Troubled productions: hits and misses
By Emily Christianson, Patrick Kevin Day, Todd Martens, Jevon Phillips and Scott Sandell, Los Angeles Times
Few productions have experienced the setbacks of Julie Taymor’s “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark” musical on Broadway. Actors have sustained injuries; the opening date has been pushed back multiple times; critics have panned it during previews; a script doctor has been brought in for some retooling; and, just this week, director Taymor stepped down from daily operations. And yet, with $65 million already invested in the production and more than $1 million in weekly running costs, the show must go on, lest its producers take a huge bath.
Of course, trouble does not always translate to failure in the end, as a look at past productions will tell you. Click through for a look at ones that pulled through similar troubles and those that failed. (Jacob Cohl / Associated Press)
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Just two days before opening night, the L.A. Opera was forced to postpone the show. The official word was, “computer malfunctions caused a large pivoting platform, central to scenery designer George Tsypins large-scale set, to stop working, causing the platforms internal mechanisms to break.” The delay cost the production $300,000 and weak reviews added insult to injury. But somehow “Grendel” still managed to break even. The opera recouped the losses and even profited an additional $70,000, with the last three shows completely sold out. (Lori Shepler / Los Angeles Times)
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The tale behind this album inspired a book, and was the subject of the