Forget Zoom! Loyal bridesmaid delivers her wedding speech from London via HOLOGRAM after travel restrictions stop her from attending Canada wedding
- London-based bridesmaid was beamed to her best friend’s wedding in Ontario
- Sarah Redington couldn’t make the event due to ongoing Covid-19 restrictions
- The life-like holograph was enabled by Toronto-based organisation ARHT Media
Undeterred by travel restrictions brought on by Covid-19, a bridesmaid has appeared at her friend’s wedding in Canada as a hologram.
Like Princess Leia in Star Wars, bridesmaid Sarah Redington was beamed in full wedding regalia, holding a glass of champagne, live from London.
Redington ‘virtually’ attended the wedding of her best friend Brittany Smith to Jeffrey Gallant at Kurtz Orchards in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario, Canada last month.
Her amazingly lifelike projection was seen in video footage delivering a short message before disappearing in a flash of light, as if she’d been teleported.
It remains unclear how much the hologram cost.
Pictured is the hologram of bridesmaid Sarah Redington as she virtually appears at her friend’s wedding
Groom Jeffrey Gallant surprised his bride (left) with the projection (right), which was enabled by Toronto-based firm ARHT Media
The couple had originally set their their wedding date for May 29 this year, but ongoing restrictions due to coronavirus pushed it back to August 14.
However, the groom came up with a novel way to surprise his bride.
‘I don’t know how the idea of a hologram came to mind, but a lot of us know that this technology exists,’ the groom told the New York Times.
‘My aunts told me they felt like they were on Star Trek.’
Video footage showed Gallant surprising his new bride at their wedding reception with the hologram, which also delivered audio to the guests.
The real-life Sarah Redington, dressed in full wedding getup, appears in front of a green screen in London
‘Husband of the year’: The groom, Jeffrey Gallant, organised the stunt as a surprise for his new wife, Brittany Smith (both pictured). He said his aunts ‘felt like they were on Star Trek’
Redington – who was seen appearing in front of a green screen in London – delivered both a toast, which she had prerecorded, and then a live chat with her best friend.
The stunt was made possible by ARHT Media, a Toronto-based holographic company that usually works to beam presenters and celebrities at events.
The firm says it can beam people into one or multiple venues at the same time ‘from anywhere, to anywhere in the world via the internet’.
‘You capture people in one part of the world, you beam them anywhere else in the world where they can have two-way interactions in real time with very little latency,’ Larry O’Reilly, CEO at ARHT Media, told CBC.
The hologram appears and disappears in a flash of light, as if bridesmaid Redington had teleported herself
ARHT Media previously beamed a projection of physicist Stephen Hawking in front of a Hong Kong audience, who discussed his career and answered questions about the possibility of life on other planets.
Holograms perform one of the most complex manipulations of light – they enable the storing and reproduction of all information carried by light in 3D.
A typical lens-based photograph encodes the brightness of each light wave, meaning a photo can faithfully reproduce a scene’s colours, but it ultimately yields a flat image.
In contrast, a hologram encodes both the brightness and phase of each light wave to deliver a truer depiction of a scene’s parallax and depth.