Newsmaker
'Spider-Man' stuntman falls during Broadway preview
Updated: 2010-12-22 09:04
(Agencies)
NEW YORK - A leading stuntman in the Broadway musical "Spider-Man" was recovering in hospital on Tuesday after falling 30 feet (9.1 meters) during a performance in yet another setback for the troubled musical.
The poster for the Broadway show "Spider-Man: Turn Off The Dark" is seen outside the Foxwoods Theatre in New York December 21, 2010. A leading stuntman in the Broadway musical "Spider-Man" was recovering in a hospital on Tuesday after falling 30 feet (9.1 meters) during a performance in yet another setback for the troubled musical. [Photo/Agencies]
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The show's main aerialist Christopher Tierney was taken to a nearby hospital for observation after he fell from a high platform about seven minutes before the end of the performance, the show's spokesman Rick Miramontez said in a statement.
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"You just hear a bang. And then you hear the actress who plays Mary Jane, she was screaming and crying. The audience was a little disturbed and then everybody was quiet," he said.
The fall is the latest mishap for the $65 million musical in recent months. Actors were stuck suspended in mid-air during the show's first preview and there have been several delays to the official opening.
A lead actress in the musical, written by U2 rockers Bono and The Edge and easily the most expensive Broadway show ever produced, suffered a concussion earlier this month when she was hit by a rope while offstage.
That actress, Natalie Mendoza, said in a Twitter message posted Tuesday: "Please pray with me for my friend Chris, my superhero who quietly inspires me every day with his spirit. A light in my heart went dim tonight."
Last week the opening of the musical was officially delayed again until Feb 7 to change portions of the show.
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