That is not true the trap door is still there just not on tour. I can promise you Stephanie did not get hurt by any other way than just the trap. What did she do then?
If this is true, then what did Stephanie do to hurt herself? And Brian I am a boy and even though I do not post all the time, I am on this board a lot. So do make it seem like I could not know anything. Updated On: 12/14/07 at 11:45 AM
Madame Morrible: "So you take the chicken, now it must be a white chicken. The corpse can be any color. And that is the spell for lost luggage!" - The Yellow Brick Road Not Taken
You'd think hardcore Wicked fans would know this! The trap door isn't used when she melts. It's used afterward. I haven't seen the show in over three years and I remember that. Oy.
her hand was hit in a traffic accident by a spear/staff from one of the guards.
it was badly injured and she was a total pro to finish the show. she was hurt and really crying audibly in sebastian's arms...leaving the show. she was in such pain, she did not take a bow. that's a first...well, a 2nd. maybe.
what a pro to finish. shows can be so dangerous...good that such an accident wasn't any worse.
"I can promise you Stephanie did not get hurt by any other way than just the trap." No offense, wickedmenzel, but unless you were there, or are involved with the show, or are a personal friend whom she told herself, you really can't "promise" this. fsuchris says he has said all he could--we should respect that. Plus, why do we really *need* to know anything other than that it wasn't serious?
(BTW--fsuchris, I'm assuming your username means you're from my alma mater. )
don't read too much into white guy's description of "badly injured". Not to downplay what happened but thank goodness it isn't too serious. She'll be just fine.
Reading about this accident possibly caused by the trap door reminds me of the accident on the set of the Wizard of Oz film. Margaret Hamilton as the Wicked Witch of the West was about to "disappear" in a ball of fire in Munchkin Land. There was a sliding trap door and an elevator of sorts which was supposed to drop Hamilton below the sound stage safely in a burst of smoke, after which there is a ball of fire. Well, the ball of fire came too soon and badly burned Hamilton who was out of the film for weeks while she recuperated. The green coating on Hamilton's hands caught fire, making the experience very painful. The scene that appears in the film was the first take which went perfectly. The second take was made after a lunch break as "insurance" of the scene, and that second take was when the accident took place. The fire ball scene, as effective as it was, was not used again in the film, for obvious reasons.
Gosh...the drama here! Trap door, no trap door... theater is serious work. Accidents happen. I'm just glad SJB is ok. She's one of the best to play this part. Had she been lead when it opened, she would have had the Tony...hands down!
Stephanie is fine, but will be out of the show tonight to rest up.
Tonya Pinkins: Then we had a "Lot's Wife" last June that was my personal favorite. I'm still trying to get them to let me sing it at some performance where we get to sing an excerpt that's gone.
Tony Kushner: You can sing it at my funeral.
Actually what really happened is that Idina got angry that Stephanie was doing such a good job, and she paid one of the chorus members to stab Stephanie, but Stephanie is a quick one so they missed and only got her hand.
For those who think that in theatre ONLY trap doors are problems; and I know it's not all of you. But, come one, there are so many ways actors get hurt in all sorts of shows.
I have an injury for every show I've ever done! Of course, I am a clutz and that makes sense. A set piece was moved and hit me in the mouth, during blackout -- gave me a fat lip; tripping in the dark (happens to any actor at any given time); a dance number and someone kicks or swings too far or you didn't keep your space far enough away, prop malfunctions, costume malfunctions . . . actors sitting on the floor gets hands stepped on by walking actors, twisting an ankle in the middle of a scene, etc., etc.
In short, there's a million different ways to get hurt during live shows . . .
And I am very happy to hear that SJB got through it and is better.
I've gotten hurt plenty of times by various things in shows, too. And no trap doors were involved!
Tripped on my costume and fell down a flight of stairs from the green room once on my way down to the backstage area at one theatre. Got hit on the head by a fly that was coming down and no one said anything about it coming down, so obviously I was kind of really mad at the stagehands around me. Then in my most recent show, it wasn't even anything in the show that hurt me other than the dancing -- I got shin-splints, of all things! Those things hurt like heck... eesh.