Current:Home > InvestSignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center:How 'Back to the Future: The Musical' created a DeLorean that flies -Capitatum
SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center:How 'Back to the Future: The Musical' created a DeLorean that flies
Fastexy View
Date:2025-04-08 08:20:44
After a recent matinee of Back to the Future: The SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank CenterMusical, dozens of families poured out onto Broadway. One of them, the Angelos, had traveled from Sugar Loaf, Penn. to see the show.
"It was amazing," said 8-year-old Lula. "And the car? I can't even speak about it. It went upside down!!"
That's right. It flips upside down . . . because the DeLorean flies. Into the audience.
"I think the most important rule we gave to ourselves is the car is the star." said Finn Ross, the show's video designer.
In the 1985 movie and the new musical adaptation, the car is a time machine and the driver of the story, bringing teenager Marty McFly from his own 1985 to his parents' 1955. Ross and the rest of the team of designers knew that it was the car that would dazzle the audience. It had to look like a DeLorean, it had to have cool effects, and it needed to look like it was driving like a real car on real roads.
"Like, we can't overpower the car. We have to create a world for the car to inhabit and be free to move around it," Ross said.
A mechanical madness of gizmos
The musical originated in the West End in London — it won several awards there, including the 2022 Olivier Award for best new musical — and the all-British design team worked on the car with director John Rando. First, they thought up elaborate storyboards, then created models, then worked on life-size mock-ups of the DeLorean.
Set designer Tim Hatley made a 3D scan of a real DeLorean and then created a car which is slightly smaller in scale. It had to fit onstage — and it also had to be danced on.
"Inside it all is a mechanical, steel, aluminum madness of gizmos and electronics and what we call turtles to make it spin," said Hatley. "Motors, lights, effects, smoke machines, speakers. It's crammed with that. You can just get a person in it."
The car itself only moves slightly, while turning around. So to create the illusion of speed, Finn Ross installed an LED wall at the back of the stage and a scrim in the front, with the car sandwiched in between. It's projected video, along with lights, sound and underscoring, that make it look like the car is truly hurtling from 0 to 88 mph.
Ross also created videos of the fictional Hill Valley in 1985 and 1955, based on the original design plus maps created by fans.
"We could sort of draw and plot the DeLorean's journey around [the map]," said Ross, "but also make sure that the diner is in the right place, the travel agent's in the right place, all the different sort of things you see in the background of the movie."
The car actually flies — but it does other stuff, too
The car speaks, like Knight Rider. And it leaves fiery skid marks. Early in the show, the DeLorean suddenly seems to appear out of nowhere. That trick was figured out by illusions designer Chris Fisher.
"I have Marty sail through on the skateboard, lit through the space," Fisher explained. "So, there's nothing there. We're saying there's nothing there. And then bang, bang, bang, there's the DeLorean."
Pulling those illusions off took days of technical rehearsal with the stage crew, all of whom are sworn to secrecy, "because when you find out a secret of how magic works, it's actually quite disappointing!" Fisher said.
But the pièce de résistance is definitely the car flying at the end. At first, Rando wasn't sure what the car would be capable of — but then set designer Tim Hatley invited him to his studio. He held a model of the DeLorean in his hand.
"And he said, you know, 'It's going to go up in the air and then it's going to turn and then it's going to come towards the audience and then it's going to go out over the audience,'" Rando said, laughing. '"And then it's going to do a 360 and then it's going to turn around and go on its merry way.'
And that's exactly what the DeLorean does. How does it work? Nobody was telling. But it's quite a trick. As Lula Angelo said — it's amazing.
veryGood! (9111)
Related
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Trump's day in court, an unusual proceeding before an unusual audience
- Rare otter attack injures three women floating on inner tubes on popular Montana river
- Biden’s inaction on death penalty may be a top campaign issue as Trump and DeSantis laud executions
- New Orleans mayor’s former bodyguard making first court appearance after July indictment
- US economy likely generated 200,000 new jobs in July, showing more resilience in face of rate hikes
- Former first-round NBA draft pick is sentenced to 10 years in prison in $4M health care fraud
- The Lion King on Broadway Star Clifton Oliver Dead at 47
- Tropical weather brings record rainfall. Experts share how to stay safe in floods.
- Why we love Wild Geese Bookshop, named after a Mary Oliver poem, in Franklin, Indiana
Ranking
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- Watch: Sisters find kitten at Indy 500, welcome him home to cat family
- SUV crash kills a man and his grandson while they work in yard in Maine
- Meghan Markle Steps Out for Birthday Date Night With Prince Harry
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- Flash flooding emergencies prompt evacuations in Kentucky, Tennessee
- Details emerge about suspect accused of locking a woman in cinderblock cell
- Global food prices rise after Russia ends grain deal and India restricts rice exports
Recommendation
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
International buyers are going for fewer homes in the US. Where are they shopping?
Fifth Gilgo Beach victim identified as Karen Vergata, police say
Bark beetles are eating through Germany’s Harz forest. Climate change is making matters worse
Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
Russian court extends detention of American musician
Tim McGraw Reveals His Daughters Only Want to Sing With Mom Faith Hill
Russia to announce a verdict in Navalny case; the Kremlin critic expects a lengthy prison term