‘Spider-Man’ to resume performances after accident
NEW YORK, USA
The producers of the troubled “Spider-Man” musical on Broadway said they have enacted new safety measures ordered by the government and will resume performances on Wednesday night.
A spokesman for “Spider-Man: Turn off the Dark,” Rick Miramontez, said producers met with federal and state labor officials and the Actors’ Equity Association yesterday to discuss additional safety measures after a performer doing an aerial stunt fell about 30 feet (9 meters). He said the measures will be enacted immediately but did not immediately say what changes the show would make.
Producers postponed the musical’s scheduled Wednesday matinee, but the web-slinger will take the stage again on Wednesday night.
Firefighters were called to the Foxwoods Theatre at about 10:45 p.m. Monday after the 31-year-old performer fell near the end of the latest preview performance. He was taken to Bellevue Hospital with minor injuries, police said.
Police did not release the actor’s name, but a performer in the show identified him as Christopher Tierney. The performer spoke on condition of anonymity because the performer was not authorized to speak publicly about the accident.
Tierney is the show’s main aerialist and performs stunts for the roles of Spider-Man, and the villains Meeks and Kraven.
Audience member Christine Bord was sitting behind a perch on the balcony. The actors who fly over the audience stop on that small ramp.
“It looks like part of the New York City skyline … like a building and Spider-Man was up on the top of that … ramp,” she said. “The actress who was playing Mary Jane came off of that at the bottom. In the scene, of course, Spider-Man was supposed to come down and we’re assuming save Mary Jane at the end of the scene but instead he came flying down and he just slid right off the bottom of that ramp into the pit below and came tumbling down into the stage.
“He was being held up by a wire and you could see at the end of the wire there was maybe a weight or something that kind of came following after him,” Bord said. “And then after they both came down, it was just silent and you started to hear people screaming in the pit.”
The production has been under investigation by the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration for several weeks, according to the agency.
New York City officials said Tuesday there is no separate city investigation of the production.
Scott Fisher, president of Fisher Technical Services Inc., in Las Vegas, which builds the equipment that does the automated and powered aerial stunts for the show, said the rope involved in the accident was clipped to the stage at one end and clipped to the performer’s back at the other end.
“The stage crew would have been responsible for making the connection for hooking him up,” said Fisher. “The actor is responsible for making the final check that he’s good to go. It’s sort of like packing your own parachute.
“The move itself is part of the staging of the show. He does a freeze-frame move at the end of the ramp to make it look like he’s going to go forward and go after the girl and the lanyard is what stops him. … So he runs and stops and freezes in a position that you wouldn’t normally be able to hold unless you had a little support from behind him. If that’s not hooked up and he leans forward, he’s going to fall forward.”
Fisher said the rope involved in the accident is not part of his company’s flight systems and that he hasn’t heard whether it was actually a failure of the rope or a bad hookup. But he said it was unlikely that the rope would have snapped: It’s a 10,000-pound (4,500-kilogram) line that would be very difficult to break.
Actress Natalie Mendoza, who plays Spider-Man’s evil love interest Arachne and herself was injured during the show’s first preview last month, posted a Twitter message asking people to pray for the actor.
“Please pray with me for my friend Chris, my superhero who quietly inspires me everyday with his spirit. A light in my heart went dim tonight.”
Miramontez said the fall happened about seven minutes before the end of the performance, and the show was stopped.
“All signs were good as he was taken to the hospital for observation,” Miramontez said.
On Friday, the show’s lead producer Michael Cohl delayed the show’s official opening for the second time, pushing it back 27 days, from Jan. 11 to February 7.
In a statement that day, Cohl said, “The creative team is implementing truly exciting changes throughout the preview process. Due to some unforeseeable setbacks, most notably the injury of a principal cast member, it has become clear that we need to give the team more time to fully execute their vision.”
The US$65 million musical was conceived by Tony Award-winning director and co-writer Julie Taymor and U2’s Bono and The Edge, who wrote the music. More than eight years in the making, delays and money woes have plagued the show’s launch. Three other accidents have injured actors, including one who had both his wrists broken while practicing an aerial stunt.
The show’s massive costs — a 41-member cast, 18 orchestra members, complicated sets and 27 daring aerial stunts, including a battle between two characters over the audience — mean the 1,928-seat theater will have to virtually sell out every show for several years just to break even. The weekly running bill has been put as high as US$1 million. (Tickets are priced from US$67.50 – US$135 for weekday performances and US$67.50-US$140 for weekend performances.)
The first preview on November 28 did not go well. The musical had to be halted five times because of technical glitches and Mendoza was hit in the head by a rope and suffered a concussion. Her injury would eventually keep her sidelined for two weeks.
The show — whose costs easily dwarf Broadway’s last costliest show, the US$25 million “Shrek The Musical” — may be about a comic-book hero, but it has now itself become easy fodder for late night TV comics.
——AP
Photo: Spider Man Fall
A television news van is parked in front of Foxwoods Theatre yesterday in New York. The troubled Broadway musical “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark” was plagued by its fourth accident since it began previews last month when a performer doing an aerial stunt fell about 30 feet, fire officials said. (Photo: AP)