Tag Archives: Ridley Pearson

Saturday’s Softcover: You Will Believe a Boy Can Fly

As easy as A, B, C . . . from HA

Peter and the Starcatchers—Dave Barry and Ridley PearsonPeter and the Starcatchers

At the beginning of this book, toward the end of the Acknowledgement section, is the following statement: And above all we thank Paige Pearson, for asking her daddy one night, after her bedtime story, exactly how a flying boy met a certain pirate.

We all owe a “Thank you!” to Paige. Without that question, this book may have never been written.

I was introduced to this concept while watching last year’s Tony award program. Peter walked home with five awards including Best Actor.

The Shakespeare Festival in Cedar City was the only regional theater in the US to be able to show Peter. It was one of the funniest productions I have ever had the pleasure of seeing; everything about it was AWESOME! Which, of course, lead me to read the book.

As I have ranted before, movies made from books don’t always translate well. The same holds true with transferring any media into any other media. That being said: note the difference in the titles—Peter and the Starcatchers (book) and Peter and the Starcatcher (play). Note the subtlety?

While the two venues share a common thread—that of Peter, an orphan boy, becoming Peter Pan and how he met Captain Hook—the play is much more comedic and broader in presentation. The book is more detailed with more backstory and character details.

It is also much more dramatic in its presentation.

The basic story line in both versions (and this is one of the few times where I absolutely recommend both venues—Peter is playing at Shakespeare through the summer and early fall—has two ships, The Never Land and The Wasp, each carrying a secret cargo: one of two trunks. One is full of “star stuff” and one is a decoy.

But which is which?

Star stuff is the remains of falling stars containing magical properties. It seems they’ve been collected throughout the millennia by opposing forces: the basic good vs. evil.

I’m going to keep this relatively short. Read the book—see the stage production.

You’ll be thanking me when you do—and Paige as well.

See you day-after-tomorrow for Monday Moans.

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