I am building using a similar method. The difference is that my ceiling ply will go on top of the wall giving much more glue and compression contact area on 1-1/2 inch thick foam walls. My cabinet face frames and bulkhead will be installed before the ceiling skin goes on and the main part of the roof has a very gentle 520 inch radius. The tops of the cabinets and bulkhead will be planed to match the roof arch and will give me spar like features to screw and glue the ceiling skin to. For the tight front radius and hatch I have made ribs. The front ones will be fully contained in the front over pillow cabinet.
On the side walls I intend to rely solely on the glue and canvas sock.
My original plan was to build temporary forms or props, but then I decided that the cost of the material, time to construct, install, remove and remedy any damage to finish work for something temporary would be more than what it would take to just make something permanent.
Ultimate light weight is not necessarily my goal (my TV's are more than capable), but I did want to save on gas and still haul too much gear.

I did a small scale test of my planned vacuum bagging technique this evening to see if TB2 will work for laminating larger ply panels to blue foam board. I used a piece of 5 mm (1/4 nominal) luan underlay about 18 inches wide by 2 ft long (to simulate the more dear 5 mm Okoume marine ply) sucked to an equal sized piece of 1-1/2 thk foam. After 1-1/2 hours under the bag (the TB2 calls for 1/2 hr clamp time and 24 hr cure), my initial prodding and tentative flexing show great promise for a very rigid panel. Not sure how that would be with 1 inch thk foam

, but I suspect that it would still be impressive.
I would not be comfortable trying to staple into the end grain of such a thin inner skin, and would almost certainly split several through the finish face. However, I wonder if just toeing the nails or brads through the ceiling and into the foam would be enough to hold until the glue dries.
Did your test simulate the geometry of the ply to foam ledge, or just gluing and stapling face to edge of the ply? I suppose you could make the foam above the inner skin thinner, giving you more surface area to lay a wider ceiling panel onto, if that is an option and you decide it is better or necessary.
Just some of my experience and $.02.