productions, Inc. where for six years she produced and directed multi-image and video projects for numerous corporate clients. The Multi-Image Murders and Fifty Who Made the Difference won several awards, including Gold Awards from IFPA, The Chicago Film Festival and the U.S. Industrial Film Festival. From 1988-1990, she served as a producer for a variety of Whittle Communications’ documentaries. Her work in the multi-image/video field includes the 1991 Words on Fire. She produced this half-hour program for PBS affiliate KTCA and Alive from Off Center.
Harrington was also responsible for the re-design and re-launch of Esquire magazine in 1986.[13] As design director for Esquire, she conceived and edited Randy Shiltsís’ My Life on the AIDS Tour, which was nominated for a National Magazine Award and published in Best American Essays of 1990.
Harrington began her academic career in 1995 giving seminars in Broadway master lighting classes, which she helped to create, in universities along America's northeastern region, notably New York University, Yale University, Virginia Commonwealth University, and Long Island University. From 2005 to 2009, she served as lecturer on Projection for Performance at the Yale School of Drama's Design Department. In 2009 the co-chairs of the Design Department Ming Cho Lee and Stephen Strawbridge, announced that Wendall was to head the departments new projection concentration. The program began in the fall of 2010 and is one of the first graduate theatre training programs of its kind in the United States.[15]
1980 Multi -Image Murders AMI International Gold Award for Best Concept and Script
1984 50 Who Made a Difference (IFPA Gold Award, The Gold Hugo from Chicago International Film Festival and First Place, Gold Camera from the US Industrial Film Festival)