The
Titanic's sinking occurred over 111 years ago and yet it still holds a special
place in not only history, but popular culture as well. If you are reading this
you probably know its history already. It crashed into an iceberg on its maiden
voyage from Southampton, England to New York City. One thousand, five hundred
and twenty two men, women, and children perished in the freezing water.Whether from James Cameron's Oscar- winning
film, multiple documentaries throughout the years, or the smash hit stage musical
being reviewed here (the filmed version), people have been drawn to its tragic
story.
The
musical first opened on Broadway April 23, 1997 and ran for 804 performances.
It
won
all five Tony Awards it was nominated for, Best Musical, Best Book, and Best
Score, along with Best Orchestrations and Scenic Design, and successfully
toured both the US and Europe for years. In its current "revival"
Fathom Events, along with By Experience, are bringing the production of the
recent UK tour to the silver screen.I
did not see the original production. I feel it puts me in a better position to
review this filmed version as I have no preconceived notions or memories about
the show.
Twenty
five actors perform in this filmed version as opposed to forty three in the
Broadway production. From what I read about the Broadway version, the set was
so expensive (it tried to encompass all three classes of passengers along with
the ship's bridge), there were no out-of-town tryouts. In this filmed version,
since it was a tour, the producers made a similar, if smaller set for the show,
but whether it was or not a recreation, it is, once getting past slight
distractions, a very good set.
(Photo: Pamela Raith)
The
cast is terrific. Standouts are Martin Allanson as J. Bruce Ismay, director of
the White Star line, the "Villain" of the show, cast with a Snidely
Whiplash moustache is, if not "evil incarnate," than at least
"evil a-boat-ate."Graham
Bickley as the put-upon by Ismay ship's Captain Edward Smith, is one of the
most sympathetic characters, Alice Beane, as portrayed by Bree Smith is the
social climbing, selfish wife who sneaks into First Class to hobnob with the
hoi polloi who puts her marriage at risk. Adam Filipe as Stoker Frederick
Barrett is an experienced stoker, who becomes engaged to be married through the
wireless while at sea. He knows the voyage is at risk due to Ismay's
machinations to increase the ship's speed to set the Atlantic crossing speed
record.
To
list all the wonderful performances and numbers would take too much time and
effort, as I am not being paid by the word.
This
filmed version will be available to see at over 700 U.S. theaters country-wide
on November 4th and 8th. At approximately $20/a seat, it is a whale of a
bargain to see this multi-award winning show.