St. Petersburg Times
Special report
Video report
  • For their own good
    Fifty years ago, they were screwed-up kids sent to the Florida School for Boys to be straightened out. But now they are screwed-up men, scarred by the whippings they endured. Read the story and see a video and portrait gallery.
  • More video reports
Multimedia report
Print Email this storyEmail story Comment Email editor
Fill out this form to email this article to a friend
Your name Your email
Friend's name Friend's email
Your message
 

Get Away

SeaWorld goes showbiz

By JAY CRIDLIN
Published May 11, 2006


[SeaWorld]
SeaWorld trainers Dawn Brancheau and Sam Davis go sky high with a pair of killer whales during a performance of the park's new Shamu show, Believe.
  Variations on a theme
Temperatures are rising. School is about to let out. You can practically feel the asphalt melting beneath your feet.

Coaster reaches the top of the world
All hail the mighty Yeti.

Island has new adventure
The prevailing wisdom on water slides is, when you've ridden one, you've ridden them all.

Revisionist tinkering
After falling into the role of the poor stepsister to Florida's more well-know theme parks, Cypress Gardens banks on a makeover to return it to a place of prominence.

SeaWorld goes showbiz
What you need to know about Believe, the lavish new killer whale show opening today at SeaWorld, is that Shamu is still the star.

The best of the rest
Most theme parks tout one or two new attractions each year. Here are a few other highlights from the Central Florida theme parks.

What you need to know about Believe, the lavish new killer whale show opening today at SeaWorld, is that Shamu is still the star.

"We're not going to overcomplicate this thing to the point where it's lost its heart and soul," says Dave Goodman, the park's vice president of entertainment. "The big whale will jump, and people will get wet, just like always."

Apart from that, Believe is like nothing you've seen at SeaWorld.

For what SeaWorld calls "the most ambitious entertainment project in the brand's 41-year history," the whales' performance arena has been upgraded to include a 100-speaker sound system, a three-story whale tail fluke, and four moving 20-foot video screens offering unparalleled views of the whales' jumps and behaviors.

But the new technology is only the window dressing for a show focusing much more on emotion and narrative than pure educational value.

Gone are the emcees who describe what the whales are doing as they're doing it; in their place are "choreographers," Goodman says, who train the whales as "dancers." An original filmlike score will accompany the performance, which centers on a young boy developing the courage to chase his dream of swimming with killer whales.

"The presentation style we may have had with our animal shows is passe - it was more of an aquarium approach to doing business," Goodman says. "We are not going to shy away from education and educational elements, because it's still a key part of our park, but when you do a show like Shamu, we can go further than that."

Trainers have spent two years developing whale behaviors, 100 of which will be part of the new show. For example, there's the Houdini, which involves a trainer balancing on a whale's nose at the bottom of the tank, then springing up through the water toward the audience.

The music, story line and ambitious presentation mirror those of other SeaWorld shows, such as the acrobatic dolphin display Blue Horizons and the Cirque du Soleil-ish Odyssea.

Goodman said Believe is not too complex for young children to appreciate. Toward the end, one child will be plucked from the crowd to come down and interact with the whale. If nothing else, he hopes the show's theme of self-discovery will spark discussions between parents and children.

"We can educate," he says, "but we can also entertain in a way that actually gives you a feeling when you leave, an emotion when you leave, that hopefully you want to come back and feel over and over."

*   *   *

SeaWorld, Interstate 4, Exit 71, Orlando. Toll-free 1-800-327-2424 or www.seaworld.com. Hours vary. $61.95 adults, $49.95 children. Florida residentdiscounts available.

[Last modified May 10, 2006, 11:56:25]


Share your thoughts on this story

Comments on this article
Subscribe to the Times
Click here for daily delivery
of the St. Petersburg Times.

Email Newsletters

ADVERTISEMENT