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The Glitz, Glam, and Grit of Entertainment on a Cruise Ship

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There are two ways to watch the new revue Revolution, a Celebration of Prince, on board the 3,571-passenger Norwegian Aqua. I try both one night in April while the ship is docked in Manhattan. During the first, at 7:30 p.m., guests sit in the comfortable, conventional seats, smiling and nodding while sipping Pinot Noir. But at the second, which starts promptly at 9:30 p.m., the theater resembles a nightclub, and guests stand on the floor while crew members in reflective bomber jackets wheel pieces of the stage around the spectators to create different configurations. The space actually becomes a real club later in the evening, so this second showing represents the start of that transformation, beginning with “For You,” followed by the opening words “Dearly beloved…,” from “Let’s Go Crazy,” and then the catwalk choreography that accompanies “The Glamorous Life,” the song Prince wrote for Sheila E.

The enormous size of the show reflects the way onboard entertainment has scaled in tandem with the growth of cruise ships themselves. The shows have also become ubiquitous; on megaships like Norwegian Aqua or Royal Caribbean’s Utopia of the Seas, they take place not only on designated stages but also on the pool deck, in the atrium, and any other public place where passengers might be getting bored. The style of the shows has also shifted. Norwegian Cruise Line (NCL) is doing less Broadway theater and more simple flash. “Our guests want three things,” says Bryan White, the company’s vice president of entertainment production, “music they know, visual spectacle, and narratives that are easy to follow.”

Dancers such as Maya Vitug (pictured above) spent 6 weeks at the NCL studio in Tampa learning choreography and aerial acts.

NORWEGIAN CRUISE LINE

“Easy to follow” does not mean “easy to mount.” Even a big ship like Norwegian Aqua still has just over 40 performers on board, who are expected to perform for three to four hours a day. In Revolution, there are 98 distinct costumes composed of 384 total pieces—and 48 quick changes, 5 of which happen onstage—all of which have to be laundered afterward in a backstage facility. There are set pieces that attach to the front of the stage and move three times during the show. The 10 dancers, 6 vocalists, and 2 aerialists (not to mention the live band) pull double duty in another show, the Cirque du Soleil–style Elements: The World Expanded, on the same stage, which features a magician and incorporates aerial acts as well. Most of the dancers had no prior training with ropes and harnesses and spent part of their six-week stay at the company’s Shows and Experiences Creative Studios learning the skill plus choreography for both shows. “We’re dancers,” cast member Nyla Walker tells me after demonstrating her prowess at such moves as the whip back. “We like to stay on the ground.”

I see the training in action six weeks earlier while visiting the studio, which sits in an office park outside Tampa. While Walker and company rehearse on soundstages, activity churns in every other corner of the 112,000-square-foot facility where the fleet’s 70,000 costumes are sewn, fitted, and stored and 7,000 pairs of Capezio dance shoes are inventoried. Materials for set pieces are also sent here to be constructed and sent out to shipyards for installation. “This is where we grow new work,” says Patricia Wilcox, Revolution‘s director-choreographer, who helped lobby Prince’s estate for music rights.

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