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Showing posts with label broadway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label broadway. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Angry Reaction as Theater Critics Cross the Line on 'Spider-Man'


This past weekend theater insiders were surprised when two critics, Jeremy Gerard of Bloomberg News and Linda Winer of Newsday, crossed an unspoken line and published their takes on Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark, more than five weeks before opening night on February 7th.

The result has not pleased representatives for the troubled production.

"For a major critic to review a Broadway musical, or play for that matter, after only the twentieth preview, is disappointing and uncalled for,” Spider-Man’s spokesperson, press agent Rick Miramontez said in a written statement .

“Whatever reason the critic or their editor may have, it does not mask the fact that for decades, musicals have developed in front of paying audiences before critics are INVITED," he added. "While we are certainly not naive about the media scrutiny attached to this production, as we have been accommodating throughout, this unprecedented new development is troubling, to say the least."

Winer’s piece in Newsday on Christmas acknowledged that she “broke Broadway’s gentleperson’s agreement,” by purchasing a ticket for a preview.

The common practice on Broadway is to invite critics to one of several “critic’s previews” right before opening once the producers and creative team have deemed the show finished. Their reviews are embargoed until after the curtain falls on opening night.

But Winer wrote that with all the news about the show -- the opening delayed for the fourth time and audiences buying full price tickets for previews, -- “it seems that critics are now the only interested parties who can’t see the bride before the wedding.”

Her piece was less a review than a report, though she did acknowledge that the show’s vaunted flying effects are “exciting and scary, in a circus way,” and that director Julie Taymor was “said to be making much-needed changes to the meandering book, especially in the weak second act.” The rest of the criticism came from audience members Winer interviewed, one of whom complained the music was “weak” and another who said she “didn’t think this is theater for adults.”

Bloomberg's Gerard wrote a full-out review, although he acknowledged that this was an “interim report” and fully intends to re-review the show and publish it the day after Spider-Man opens. Like Winer, Gerard purchased a ticket (one of the $292.50 “premium’ seats in the orchestra).

He praised the sets, lighting and choreography, acknowledged the short-lived thrill of some of the flying effects, but came down hard on the show itself: “an unfocused hodge-podge of story-telling, myth-making and spectacle that comes up short in every department. Can it be saved? Ask me on Feb. 8.”

Reached by phone, Gerard explained his decision to “breach the compact” that critics hold off on seeing a show and publishing their opinions until asked by the producers. He explains that “in the past, previews were given for a limited time and tickets were discounted pretty heavily.” But, in the case of Spider-Man, the ads don’t acknowledge the show is a work-in-progress and most theatergoers are paying full price.

“My own feeling,” he says, “is that when they postponed from December to January to, now February, asking critics to wait was just too much. I had an obligation to the readers to get involved in the conversation.” He adds that with his review “you’re getting more than gossip, more than a hospital report, more than a ga-ga report about the flying.”

Gerard, who has covered theater for the New York Times, Variety and New York Magazine, as well as Bloomberg, points out that there are several precedents. When shows tried out regularly on the road, critics like Richard Coe in the Washington Post and Elliot Norton in several Boston newspapers reviewed unfinished products and “were proud to be part of the process.”

And a couple of Broadway shows with unusually lengthy preview periods, Nick & Nora (1991, 71 previews) and Sarava (1979, 39 previews), were reviewed by critics before they officially opened. While Gerard doesn’t see his interim review of Spider-Man as the start of a trend, he doesn’t discount the possibility of doing something similar in the future should circumstances warrant it.

“I’m comfortable in doing the responsible thing,” he says. “It’s a show there’s great interest in.”

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

PHOTOS: Inside Broadway's $60 Million Production of 'Spider-Man'




See the first pictures from the set of the daredevil show, in which actor Reeve Carney "can fly through the theater at 40 miles an hour," says director Julie Taymor.

The December issue of Vogue (on newsstands Nov. 23) has exclusive photos from Broadway's $60 million production of Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark, the most expensive show to hit the Great White Way's stages.

The show, which is slated to begin previews at Foxwoods Theatre later this month after several delays due to safety issues (one actor broke both his wrists in a slingshot stunt gone wrong), is directed by Julie Taymor and features songs by U2's Bono and The Edge. It stars newcomer Reeve Carney.

“Spider-Man is a genuine American myth with a dark, primal power,” Taymor tells Vogue. “But it’s also got this great superhero, and -- hey! -- he can fly through the theater at 40 miles an hour. It’s got villains, it’s got skyscrapers, it’s colorful, it’s Manhattan. I knew it would be a challenge, but I saw the inherent theatricality in it, and I couldn’t resist.”

The bright costumes were photographed by Annie Leibovitz for Vogue and designed by Tony nominee Eiko Ishioka. “Julie wanted me to add elements of crazy fantasy to create a world that was dangerous, risky,” Ishioka says. “Something that makes audiences go, ‘Wow!’

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http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/photos-broadways-60-million-production-45482

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Corey Feldman: Steven Spielberg, Cast, Director Want to Do 'Goonies' Sequel



Corey Feldman, who starred in the 1985 cult movie that was distributed by Warner Bros., tells that everyone, including Goonies writer Steven Spielberg, co-star Sean Astin and director Richard Donner, wants to reunite for a sequel. “I would do it if [the studio] was serious, but unfortunately they can’t seem to get it together,” he says.

“We all like to see it happen, but it’s one of those stumbling blocks where no matter how much love there is ...,” Feldman tells THR at the Grayson’s Gift benefit in Santa Monica’s Hotel Casa Del Mar on Thursday. “The No. 1 question that’s always been asked of me for the last 20 years is, ‘Will there be a sequel to Goonies?,’ and unfortunately my answer is always the same. It’s not up to me, you know, it’s the studio.”

“They treasure this film, as you know. It is literally their greatest family film title of all time. That’s the way they see it. It’s always on the top 25, all DVD sales around the world all the time,” he says. “If we go and throw a sequel out there that’s lesser [in quality,] then suddenly we may hurt this continuous cash cow.”

Even though a sequel is in the very, very distant future (Feldman makes a point to say that he would never be a part of a Goonies remake), he discusses the real prospects of it going to stage, which has been widely reported.

“They are talking about doing a Broadway musical and I know Richard Donner is really behind that,” Feldman says. “He’s a dear friend of mine and we talk about it quite often and he said that they finally got a great script in which he’s very excited about.”

Would he willing to be a part of that project then? “If they did it, I would be open to doing something. I mean, I don’t think I could play Mouth at this point in the game, I’m a little old to be playing a kid,” he says. “But I would be open to maybe the Fratelli brothers or something. If they offered it, I would definitely be open to it.”

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