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How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?

How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?

antonijan Profile Photo
antonijan
#1How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 2:45pm

Did the musical have a mock-up of the ship and how did they show it sinking?

Can anybody elaborate?

I almost got a titanic musical memorabilia on ebay but I lost How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Inside the Titanic

Yankeefan007
#2re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 2:47pm

The set lifted and tilted.

Jon
#3re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 2:50pm

To elaborate, there was a three level set, all on hydraulic lifts. All through Act 2, the floor gradually sloped more and more (Stage left lifting up in the air) until it reached a 45 degree angle.

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antonijan
#4re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 2:52pm

So the whole ship wasn't shown? Did they use projection?

PS. Your icon look similar to the "Baptized to the Bone".

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CurtainPullDowner
#5re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 2:53pm

There was a little boat too, but it was only used at the very end if Act I, when it hit the iceberg.
Updated On: 5/3/09 at 02:53 PM

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blaxx
#6re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 2:55pm

So the whole ship wasn't shown?

That can't be a real question...


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Mr Roxy
#7re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 2:56pm

We had tickets for a preview which was cancelled as they could not get it to sink.

The ship at the end of the first act was very effective.


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Pippin
#8re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 2:58pm

basically for the last half of the 2nd act all the sets were at a 45 degree angle, and then during "andrew's vision", the platform that the actors were on gradually started to tilt farther and farther, the stage right side being raised, and the stage left side being lowered. It probably got up to a 35-40 defree angle with about 20 actors on it all to the stage right side.

Mr. Andrews was actually under that level, and he could be seen singing the song, looking over blueprints and whatnot. he was stage left, and a grand piano was stage right.

At the climax of the song, the piano started to slide down toward stage left toward Andrews, ultimately killing him, while a backdrop of stars upstage of the ship was lifted, and a black scrim which was downstage was simultaneously dropped. A lot was going on in a 10 second time period, and the traffic of the drops created an optical illusion that really made the ship look like it was sinking into the stage. It was very effective- when it worked.


"I'm an American, Damnit!!! And if it's three things I don't believe in, it's quitting and math."
Updated On: 5/2/09 at 02:58 PM

ZONEACE
#9re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 3:01pm

They hit an ice berg.


when ducks grow thumbs then maybe my opinion will change.

antonijan Profile Photo
antonijan
#10re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 3:10pm

Very interesting. Too bad it flopped re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?

I wonder if they can re-create this regionally.

Anybody seen a version outside of broadway?

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Bettyboy72
#11re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 3:16pm

Actually, Titanic is produced alot in many venues, including high schools and community theatres because it has a large, diverse cast. Plus, I think the music is great. The score is lovely. Ive seen a few scaled down versions and most leave the sinking of the sink to the audience imagination with blackouts or curtains rising from the bottom of the stage.


"The sexual energy between the mother and son really concerns me!"-random woman behind me at Next to Normal "I want to meet him after and bang him!"-random woman who exposed her breasts at Rock of Ages, referring to James Carpinello

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DAME
#12re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 3:17pm

It was a boring show. Torture. Why would anyone make Highschool kids put on anything so dour? Yuck.


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Updated On: 5/2/09 at 03:17 PM

jejr
#13re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 3:32pm

In the touring version, the set tilten to about 45 degrees then a black curtain slowly rose from the front of the stage until the whole stage was in blackness and then a black out. It was extremely effective and you could hear sniffles and gasps from the audience. You really felt that you were watching the ship go down.

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Bettyboy72
#14re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 3:38pm

Dame, high school kids are OBSESSED with Titanic and they love doing the show. It makes them feel like Leo or Kate. They love it, plus it makes them feel like they are "acting." They get to do accents and stuff and all the stage mothers get to think their child is sooooo talented. It works out for everyone. Plus, its so much better than another frickin production of Grease.


"The sexual energy between the mother and son really concerns me!"-random woman behind me at Next to Normal "I want to meet him after and bang him!"-random woman who exposed her breasts at Rock of Ages, referring to James Carpinello

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dramamama611
#15re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 3:38pm

I actually loved this on B'way, and I went unwillingly.

I thought the mini boat, howwever, was the worst part of it.


If we're not having fun, then why are we doing it? These are DISCUSSION boards, not mutual admiration boards. Discussion only occurs when we are willing to hear what others are thinking, regardless of whether it is alignment to our own thoughts.

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Bettyboy72
#16re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 4:28pm

The audience laughed at the mini-boat during the tour when I saw it...there were also a few "awww"s, like "aw, that is so cute." My friend was a local wig person for the tour stop in buffalo and said the cast was so downtrodden by all the bad reviews.


"The sexual energy between the mother and son really concerns me!"-random woman behind me at Next to Normal "I want to meet him after and bang him!"-random woman who exposed her breasts at Rock of Ages, referring to James Carpinello

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CATSNYrevival
#17re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 4:37pm

I'll never understand why people laughed at the mini boat, but I've read that it was more effective depending on where you were sitting. It looked amazing from my seat and I was also impressed with the watter effect underneath the ship and how it all disappeared in the quick blackout.

jimmycurry01
#18re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 4:47pm

I saw it in the Civic Opera House when it was still an equity tour in Chicago. I had pretty good seats, front center mezz, and the little ship looked pretty funny and a whole lot of people were laughing at it. I think people were disappointed in the show in General. The Music was great, the sinking effect was cool, but the very similar effect of Javert jumping into the Seine in Les Miz was more impressive to me.

#19re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 8:03pm

To me, the most effective moment was at the top of act 2, as the first class passengers gathered in the salon and bitched about being awakened for nothing. During a pause in the song, a rolling bar cart suddenly rolled across stage as the ship was starting to sink. The simple easy effect brought the drama home far better than any of the subsequent hydraulics.

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broadway122
#20re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 11:36pm

Our drama teacher is considering this for next years musical. It sounds like one very technical piece.


"i had no idea billy elliot was about one boy's triumph over epilepsy."-FindingNamo

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CATSNYrevival
#21re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/2/09 at 11:57pm

It doesn't have to be. It just was on Broadway.

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broadway122
#22re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/3/09 at 12:07am

Oh. Just curious, how have other productions of Titanic executed the sinking of the ship?


"i had no idea billy elliot was about one boy's triumph over epilepsy."-FindingNamo

Chrysanthemum62001
#23re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/3/09 at 12:11am

I love it when Michael Cerveris talks about this show. I would sell someones first born to have seen it.


"What a mystery this world. One day you love them and the next day you want to kill them a thousand times over." The Masked Bandit in THE FALL

antonijan Profile Photo
antonijan
#24re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/3/09 at 1:34am

Thanks for all the information.

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frontrowcentre2
#25re: How did the Titanic sink on Broadway?
Posted: 5/3/09 at 2:07am

CatsNY is right. It doesn't HAVE to be all that elaborate. In fact watching the Broadway production I wished they had gone with a minimalist staging (thing GRAND HOTEL at sea and you'll get the idea.)

Trouble was the set was huge but some of the drops looked cheap and scenes such as the first class dining room cried out for an opulence that was missing.

Also director Richard Jones seemed so concerned with the technical aspects he wasn't giving more than general direction to the cast. (Jones was not even nominated for a Tony that year.) Fortunately most were able to develop some kind of characterization from Peter Stones' very thin script.

But the show had moments. The tableau at the end of act one when the set cleared away and se saw the mighty Titanic off in the distance sailing across the ocean and off stage to a crash. Blackout. I thought it was brilliant. But when I first heard about it I must admit it sounded chintzy. Then I saw it and saw how effective it was.

Maury Yeston's score was (as any who have heard the cast album know) gorgeous. The show was helped by first by Rosie O'Donnell constantly plugging it, then winning the Tony award, and finally when the phenomenally successful movie coming out 8 months later. Unfortunately the movie was so huge that within a year there was Titanic backlash and audiences grew weary of hearing about it. The receipts for the show fell off rather dramatically in the winter of 1999 and the show closed still in the red. It was a flawed show but certainly interesting. I know at least two community theatre groups here are planning to mount it next spring.


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Live theatre does not use a "soundtrack." If it did, it wouldn't be live theatre!

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