Spider-Man Turn Off the Dark 2011 - Articles Page 18.6

Run Time:
2 hours and 45 minutes, with one intermission
Ages: Y
Opened: June 14, 2011
Closing: January 04, 2014

Spider-Man Turn Off the Dark - 2011 - Broadway History , Info & More

Foxwoods Theatre
213 W. 42nd St. New York, NY 10036

SPIDER-MAN Turn Off The Dark features music and lyrics by 22-time Grammy Award-winners Bono and The Edge and a book co-written by Julie Taymor, Glen Berger and Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, with direction by Ms. Taymor and additional direction by Philip William McKinley. Scenic Designer George Tsypin and Costume Designer Eiko Ishioka are winners of Outer Critics Circle Awards and were nominated for Tony Awards for their work on SPIDER-MAN Turn Off The Dark.

Spider-Man Turn Off the Dark - 2011 - Broadway Cast

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Spider-Man Turn Off the Dark - 2011 - Broadway Articles Page 18.6

SPIDER-MAN Issued Safety Violations by NY State Department of Labor
by Robert Diamond - February 12, 2011


The New York Times is reporting that the New York State Department of Labor has issued two safety violations against SPIDER-MAN over accidents that occured in 2010 including Christopher Tierney's incident and those actors who were injured while rehearsing.

Cindy Adams Jumps on SPIDER-MAN Bandwagon 'Spider-Crap'
by Robert Diamond - February 12, 2011


Syndicated columnist Cindy Adams is the latest to weigh in on SPIDER-MAN, write in her column that:

STAGE TUBE: Listen to SPIDER-MAN Reeve Carney Play Acoustic 'Bohemian Rhapsody'
by Kelsey Denette - February 11, 2011


Reeve Carney performs songs by one iconic rock group every night with SPIDER-MAN, Turn Off the Dark's score being written by U2's Bono and The Edge, but he recently sang another famed group's song when he performed Queen's 'Bohemian Rhapsody' for Rolling Stone. View Carney's performance below!

SPIDER-MAN Finds its Pull-Quotes in Reviews!
by Charlie Piane - February 11, 2011


With SPIDER-MAN TURN OFF THE DARK's less-than-appealing reviews hitting newsstands this week, the producers of the $65 million giant have sifted through the critiques to find their pull-quotes for marketing. Were the chosen quotes used in context of the original reviews? BroadwayWorld lets you decide by offering the following comparison!

SPIDER-MAN Seeks Feedback from Focus Groups
by Kelsey Denette - February 11, 2011


With SPIDER-MAN's less-than-appealing reviews hitting newsstands this week, the producers of the $65 million giant are looking to see what the average audience member thinks of the production by offering 'goodie bags' to those who participate in focus groups. According to the New York Times, however, participants will not be viewing the entire show. They will view one act only - either act one or act two, not both.

STAGE TUBE: Patrick Page on SPIDER-MAN Safety, Reviews
by Jessica Lewis - February 10, 2011


So what does the SPIDER-MAN cast think of the harsh reviews the show received earlier this week? Click below to hear what Green Goblin Patrick Page had to say on MSNBC's Morning Joe earlier today.

Script Changes & Other Work Continues on SPIDER-MAN
by Robert Diamond - February 10, 2011


After what's reported as two sold out shows yesterday, the cast of SPIDER-MAN will be back at work in rehearsal this afternoon, on tech work on the still being tweaked 'Deeply Furious', flying work, understudy rehearsals and more. The cast is also working on new scene work as well, with unspecified changes coming to the script of the show, which despite the reviews earlier this week remains fully committed to going forward and to doing more work on the show until their official opening on March 15th. There's no word however if any substantial changes are planned for any of the issues that were raised across the board by multiple critics.

STAGE TUBE: Post-Reviews, SPIDER-MAN Tagged 'National Joke'
by Kelsey Denette - February 9, 2011


After many major newspapers published their reviews for SPIDER-MAN Turn Off the Dark on Tuesday, other major news outlets are picking up on the buzz: the $65 million (and counting) spectacle was essentially lambasted across the board. With a headline that screamed 'THE NATIONAL JOKE', NBC's The Today Show spoke with critic Ben Brantley and producer Michael Cohl, and had a look at the reviews, saying '[The reviewers note that] the show is 'hanging on by a thread'...'laughable'...and these are the good ones.' Watch the segment below!

'Not Legitimate Reviewers' Says SPIDER-MAN's Cohl
by Robert Diamond - February 8, 2011


SPIDER-MAN's lead producer, Michael Cohl spoke exclusively to Entertainment Weekly and told them that 'Any of the people who review the show and say that it has no redeeming value are just not legitmate reviewers, period. It's hard to have people that don't get pop culture reviewing a pop culture event, isn't it?'

'UNCOOL!' Says SPIDER-MAN Rep!
by Robert Diamond - February 8, 2011


Spider-Man spokesperson Rick Miramontez gave an exclusive statement to Entertainment Weekly about his reaction to the show's reviews. What'd he say? 'The PILE-ON by the critics was ridiculous and uncalled for. Their actions are unprecedented and UNCOOL!' Click Here for the EW piece.

BroadwayWorld's nonReview of Spider-Man
by Michael Dale - February 8, 2011


Why you won't see a review of Spider-Man from BroadwayWorld today.

NY Times on SPIDER-MAN 'Sheer Ineptitude' and 'Beyond Repair'
by Robert Diamond - February 7, 2011


In the New York Times, Ben Brantley writes that 'You are of course entitled to disagree with our decision. But from what I saw on Saturday night, 'Spider-Man' is so grievously broken in every respect that it is beyond repair. Fans of Ms. Taymor's work on the long-running musical 'The Lion King,' adapted from the animated Walt Disney feature, will have to squint charitably to see evidence of her talent. True, signature Taymor touches like airborne puppets, elaborate masks and perspective-skewing sets (George Tsypin is the scenic designer) are all on hand. But they never connect into a comprehensible story with any momentum. Often you feel as if you were watching the installation of Christmas windows at a fancy department store. At other times the impression is of being on a soundstage where a music video is being filmed in the early 1980s. (Daniel Ezralow's choreography is pure vintage MTV.)

USA Today Says SPIDER-MAN 'Worth Rooting For'
by Robert Diamond - February 7, 2011


In USA Today, Elysa Gardner bucks the trend thus far and writes that 'And while the state-of-the-art visuals can be stunning - not just the aerial sequences, but Kyle Cooper's blazing projection design - some of the most affecting touches are low-tech. Before Spider-Man first takes flight, the dancers doing his stunts leap and twitch like giddy children perfecting a new trick. Bono and Edge's songs aspire to the same emotional sweep. In a USA TODAY interview in November, Bono described the 'operatic' scope of U2's music. There are tunes here, melodic and undeniably theatrical, that confirm that determination to transcend sentimentality that links them to tunesmiths from Bruce Springsteen to Rodgers and Hammerstein. For more, tune in again in March. But know this for now: Spider-Man's creative team is trying to bring musical theater back to the future. And that's a mission worth rooting for.'

Variety & The Hollywood Reporter Tackle SPIDER-MAN
by Robert Diamond - February 7, 2011


In the Hollywood Reporter David Rooney writes that 'But mostly, Spider-Man is chaotic, dull and a little silly. And there's nothing here half as catchy as the 1967 ABC cartoon theme tune. The absence of the word 'musical' from Taymor's definition of the show seems key. The songs by Bono and The Edge display minimal grasp of music's function in goosing narrative or illuminating character. And despite all the wailing-guitar attitude, they only squeak by as atmospheric enhancement. Aside from one or two stirring anthems in familiar messianic U2 mode, this is strictly album filler, with echoes of everyone from T. Rex to Alice Cooper, plus an occasional nod to The Who's Tommy. The lyrics - when you can decipher them - are either too vague or too literal. But an underwhelming score is the least of the show's worries. What really sinks it is the borderline incoherence of its storytelling. ' Click Here for His Full Report.

LA Times on SPIDER-MAN 'Incoherence'
by Robert Diamond - February 7, 2011


Here's what Charles McNulty had to say for the LA Times: But the time has come to assess the work, not the hullabaloo surrounding it. So much emphasis has been placed on the technological hurdles, the notion that 'Spider-Man' is trying things that have never been attempted before in a Broadway house. What sinks the show, however, has nothing to do with glitches in the special effects. To revise a handy little political catch phrase, 'It's the storytelling, stupid.' And on that front, the failure rests squarely on Taymor's run-amok direction. This is, after all, her vision, and it's a vision that has been indulged with too many resources, artistic and financial. The production, lacking the clarity that's born out of tough choices, adds when it should subtract, accelerates when it should slow down. Taymor's inventive staging of 'The Lion King' was a victory for the craft and commerce of theater alike. But the investors of 'Spider-Man' have inadvertently bankrolled an artistic form of megalomania.

Chicago Tribune Reviews SPIDER-MAN 'tangled web'
by Robert Diamond - February 7, 2011


Here's what Chris Jones had to say for the Chicago Tribune:'After the $65 million spent, the endless delays, the injuries, the cast changes, the incessant spinning of stories on the Web, Julie Taymor's 'Spider-Man Turn Off the Dark' now has to be willing to stand in the light. Deck chairs can be rearranged forever.

Bloomberg on SPIDER-MAN 'Remains Inert After 65 Previews'
by Robert Diamond - February 7, 2011


Here's what Jeremy Gerard had to say for Bloomberg:'Preview number 65 was no improvement over number 30. In fact, it was worse. After all this expenditure of talent and money, 'Spider- Man' is probably unfixable because too much has gone into making humans fly, which is not what they are good at. It imitates poorly what the 'Spider-Man' movies do brilliantly with computer graphics -- and without putting live actors in jeopardy.

Washington Post on SPIDER-MAN '170 spirit-snuffing minutes'
by Robert Diamond - February 7, 2011


Here's what the Washington Post had to say:If you're going to spend $65 million and not end up with the best musical of all time, I suppose there's a perverse distinction in being one of the worst. What's apparent after 170 spirit-snuffing minutes in the Foxwoods Theatre - interrupted by the occasional burst of aerial distraction - is that director Julie Taymor, of 'The Lion King' fame, left a few essential items off her lavish shopping list:

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