Showing posts with label SpiderMan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SpiderMan. Show all posts

Monday, January 3, 2011

A Cautionary Tale for 'Spider-Man'

January 2, 2011, 1:47 pm

In an Op-Ed piece in The New York Times on Sunday, Jennifer George, the daughter of the producer George W. George, writes about the debacle that was her parents’ musical “Via Galactica,” one of Broadway’s most famed flops.

(Clive Barnes, in his 1972 review in The New York Times, wrote, “It is a difficult show to care for.” The show’s poster is on view at Joe Allen’s interactive Flop Wall.)

Mindful of the long hours of rehearsal, technical glitches, injuries and critical drubbing that the show took, Ms. George offers advice to the creators of the troubled Broadway musical “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark”:

“I can well imagine the pressure the creators of ‘Spider-Man’ have been under. Right before opening night, when you’re running out of time, you can find yourself so close to the canvas that you can’t see the big picture. But I’d like to urge them, take a moment, now if you can. Step back and look at what you have. Put the play’s human moments front and center. There’s still time.”

The entire Op-Ed piece is here.

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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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Concussion Sidelines 'Spider-Man' Actress

A lead actress in the new Broadway musical “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark” suffered a concussion at the first preview performance on Sunday night when, standing offstage, she was struck in the head by a rope holding a piece of equipment, a spokesman for the actress said on Friday. The actress, Natalie Mendoza, who plays the villainess Arachne, did not perform on Thursday night and is not expected to return before Tuesday.

Ms. Mendoza did perform at the second performance, on Wednesday night, against her doctor’s advice, said the spokesman, Shea Martin. A spokesman for the production, Rick Miramontez, said, “It was her choice, and she insisted on doing it.”

The show’s director, Julie Taymor, and the lead producer, Michael Cohl, were informed before Wednesday’s performance that Ms. Mendoza had a concussion, Mr. Miramontez said. The role of Arachne involves several flying sequences, including one in the first act where Ms. Mendoza is spun upside-down. Mr. Cohl would not comment and Ms. Taymor did not respond to interview requests by mid-Friday afternoon.

On Friday, representatives for the Actors’ Equity union and the New York State Department of Labor, which monitors safety in public performances, said they were looking into the accident.

Ms. Mendoza is the third actor in “Spider-Man” to be hurt working on the production; during rehearsals this fall, one dancer broke his wrists after landing incorrectly during a flying stunt, while another actor injured his feet doing the same stunt.

The actress did not report her injury on Sunday night; otherwise, Mr. Miramontez said, it would have been included in the stage manager’s post-performance report. The seriousness of the accident was also not clear; Mr. Martin said that she may have been hit by the equipment on the rope, as opposed to the rope itself, or that the rope may have been made by re-enforced materials. Ms. Mendoza, 30, is 5’6’’ tall with a slim, athletic build.

At some point afterward Ms. Mendoza saw a doctor — the cast had the day off on Monday — and, late Tuesday morning, she sent out a message via Twitter that simply said, “Concussion.” She informed the production on Tuesday that she had a concussion; the spokesman, Mr. Miramontez, said it was noted in the stage manager’s report for the Tuesday rehearsal.

On Wednesday, Ms. Mendoza told Ms. Taymor and the producers “that she strongly wished to perform” in the preview that night even though her doctor had advised against it, Mr. Miramontez said. The particulars of the discussion about allowing Ms. Mendoza to perform on Wednesday night remain unclear.

Ms. Taymor was in rehearsal on Friday and interview requests for her were pending with Mr. Miramontez and her personal publicist, Chris Kanarick.

On Thursday Ms. Mendoza fell ill, and the production announced that night that her understudy, America Olivo, was performing as Arachne through the weekend because Ms. Mendoza had a concussion.

Ms. Olivo is now scheduled to play Arachne until at least Tuesday night; she did not reply to an e-mail request for comment on Friday.

“Spider-Man” is the most technically complex show ever on Broadway, with 27 aerial sequences of characters flying and scores of pieces of moving scenery, some of which are among the biggest on a New York stage right now. Yet the show remains under-rehearsed: Ms. Taymor acknowledged in an interview in November that “the musical probably won’t be ready to do without stopping and fixing things in the first few performances.”

Performances had already been delayed by two weeks in November, at a cost of a few million dollars in ticket revenue and rehearsal expenses. “Spider-Man” has cost $65 million, more than twice as much as any Broadway show in history; it is scheduled to open on Jan. 11, 2011.

The actress declined an interview request made through Mr. Martin. He also declined a request to interview Ms. Mendoza’s doctor.

A spokesman for the state Labor Department, Joseph Morrissey, issued a statement in response to questions: “The Department of Labor’s agreement with the production says that if an accident or equipment malfunction happens as it relates to an aerial performance, we need to be notified. The production has explained to us the details of the accident. They also indicated that they have made changes to prevent this type of accident from happening again. We plan to follow up regularly to ensure that these modifications are adequate.”

Asked what changes had been made as a result of the accident to protect the actors and stagehands, Mr. Miramontez said that Mr. Cohl did not have specific details but “takes the issue of safety extremely seriously and everything is done to make sure that everyone involved in the show is safe and is knowledgeable about safety.”

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Saturday, December 4, 2010

Curtain to Rise on 'Spider-Man'

Ready or not, here comes “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark.”

The most expensive show in Broadway history, at $65 million, or more than twice as much as the previous record-holder, “Shrek the Musical,” “Spider-Man” will hold its first preview performance at 6:30 p.m. on Sunday before more than 1,900 paying theatergoers, reporters, and several of the musical’s nervous producers and investors.

They will witness the latest attempt to run “Spider-Man” from start to finish without stopping, after several failed outings over the past week, when the director, Julie Taymor, had to pause to work on scene transitions and some of the show’s unprecedented technical and special effects. Most new Broadway shows have at least one dress rehearsal before an invitation-only audience, but the producers canceled plans for one to give Ms. Taymor more time to work.

Ms. Taymor expects the first performance to stop at some point to work through technical glitches, executives involved with the production said on Sunday. In addition, the final 10 minutes are not fully finished and may not be entirely staged, according to the executives, who spoke on condition of anonymity because Ms. Taymor and the producers had forbidden public comment on the backstage work.

“Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark,” a musical version of the Marvel Comics superhero story, has attracted enormous media attention and public interest by Broadway standards, in large part because of the money and the talent involved. U2’s Bono and the Edge signed on to create the show nine years ago and have written a full-length score, their first for Broadway. Ms. Taymor soon joined as a Tony Award winner for one of the last musical spectaculars to open on Broadway, “The Lion King.”

The complexity of “Spider-Man” – particularly its flying sequences over the heads of audience members – has also stoked curiosity as well as concern, after two actors were injured (one broke his wrists) performing aerial stunts this fall. And the show’s growing cost – it is likely to exceed $65 million in the end – has drawn attention given the economy and the difficulty of raising money to mount the show. The musical was originally supposed to start performances last January.

The show has been a work in progress since rehearsals began in August. A new ending was conceived in the last few weeks by Ms. Taymor; her co-author of the book, Glen Berger; and by Bono and the Edge. The ending involves a mixture of spectacular effects and intense, intimate moments involving the lead characters Peter Parker (played by Reeve Carney) and Mary Jane Watson (Jennifer Damiano). But 12-hour rehearsal days (though everyone had Thanksgiving off) have not been enough to deal with the show’s many technical elements and the new ending.

The producers had already delayed the latest scheduled start of preview performances by two weeks; Ms. Taymor has said that a further delay would be too expensive. The producers have also canceled several matinee performances in December to give more time to Ms. Taymor and the cast and crew to work on the show.

A spokesman for the production said on Sunday that the estimated running time was two and a half hours, but he acknowledged that he could not say with precision how long the performance would last. Ms. Taymor and the show’s lead producer, Michael Cohl, declined interview requests.

Halting a show midperformance during previews to fix problems; making changes during early weeks of paid performances; and tinkering with production numbers and finales are not unheard of with new and technically ambitious musicals. But most of this work usually occurs during tryout performances in other cities, where producers go to solve problems far from the eyes of Broadway. “Spider-Man,” however, is opening cold on Sunday evening at the 1,932-seat Foxwoods Theater because the producers decided an out-of-town run would be financially unfeasible.

Another new musical, “Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown,” opened cold on Broadway this fall. Several performances were paused because of technical problems, and the show lacked a finale while the initial one was reworked. “Women on the Verge” opened to largely negative reviews in November. “Spider-Man” is scheduled to open on Wednesday night, Jan. 11, 2011, with most theater critics’ reviews coming out the next day.

One threat to starting performances has been tackled: Safety inspectors from the New York State Department of Labor have signed off on the 27 flying sequences in “Spider-Man” without asking for substantive changes, the executives with the production said. The inspectors made their fourth visit to the Foxwoods Theater on Friday to assess the most technically complex flying sequences — some for the second time — and gave the green light to hold Sunday’s performance. The department’s approval is required by law for aerial stunts used in public performances.

The executives added that Ms. Taymor had not made any changes on her own to the major flying scenes, including an elaborate aerial battle over the heads of audience members (without a net) at the end of Act 1 between Spider-Man and one of the show’s villains, the Green Goblin.

Leo Rosales, a spokesman for the state Department of Labor, said in an interview on Sunday that the inspectors had no issues with the safety of the flying maneuvers or their sequence in the show. “We are set,” Mr. Rosales said.

“Spider-Man” has timed a major media rollout to the start of preview performances; the CBS news show “60 Minutes” will broadcast a segment about the musical on Sunday night, a rare feature on a Broadway show on that much-watched television show. The musical is also set to begin running two television commercials in the New York area on Monday; the commercials were created by Jacob Cohl, a son of the lead producer.

The younger Cohl is a filmmaker and photographer who previously directed the documentary “Salt of the Earth” about the Rolling Stones. The band has long worked with Michael Cohl as their lead concert promoter. Jacob Cohl and his crew have hundreds of hours of footage after filming for months at the theater, in rehearsal rooms, and at meetings including Bono, the Edge and Ms. Taymor. The footage is the property of the musical production. If “Spider-Man” is a hit, few doubt that the Cohls and Ms. Taymor, who is also a filmmaker, will spin a documentary or other film project out of the material.

Among those expected in the audience on Sunday night are Lesley Stahl, the “60 Minutes” correspondent on the “Spider-Man” segment, and Sean Hayes, the star of the Broadway musical “Promises, Promises,” according to the executives with the production. Bono and the Edge will not be in the house, however, because they are on tour with U2 in Australia until late December.

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Friday, December 3, 2010

Video: 'Spider-Man' on '60 Minutes'

November 24, 2010, 1:42 pm


“Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark”
will get some national exposure on Sunday night when “60 Minutes” takes a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the technologically complex musical, which is directed by Julie Taymor and has music by Bono and The Edge of the rock band U2. Lesley Stahl, the “60 Minutes” correspondent, started following the development of the show 18 months ago; the curtain goes up on the first preview on Sunday at 6:30 p.m., a half-hour before the program is to air on CBS.

As Patrick Healy reports, “Spider-Man” has been nine years in the making, and is now the most expensive show in Broadway history.

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Thursday, December 2, 2010

Video: A First Look at 'Spider-Man'

November 22, 2010, 6:45 pm

A video posted today on the Facebook page of the new Broadway musical “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark” offers a glimpse of what to date has been one of the season’s biggest secrets: what does the show look like?

The video includes shots of the show’s troubled aerial maneuvers, the superhero’s costume, chorus numbers and rehearsal footage of the 27-year-old actor Reeve Carney, who plays the title character. There are also interview excerpts with the musical’s composers, Bono and the Edge of the rock band U2, and the director Julie Taymor, who describes the show as taking audiences to a “mythic place.”

“We can’t really tell you what this is,” she says to an unseen audience. “But it has rock and roll, it has drama and it has circus.”

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Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Inspectors Haven't Seen Enough Flying for 'Spider-Man' Safety to Pass Muster

Increasing the likelihood of another delay for “Spider-Man: Turn Off The Dark,” the producers of the upcoming $60 million Broadway musical were unable to present all of the two dozen flying and aerial maneuvers on Wednesday for safety inspectors from the New York State Department of Labor, requiring them to return before performances can begin.

A department spokesman, Leo Rosales, said on Wednesday that the producers and director Julie Taymor were prepared to show only several of the maneuvers; the state agency must approve all two dozen in the next 10 days if performances are to begin as scheduled on Sunday, Nov. 14.

“Spider-Man” is expected to involve more flying and special effects than any Broadway show in history, with actors and dancers swinging over the heads of audience members, without nets, inside the Foxwoods Theater. At least one of the flying maneuvers, in which actors are launched from the back of the stage like a slingshot, has raised safety questions after injuries to two performers this fall, including an actor who broke both of his wrists when he landed with serious force on the lip of the stage.

“The producers were not prepared to demonstrate all of the maneuvers today, as they were supposed to, because they weren’t ready for the all of the flying and aerial work to be shown,” Mr. Rosales said. “We made it clear that we need to see every maneuver before they are legally allowed to hold their first performance. This is a unique production, with an unprecedented amount of activity going on directly above audiences, so we want to see each one of those activities demonstrated.”

Ms. Taymor and the producers had been working toward the inspection for weeks, and even had the show’s composers, U2’s Bono and the Edge, on hand as the state employees visited the theater on Wednesday afternoon.

While preview performances for “Spider-Man” are still set to begin on Nov. 14, people inside and outside the production have said this week that the start date may end up being delayed because of the extensive technical work still underway. Any delay is up to Michael Cohl, the lead producer of the musical; he referred questions about the inspection and a possible delay to a spokesman for the production.

The spokesman, Rick Miramontez, said in an e-mail: “The plan has always been to present aerial sequences to the inspectors in stages, as they are developed. This has and will necessitate several visits to the theater.” He did not reply to a question about whether the aerial sequences can be finished and reviewed by the inspectors before next Sunday.

“Spider-Man” was originally supposed to begin performances back in February, but the production shut down for months in 2008 after the original set of producers could not raise the money to capitalize the show, which at the time was estimated to cost around $40 million. Mr. Cohl, a prominent rock-concert promoter for U2, the Rolling Stones, and other bands, came on board as lead producer a year ago and has since raised the money for the show; Mr. Cohl said in September that the musical now cost $60 million, believed to be more than twice as much as the price tag of the previous Broadway show with the biggest budget, “Shrek the Musical.”

Mr. Rosales of the Department of Labor said he could not comment on the inspectors’ findings from their visit today because they were still going over the designs before making safety determinations on each of the maneuvers. He also said he did not know when the producers would be ready to have the inspectors return.

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Friday, November 12, 2010

Another Actor Speaks of 'Spider-Man' Injuries

October 29, 2010, 4:10 pm

6:12 p.m. | Updated

A second actor in the coming musical “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark” was recently injured in rehearsal performing the same sling-shot technique that caused castmate Kevin Aubin to break both of his wrists during a flying demonstration last week. The other actor, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of career considerations, said that the problem for both him and Mr. Aubin involved a “flying glitch.”

“I had broken my feet on the same move a month earlier,” the performer wrote. “Kevin is doing fine though and took it like a champ.”

A spokesman for the “Spider-Man” musical said the actor in question had broken a toe.

The injured actor added, “I can’t believe this is such big news lol” — a sentiment that was echoed in several e-mails, solicited and otherwise, from Broadway dancers and performers on Friday as media reports spread about Mr. Aubin’s injuries. The e-mails described an array of broken ankles, legs, fingers, and arms in musicals like “Mary Poppins,” “The Lion King” and “Wicked” that involve extensive dance and movement and, in some cases, special effects.

One actor, Adrian Bailey, filed a lawsuit against Disney and others in 2008 after falling through a trap door before a performance of “The Little Mermaid” and suffering fractured wrists, a broken back, a shattered pelvis and several injuries. Mr. Bailey alleged that there were inadequate warnings and safety devices to protect performers. The litigation remains ongoing.

Michael Cohl, the lead producer of “Spider-Man,” said in an e-mail on Friday that a “multitude of factors, technical and human,” contributed to last week’s accident. “Our priority from ‘Day 1’ has always been to put safety first,” he said. “We continue every day to make the running of the show a safer experience.”

“Spider-Man” is scheduled to begin performances at the Foxwoods Theater on Nov. 14.

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