Showing posts with label Musical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Musical. Show all posts

Friday, December 24, 2010

'Spider-Man' Musical Will Resume Performances

December 23, 2010, 5:40 pm

The Broadway musical “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark” is a go to resume performances at 8 p.m. Thursday, a spokesman said three hours before curtain — the first show since a stunt actor was seriously injured mid-performance on Monday night.

The producers canceled the musical’s two shows on Wednesday, at a cost of roughly $400,000 in ticket sales, to put a new safety plan in place for the 38 aerial and stage maneuvers in “Spider-Man” that involve actors hoisted and tethered in harnesses. State safety inspectors visited the Foxwoods Theater on Thursday afternoon and gave final approval to the new safety measures, which involve two stagehands securing each actor in a harness and then telling a stage manager that the maneuver is ready to begin, as opposed to the past practice of a single stagehand simply rigging each actor.

“All of the safety redundancies are in place,” Leo Rosales, the spokesman for the inspectors with the New York State Department of Labor, said on Thursday afternoon. Two understudies have been training and rehearsing for the last two days to step into the stunts and roles previously performed by the injured actor, Christopher Tierney, who remains hospitalized with broken ribs.

The understudies have had weeks of training on the stunts, yet Mr. Tierney has been the one performing them, including some of the $65 million show’s most elaborate sequences where characters fly over the heads of audience members.

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'Spider-Man' Musical Safely Swings Through Performance

“Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark” went off without injury or any major technical hitch on Thursday night in its first performance back on Broadway since a stunt actor was badly injured after falling more than 20 feet during a scene in Monday night’s show.

There appeared to be no problems with a new safety plan that involved two stagehands, not one, rigging actors into their flying and acrobatic harnesses for the 38 maneuvers that involve aerial sequences or potentially risky choreography. At one point near the end of the show, one stagehand came out onstage to rig the actor Reeve Carney into a harness for a sequence where he scampers across an enormous net and jumps from it; no second stagehand was visible, though crew members might have started rigging up Mr. Carney before the scene began. The stunts went fine in that scene for Mr. Carney, who plays Peter Parker and is one of the actors playing Spider-Man.

Before Thursday night’s performance began, the lead producer of “Spider-Man,” Michael Cohl, took the stage and told the packed house at the Foxwoods Theater that the injured performer, Christopher Tierney, had undergone surgery and would begin rehabilitation on Monday. The audience applauded loudly at the mention of Mr. Tierney, whose accident has drawn wide news media coverage and led state and federal workplace safety officials to insist on the new plan to help protect the actors.

Several audience members said on Thursday night that they had purchased tickets to the musical — the most expensive ever on Broadway, at $65 million, and the most technically ambitious — in part because of the news media coverage this week. These theater-goers said they had been curious about the stunt work in the show and its mix of artistry and technical elements. The production itself, however, drew mixed responses.

“There is a reason for having out-of-town tryouts for a major new musical before coming to Broadway, and while I know it’s expensive, ‘Spider-Man’ would have been helped a whole lot by one,” said Kenny Solms, a longtime comedy writer who helped create “The Carol Burnett Show” on television and whose play “It Must Be Him” ran in September at Off Broadway’s Playwrights Horizons. “And based on the seven minutes or so of flying in a three-hour show tonight, I have to see that if I’d wanted to see flying, it’s more magical and memorable in ‘Peter Pan.’”

But David Ravikoff, a tourist from Washington, who said that the recent media hubbub was one reason he wanted to see the show, said that he was dazzled by the creativity and the special effects.

“I was sort of expecting it to be ‘Spider-Man’ as we’ve all come to know the comic-book story, but the show had these wild, mythological, psychosexual dramatic layers that I loved, that I thought were so Julie Taymor,” said Mr. Ravikoff, referring to the “Spider-Man” director, who also directed “The Lion King” musical and the films “Across the Universe” and “The Tempest,” among others. He added, “I’m not really sure what was going on in parts, but I was totally impressed.”

Absent on Thursday night was one of the lead actresses, Natalie Mendoza, who had been out of the show for a couple of weeks early this month with a concussion; though she and the rest of the cast had not performed since Monday night, she was ordered on vocal rest by her doctor, according to a “Spider-Man” spokesman. An understudy played the role of the spider villainess Arachne.

The actors Ari Loeb and Kyle Post divvied up the roles and stunt work usually shouldered by Mr. Tierney, meanwhile.

The producers had canceled the musical’s two shows on Wednesday, at a cost of roughly $400,000 in ticket sales, to put a new safety plan in place for the 38 aerial and stage maneuvers that involve actors hoisted and tethered in harnesses. State safety inspectors visited the Foxwoods Theater on Thursday afternoon and gave final approval to the new safety measures, which involve two stagehands securing each actor in a harness and then telling a stage manager that the maneuver is ready to begin, as opposed to the past practice of a single stagehand simply rigging each actor.

“All of the safety redundancies are in place,” Leo Rosales, the spokesman for the inspectors with the New York State Department of Labor, said on Thursday afternoon.

“Spider-Man,” with music and lyrics by U2’s Bono and the Edge in their Broadway debut, has pushed back its opening night to give more time to Ms. Taymor and the rest of the creative team to continue working on the show. Previously set for Jan. 11, 2011, the new opening night is Feb. 7.

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Tuesday, December 7, 2010

With Great Satire Comes Great Publicity: 'S.N.L.' Sends Up the 'Spider-Man' Musical

December 5, 2010, 9:58 am

11:38 a.m. | Updated

If mockery is its own form of currency, “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark” should be rolling in it by now. “Saturday Night Live” has now joined the chorus of comedy programs poking fun at this beleaguered Broadway musical, with a “Weekend Update” skit from Saturday’s broadcast in which Andy Samberg plays the latest in a long, “Spinal Tap”-esque line of actors who have encountered some physical challenges when trying to portray the titular wall-crawler.

Still, things could always be tougher. As Mr. Samberg’s character informs Seth Meyers, “You know how many people die every year doing ‘Jersey Boys’?”

Update: Rick Miramontez, a press representative for “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark,” said in an email that the musical’s production team has been sending floral bouquets to the comedy shows that have been spoofing “Spider-Man.” (A note that accompanied flowers sent to the “Conan” crew read: “We wanted to thank you for your tribute to our show, but we couldn’t decide what to send. We hope you enjoy the flowers – it was cheaper than a cease and desist.”)

Mr. Miramontez wrote, “The flowers that Conan received were sent with affection and admiration. They were expensive! If the Spider-Man company sends Seth and the ‘S.N.L.’ team a floral tribute, it might even be bigger!”

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Sunday, November 21, 2010

2011 Musical America Winners Announced

November 8, 2010, 5:00 pm

Musical America, which publishes the Musical America International Directory of the Performing Arts and maintains the Web site musicalamerica.com, has announced the winners of its 2011 Musical America Awards. Its musician of the year is the violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter, soon to begin a season-long stint as artist in residence at the New York Philharmonic. The composer of the year is Thomas Adès; the conductor, Rafael Frühbeck dr Burgos; the vocalist, the baritone Simon Keenlyside; and the educator, Vivian Perlis, the founder of Yale University’s Oral History of American Music. The awards are to be presented at Carnegie Hall on Dec. 13.

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Thursday, November 18, 2010

'Porgy and Bess' Will Be Reincarnated - As a Musical

November 4, 2010, 7:00 pm

Suzan-Lori Parks, the Pulitzer-Prize winning playwright of “Topdog/Underdog,” and Diedre Murray, the musician and composer, are developing a new version of “Porgy and Bess” that features rearrangements of George Gershwin’s famed score and plays down its roots as an opera.

The show is scheduled to debut in September at the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where it will be directed by Diane Paulus, the theater’s artistic director.

“It won’t be an opera — that the big deal here,” Ms. Paulus said in an interview. “The Gershwin estate was interested in a team that would take this amazing classical work, that people know as an opera, and turn it into a musical. They wanted to make it more fully realized in terms of characters. They were eager to have a writer bring it to the audiences of today.”

Also involved behind the scenes are the producers Jeffrey Richards and Jerry Frankel. Ms. Paulus, Mr. Richards, Mr. Frankel and the Public Theater helped to bring the Public’s summer staging of “Hair” to Broadway, where it became a moneymaker and won a Tony for Best Revival of a Musical.

Ms. Paulus said she and the producers had been looking for another project together. She reached out to Ms. Parks because she is a longtime fan of her writing, she said, and she had successfully collaborated for over a decade with Ms. Murray, who won Obie awards for her scores of “Running Man” and “Eli’s Comin’. ” Ms. Murray will create new arrangements for the Gershwin score.

The show will open the ART’s 2011-2012 season. Asked whether there were Broadway aspirations, Ms. Paulus said: “If the show has a future life in New York, that’s great. There is an intention for it to have a future life.”

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