Edmonton Journal

Neverland takes flight again on NBC

Allison Williams plays the foreveryou­ng Peter Pan

- FRAZIER MOORE The Associated Press

NEW YORK — The boy who refused to grow up: It sounds like men today in this youthobses­sed culture. But nearly a century before his name found its way into pop psychology, Peter Pan was born as the high-flying hero of a play by Scottish writer James M. Barrie.

Many adaptation­s later, 1954’s Broadway musical version of Peter Pan came to TV in a live NBC telecast in 1955, then was re-staged a year later with Mary Martin yet again in the title role.

Now NBC is recapturin­g its youth for a revival of Peter Pan, broadcast live Thursday and starring Allison Williams (Girls) as Peter, the cocky young champion of Neverland, and Christophe­r Walken as the deliciousl­y evil pirate, Captain Hook. The cast also includes Christian Borle, Kelli O’Hara and Minnie Driver as the narrator. In Canada, the event will also air on broadcaste­r City.

Officially titled Peter Pan Live! this three-hour event is a followup to last year’s live The Sound of Music, which drew 18.6 million viewers.

Why Peter Pan?

“It’s a classic, a really great musical, that has its DNA in live television,” said Neil Meron, who with his partner, Craig Zadan, are back as executive producers. “To follow The Sound of Music and create some sort of beachhead for a holiday tradition, you look for titles that can fit into that little box,” he said, pointing to a nearby TV, “and Peter Pan fits very snugly.”

More than snug, Peter Pan will be bursting wide open with more subtext to the characters and narrative than its Broadway forebear, Meron said. Its glorious score (including I Won’t Grow Up, I’m Flying and Never Never Land) is supplement­ed with additional tunes by the team of Jule Styne, Betty Comden and Adolph Green.

“It’s much bigger and much more challengin­g than The Sound of Music last year,” said Zadan. “A lot more musical numbers, a lot more dancing, plus the sword fights and flying. And a live dog.” With no do-overs allowed.

But maybe the biggest difference between this year and last: Everyone knew and cherished the 1964 Julie Andrews-starring film of The Sound of Music, which made tampering with it a dicey propositio­n.

“We had a gigantic shadow over us last year,” said Meron. “This year, the shadow isn’t as big.” Then he added with a smile, “Peter Pan DOES find his shadow in the show.”

That’s a fact. Early in the action, we see Wendy with a needle and thread reattach Peter’s shadow, which he had left behind on a previous visit to the Darling children’s nursery. Then he teaches Wendy and her two little brothers how to fly. Then off they fly to Neverland!

“It’s a beautiful story about finding the child in you and trying to hold onto that while you grow up,” said its stage director, Rob Ashford.

Said live TV director Glenn Weiss: “We’re trying to immerse the viewer into this show. Cameras will be inside the scenes. There may even be a camera capturing a flying point of view.”

While Peter gets to fly, Captain Hook will have ample chance to demonstrat­e he’s light on his feet.

Tap dancing in boots? “I asked them to make my clothing as light as possible,” said Walken, “’cause there’s a lot of stuff to wear: a wig and a hat and swords and muskets!”

A show business veteran at 71 — and identified with serious drama — Walken isn’t typically thought of as a song-and-dance man, despite his memorable hoofing in Pennies From Heaven.

“Musicals are my favourite!” he declared. “If somebody says, ‘I’m taking you to the theatre,’ I say, ‘OK. Just make sure it’s a musical.’ I have deep respect for musicals — and for this one in particular.”

“Peter Pan just appeals to something in a kid’s imaginatio­n,” said Williams, 26 — “a boy flies through your window and everything’s different forever.

“And if you revisit Peter Pan periodical­ly as you grow up, it means different things every time you see it. The hardest I’ve ever cried in public was when I saw Cathy Rigby in it the summer before my senior year of high school. I had spent so many years wishing I was 16 so I could drive and 18 so I could vote, but now here I was, telling myself, ‘I grew up! I didn’t mean to do that!”’

She laughed at the memory. “If only I could have told myself then, ‘Don’t worry. You’ll play Peter Pan in a few years, and you’ll un-grow-up.”’

Thursday night, every viewer can join her.

 ?? VIRGINIA SHERWOOD/ NBC ?? Veteran actor Christophe­r Walken, centre, stars as the deliciousl­y evil Captain Hook in the NBC event Peter Pan Live!
VIRGINIA SHERWOOD/ NBC Veteran actor Christophe­r Walken, centre, stars as the deliciousl­y evil Captain Hook in the NBC event Peter Pan Live!

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