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Along time ago, in the Land of the Rising Sun.
A year later, out of the blue, Faris got the call from Kenneth Feld. The “Lucas thing” was back on.
As he promised, Faris spent the week after that first Lucasfilm meeting diligently watching the movies and taking notes. But when he returned with ideas for the production, no one else had done anything. “I started going through all my notes and nobody offered up any ideas,” Faris says. “I walked away from the meeting and called Kenneth and said ‘You know what, these guys just want to be contracted as a division of Lucas Entertainment to create the show. I don’t think that’s right. I think we can create it ourselves.”
Inspired by Lucas’ use of the Hero with a Thousand Faces, Faris decided to create a character whose fate would be intertwined with the adventures of each film.
Feld said: Great. Go do it. Faris isolated the thematic high points of all of the films and came up with a way to connect them all together. Inspired by Lucas’ use of the Hero with a Thousand Faces, he decided to create a character whose fate would be intertwined with the adventures of each film. When writing Star Wars, Lucas had turned to the narrative structure outlined in Joseph Campbell’s The Magic of Myth, which sees a hero answering the call to adventure, undergoing trials, and eventually succeeding in a quest. Some of Star Wars’ key plot points, like Luke’s initial refusal to leave Tatooine, Obi-Wan Kenobi’s supernatural aid, Luke’s meeting with Princess Leia, and his rescue by Han Solo all closely follow the Hero’s Journey.
Super Live Adventure’s central character ended up being a young Japanese-American actress, who would sit in the audience and “randomly” be plucked from her seat at the start of each show. The girl, named Hiromi, traveled through Lucas’ film worlds with the aid of a magic wand, seeking a hero to fight the powers of evil. In the end, of course, Hiromi discovers that she was the hero all along.
After Lucasfilm gave Faris’ proposed story the green light, he brought on writer Roberts Gannaway to turn his stew of Lucas stories into an arena-worthy extravaganza. The script they eventually concocted not only scrambled together Lucas’ films, it blended elements from the Star Wars and Indiana Jones trilogies into half-recognizable amalgamations. When the auditorium lights raised at the start of each show in the summer of 1993, an audience of thousands of Lucas diehards were treated to familiar film clips of their favorite silver screen moments. What followed, however, could get a little–well, strange.
A Hero’s Journey
A draft of Gannaway’s GLSLA script dated January 26, 1993 begins with an exuberant description of the show’s opening moments. “Abstract SOUND EFFECTS – the SCREECH of an exotic beast, the ROAR of a Tie fighter, etc. – reverberate through the auditorium, heightening anticipation and hinting at the marvelous things to come. Each of the large screens displays the ‘George Lucas’ Super Live Adventure’ logo.”
“A swiftly edited series of Lucasfilm highlights accompanied by a trumpeting medley of the most MEMORABLE THEMES,” the script continues. “It’s a thrilling, breathtaking, even humorous collection of similar moments from the different films, and all the Lucas heroes…”
After the opening film montage–which includes clips of Lucas himself directing and working with scale models, just to make sure the fourth wall is good and broken–an actor playing Willow enters from the back of the auditorium and hands a small bundle to Hiromi, who is sitting in the audience. Faris recalls the show’s opening moments beat-by-beat.
“He runs up on stage and he’s confronted by the evil General Kael from the Willow movie,” says Faris. “Willow’s frozen with fear and the general comes up on horseback on this giant black Friesian, beautiful Friesian horse, and he climbs down, takes out his broadsword, and he chops Willow in two. And he ends up with only a cloak. It was a great effect.
“[Kael] gets back on his horse and rides off and Willow’s discovered out in the house, and he grabs the girl and pulls her out and brings her up on stage and she’s got a baby. And that’s the baby that the evil queen in Willow wants. This is the setup of the whole show. He brings her up on stage and suddenly they’re visited by this spirit, this fairy that appeared in Willow, and she speaks to them and says ‘We’re looking for a hero to protect us. There’s a dark force coming. And you’ve been chosen to find that hero. Take this wand’–and magically this wand appears. ‘And use it on your journey. It will help you.’ ”
Massive set changes, which regularly exchange one set of towering scenery for another, allow Hiromi and her magic wand to travel through Lucas’ films worlds, some emphasizing grand setpiece moments over familiar narratives. A looming castle with a working drawbridge dominates the Willow set. In the world of American Graffiti, dancers dressed in their best 1950s sock hop outfits twirl across the stage as a giant jukebox towers 15 feet above their heads.
When the lights go up on Indiana Jones’ segment, the action moves from a suspension bridge dangling high above the stage, to Hong Kong’s Club Obi-Wan (complete with giant dragon backdrop), to the Ark of the Covenant. Along the way, Indiana Jones’ nemesis Belloq tries to steal Hiromi’s magic wand, Indy battles a tiger, and the famous face-melting finale to Raiders of the Lost Ark gets its due as Belloq opens the Ark.
“After this moment of beauty, the angelic voices melt into a foreboding chorus of INHARMONIOUS MOANS,” reads the script. “Without warning, a sheet of fire and smoke consumes the altar, blotting Belloq from view. We hear his blood-curdling SCREAM and can practically smell the stench of burning flesh. Then a gust of wind sweeps the smoke away, revealing Belloq’s toasted skeleton!”
In each world, Hiromi gets her own heroic moment, building up to the feel-good final reveal that she was the pure-of-heart hero the world needed all along. The script describes these moments with a childlike excitement as if it, too, is surprised by every twist and turn. When Indy is trapped under a statute as the Ark’s temple set falls to pieces, she saves the day. “Without a split-second to lose, Hiromi plucks the wand off the staff, aims, and wishes!” reads the script. “A beam of light bursts from the wand and connects with the statue. The sculpture’s fall is halted…and it wavers in mid-air! It’s as if Hirmoi is holding the statue up with a single beam of light! An awestruck Indy frees his leg and dives to safety.” Hiromi, of course, is blissfully unaware of her heroism, evne when Indy “pops his hat onto Hiromi’s head” and says “I think you’re the hero around here.”
The Star Wars segment is the most elaborate of them all, combining Jabba’s palace, the Mos Eisley Cantina, and a Death Star poised to destroy a Rebel base. Admiral Ackbar delivers a dramatic speech to a crew of Rebel pilots, but not before bowing in typical Japanese fashion. Luke Skywalker and Darth Vader battle with lightsabers across the Death Star set, but it is eventually Hiromi who saves the day with Luke’s lightsaber.
Like the Indiana Jones segment, GLSLA’s Star Wars finale combines the Death Star of A New Hope with the climax of Return of the Jedi, blending the threat to the rebel base with the death of the Emperor–this time it’s Vader who gets thrown down an energy shaft–and Jedi’s climactic space battle. But most of the iconic images from the films actually show up on stage, including Jabba and a life-size Millenium Falcon. Super Live Adventure’s script can’t truly convey the scale of the production, or its quirks; the way the Japanese audio and the actors’ exaggerated motions don’t quite line up, lending the show a slight Power Rangers feel. Or the way combining classic film scenes and brand new ones, like Indiana Jones facing off against a sleepy, disinterested tiger, feels a bit like big-budget fan fiction.
As conceptually absurd as the production is, the scale of the sets, stunts, and special effects is even harder to believe. It took a cast and crew of more than 100 to make George Lucas’ Super Live Adventure work, and nearly two years passed between Faris’ initial meeting with Lucasarts and the premiere in Japan.
Before Hiromi could embark on her Hero’s Journey–before she even had a name–Faris spent months finding his crew. Then, together, they spent an entire year figuring out how to bring Lucas’ fantasies, originally built with scale models and post-production special effects, to live audiences.
Inflatables, Laser Beams, Fantastical Things
Super Live Adventure would need a production designer who could build big.
Scott Faris’ first hire, before there was even a script for GLSLA, was production designer Douglas Schmidt. Faris knew about Schmidt due to his work on 1981’s Broadway production of Frankenstein. At the time, the $2 million dollar production had been the most expensive Broadway show of all time, and the play infamously closed after a single performance. Schmidt’s grandiose sets weren’t to blame, and Super Live Adventure would need a production designer who could build big.
“Once Doug was on board, Doug and I went on this research phase,” Faris says. “We just flew around the country seeing concerts. If somebody had indoor pyro, we’d go see if. It somebody was using video in some amazing way, we’d go see it. Whatever tickled our fancy, we’d go see, and we’d see how we could work some variation of that into the show.”
Schmidt, who still works as a theatrical production designer from his studio in San Francisco, remembers getting a call about the show and being on the next plane to Burbank, where Faris kept an office.
“We had nothing–a big pile of Xerox paper to start with,” Schmidt says. “The first thing that I did was arrange a sitdown talk with the folks at Lucas. Mercifully they’re right in the neighborhood. I was able to get access to their archives, which was fabulous. It was like a kid in a candy store. Just to hold those Ralph McQuarrie sketches in your hand, just pull open these drawers and see this whole movie in pictures, painted and imagined, it was truly cool.”
While Schmidt researched Lucas’ films for inspiration, Faris hired more key staff members for the production, including scriptwriter Gannaway, his regular collaborator Jonathan Deans as sound designer, and former My Three Sons actor-turned-musician Don Grady as composer. He hired a Hollywood stunt coordinator to handle stunt rigging and editor Dustin Ebsen to assemble the film clips that would supplement the stage performances. The Super Live Adventure production eventually held auditions in New York and Los Angeles and even Orlando, where stuntmen congregated for gigs at Disney World and Universal Studios.
As the production designer, Douglas Schmidt was responsible for directing the visual look of the entire show. In smaller theatrical productions, the production designer may handle scenery, lighting, and even costumes, directly overseeing nearly every production department. On Super Live Adventure, lighting, lasers, sound, and costumes were such enormous undertakings, they all had their own leads. It still took the entirety of 1992 to put the show together.
“There were all kinds of physical problems to deal with,” says Schmidt. “If you look at those movies, and you look at the research materials, everything’s huge. Couldn’t possibly be bigger. Somehow we had to figure out a way to make all of that user friendly enough that we could get it first to Japan, then tour it, because once we got it to Japan it was going to go to three or four different cities.”
Schmidt had long wanted to try inflatable sculptures as set elements, and Lucas’ grandiose movies offered the perfect opportunity. Some of Super Live’s key set pieces–the Chinese dragon from Temple of Doom’s Club Obi Wan, a gigantic jukebox inspired by American Graffiti, and Jabba from Star Wars, were all inflatables. Each inflatable started as a half-inch scale clay model which was then painted with latex. Once the latex dried, it was carefully cut off the model, flattened out, scanned, and digitally enlarged to the appropriate size. While there’s a telltale bulge to the inflatables up close, from an arena seat, the massive props were impressively enormous and realistic.
Larger Than Life Inflatables, still in business in San Diego, made the blow-up scenery. Both Faris and Schmidt say that they’ve never seen another theatrical production use inflatables on the same scale. A full-scale Millenium Falcon–or rather, the front half of one–dwarfed them all. The balloon wasn’t quite spaceworthy, though it was based on the original schematics used to design the external set that appears in The Empire Strikes Back.
“It was [mounted on] a steel framework and onboard fans kept the thing inflated,” Schmidt says. “These big doors opened up and from way way way upstage the spaceship comes down towards you and is landing, and then a ramp comes down and all the people come out.” (In reality, fog machines and dry ice obscured the ramp lowering from the steel truss, and actors walked out from behind the ramp.) With the inflatables, Schmidt was able to match Lucas’ sense of scale, and between shows the blow-up stage elements could be deflated, packed into boxes, and carted around with ease.
Many of the sets were constructed from more traditional materials, like the bridge that Indiana Jones fought across; stuntmen and acrobats would have to fall from the wood-and-rope bridge, through smoke obscuring the stage, and into trapdoors hidden in the floor. The temple housing the Ark of the Covenant was reproduced in sculpted foam, and its giant statues would crash to the ground as Indy and Hiromi made their escape. Lucasfilm loaned the production a real Tucker automobile from the 1988 film.
Schmidt designed a raised stage a massive 60 feet in diameter, which could accommodate subterranean elements like trap doors, fog machines, and spears that would pop up to get stabby with Indiana Jones. The backstage area, which also had to be raised, was twice the size. Schmidt also designed a grid that hung over the stage, which actors would repel down from 462 lights bathed the set in a rainbow of colors. The stage was constructed by Tait Towers, known for supplying lighting grids, stages and other pieces of equipment for enormous rock concerts. Their recent portfolio includes the London 2012 Olympics Ceremony and Madonna’s MDNA tour.
Costume designer Frank Krenz and Kenneth Feld’s prop shop produced more than 400 costumes for GLSLA, including Darth Vader, C-3PO, R2-D2, the aliens from the Star Wars cantina, and more than a few sets of Stormtrooper armor.
Other companies were brought in to supply the sound system, rock concert-caliber lighting, pyrotechnics, lasers, and wild animals (two tigers, two horses, and four dogs). Don Grady based his score on the original music from Lucas’ films, then flew to London to record it with the Royal Philharmonic, the same orchestra that played for John Williams.
Sound designer Jonathan Deans recalls that all of the sound effects came on hard drives from Skywalker Ranch. The screams of the TIE fighters, laser zaps, and lightsaber clashes were straight from the movies. Due to the storage limitations of the time, nearly every scene in Super Live Adventure had its sound files stored on a separate drive.
“We actually developed equipment for the show,” Deans says. “We created a console that could [control] 15 tracks…The audio was digital on the hard drives, but at the time there were no digital consoles. The console, the LCS console–the next [iteration] of that console became digital and actually was the first digital console to be used in live entertainment. So it was just pre-[digital], by a very short time, that it existed.”
And, of course, there were the lasers, which would likely be replaced by LEDs in a modern production–safer and cheaper, but nowhere near as flashy. For the duel between Luke and Darth Vader, the laser technicians created lightsaber by trapping laser beams within tubes.
“The budget for lasers was outrageous,” Scott Faris says. “We did things that had never been tried or were not even legal, and we found ways to get them approved. Hand-fired lasers had never been used in that way before, but we had to have it for Luke Skywalker and Han Solo shooting it out with the stormtroopers. And our laser guys worked out a system of interlocking safeties so an infrared beam would target on the chest of a stormtrooper and when it got positive feedback it would fire the laser, and when the laser fired a squib charge would go off on the stormtrooper, and he’d fall and die. It looked just like the movies.”
By February 1993, George Lucas’ Super Live Adventure was coming together. Feld found an empty arena in North Carolina where the production could set up and rehearse. And rehearse. And rehearse. “We were [there] for two months,” Schmidt says. “Two months in Charlotte. We got it together. We had a show at the end.”
After two months of rehearsal, it was time to ship cast, crew, costumes, sets, and stage to Japan. As the premiere date of Super Live Adventure drew closer, the Japanese financiers prepared to take advantage of something even more popular in Japan than the Star Wars films–George Lucas himself.
Big in Japan
A thin, early-40s Lucas with the first hints of gray in his beard was the face of Panasonic.
In 1987, Matsushita Electric–now known as Panasonic–began a Japanese ad campaign called Something New. A thin, early-40s Lucas with the first hints of gray in his beard was the face of the campaign. Commercials and print ads were created in the US at ILM, with props and models from Star Wars making regular appearances. ILM even built a robot mascot named Sparky for Matsushita that was designed by artist Ralph McQuarrie.
The Matsushita campaign swept advertising awards in the late 1980s. By 1993, when Super Live Adventure made its premiere, Lucas was no longer starring in the ads, but the cult of celebrity was already established. His face had been all over Japan for years.
Alongside his role of producer and director for Super Live Adventure, Faris found himself also producing a giant press conference ahead of the premiere.
“They wanted to interview [Lucas] for Japanese TV so they said I should go up and ask George the questions,” Faris says. He met Lucas at Skywalker Ranch briefly during during production in ’92, then flew to Japan to hold the press conference at the Akasaka Prince hotel in Tokyo. Tokyo Disney loaned Faris C-3PO and R2-D2, and they brought in 20 sets of stormtrooper armor and a Darth Vader costume created for Super Live Adventure.
“That all led up to George walking in through a giant laser tunnel,” he says. “It was outrageous. There were like a thousand journalists. Then, after that, the coolest thing ever: They got us lunch and took us to a private room and George and I just shot the shit…I’m telling you it was absolute heaven for me. I was a total Star Wars geek myself, and working in theatre, which had nothing to do with film, but I just loved film. I remember [when Return of the Jedi came out] and there was a big announcement in Variety. I said ‘I’m going to work with George Lucas.’ And 12 years later I met him.”
Months after his huge press conference, Faris returned to Japan ahead of the rest of the production and supervised the the voice cast that dubbed the show into Japanese. All audio in the production, from music to sound effects to dialogue, was pre-recorded. The Japanese actors who originally dubbed Star Wars, Indiana Jones, and Lucas’ other films all lent their voices to Super Live Adventure. The American actors had to pantomime the entire show, as all of their practice performances in Charlotte had been in English.
Other than the dubbing, little of the production was catered to the Japanese audience. “[The TV companies] wanted me originally to use a Japanese fight choreographer, and maybe I should’ve,” Faris says. “That would’ve been a good thing, because their swordsmanship was unbelievable. But at the time I was committed to a guy from the theatre who was a broadsword expert…I don’t remember, other than them feeling like they wanted to have a say in it, that there was anything that wasn’t happening.”
On April 27, 1993, George Lucas’ Super Live Adventure debuted in Yokohama.
Doug Schmidt remembers a huge audience at the premiere–and a strange one, to Americans unaccustomed to Japanese etiquette. “The audience response was so muted we thought, ‘Do they hate it?’ We got nothin’. Nothin’ during the show. No applause, no oohs, no ahhs, nothin’. They might as well have been dummies sitting there. Then at the end, they went crazy, they loved it! But nothing during the show, which threw everybody. We didn’t know what the hell was going on.”
Lucas, at least to Faris’ recollection, loved the show; he later brought his daughters to see it in Osaka.
Faris remembers sitting in the royal box with his wife and George Lucas, who returned to Japan to watch the premiere. Lucas, at least to Faris’ recollection, loved the show; he later brought his daughters to see it in Osaka.
Through spring and summer, Super Live Adventure toured Japan’s arenas, drawing big crowds at each location. As it toured, Feld flew over American entertainment bigwigs in hopes of setting up a US tour. The production sold mounds of merchandise to help recoup costs.
But by the end of Japan’s summer, the show was finished, packed up, and shipped home for storage. It’s been fading into obscurity ever since, begging a question that’s difficult to answer today: was George Lucas’ Super Live Adventure actually any good?
The Show Goes On, Until It Doesn’t
“We were so proud of it,” Scott Faris says. “It was so much fun. We explored things that hadn’t been done and everybody on the creative team was just into it. They were ready to try anything and make it work.”
During one show–maybe opening night–one of the show’s generators exploded.
Faris and his crew pulled off a technological feat with Super Live Adventure, but that technology suffered its share of technical problems. Faris, Schmidt, and sound designer Jonathan Deans all remember one disaster differently. According to Deans, there were multiple generators in trucks parked outside the arena, which were used to provide extra power necessary for the show. During one show–maybe opening night–one of those generators exploded.
“It actually blew up,” Deans says. “Parts of the generator flew out of the truck and landed on other cars parked in the car park. It was just as Mad Martigan in Willow was about to have his head cut off.”
The generator’s explosion fried every MIDI chip in the sound system, which they used to send commands between audio devices. Deans and his team had to trigger and mix all of the sound effects and music manually. On other nights, the projectors refused to send the proper timing signature to the audio gear, causing sound to regularly cut out as film clips were being played–and to come back on with a deafening explosion.
Amazingly, no one was seriously hurt during the production, though a forum post from a former cast member recalls “numerous cast members rotated out of the show due to injuries, me included.”
The scariest incident–and the funniest in retrospect–came during rehearsal in North Carolina, when one of the tigers escaped from its trainer. Deans remembers the tiger being freaked out by a shiny gold prop for the Indiana Jones segment, attacking it, and running loose. The tiger, he says, was “really fucking pissed.”
The escaped tiger was “really fucking pissed.”
Scott Faris elaborates: “We hear, suddenly, over the [loudspeaker]: ‘Please close the doors. The tiger is loose.’ And you just see people running and slamming doors. I remember one person in the office, this would be in the interior of the arena where all the dressing rooms are…this one office person calling us on the phone saying ‘Um, the tiger just walked by me in the passageway…’ Nobody got eaten, but that was a huge bit of excitement there in the early days.”
Still, neither safety nor reliability were seriously detrimental to the show’s brief run. All productions of that scale are going to have their problems. Ultimately, if George Lucas’ Super Live Adventure had a critical weakness, it was the story.
“Very sweet. Very cheesy. This show would NOT have gone over well in America AT ALL!” writes the same former cast member on a Star Wars fan forum. Schmidt says the story wasn’t a strong point, and that ultimately he didn’t think the show could’ve sustained a permanent stint in Las Vegas. Faris, however, whose position as supervising producer put him closer to Feld, says there was ample interest in bringing the show to the United States.
“People were after us when they heard about the show,” he said. “We were going to set up permanently at Universal Studios in Florida. Vegas wanted us. There was a lot of excitement after the Japanese run. Kenneth wanted to do a tour. But the one mistake we made was we built Doug’s massive deck–the tech department built it out of heavy steel scaffolding that you’d put up around a building to repair it. Very time consuming to set up and very heavy to transport.”
The Super Live Adventure stage simply took too long to assemble and disassemble to support a brisk US touring schedule. Sadly, right around the same time Tait Towers built the stage, they also developed a new rolling stage for rock concerts. Rolling arena stages could be set up in one part of the arena while lighting and sound were hung from the ceiling, then wheeled into place, effectively cutting setup time in half. But too much money had already been sunk into the Super Live Adventure stage. They couldn’t ditch it and build a new one.
Selling the show to US executives was already an uphill battle, since everyone that Feld brought to Japan had to watch the show in Japanese. Talks never panned out. But the show didn’t entirely die away, at first. For a time, people remembered it.
“My next show after that was EFX and it opened the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas,” Faris says. “One of the CEOs of one of the theaters called me and said, ‘I heard about your Lucas show. Can you put it in my theatre?’…I went down and looked and I said, ‘You know what, it’s not high enough. The ceiling’s not high enough. We can’t fit the scenery in.’ You know, the temple for Indiana Jones was like 30 feet high, and our grid was another 10 feet over that.’ ”
After its Japanese run, Super Live Adventure went into storage at a Feld Entertainment warehouse. Doug Schmidt tried to rent certain set pieces from the production multiple times over the years, but could never gain access to them. His contacts at the company demurred; It would’ve been too costly, or time-consuming, to dig pieces out of storage. When he last tried, about a decade ago, the costumes and props and one-of-a-kind inflatables were gone.
They’d been taking up too much space. Feld Entertainment threw everything away.
A Vision of the Future
Twenty years after its one and only summer tour, the last pieces of George Lucas’ Super Live Adventure that remain are souvenirs and memorabilia, the merchandise sold to Japanese audiences during the short tour. And there was a lot of merchandise, ranging from popcorn buckets to mugs, hand towels, lightsabers, keychains, and Darth Vader voice manipulators. Japanese parents were encouraged to buy their children merch; this even gets a minor mention in Gannaway’s script, when the intermission describes the audience doing “the sort of things audiences do during intermissions: bathroom, concessions, souvenirs, etc…”
Much of the art on the George Lucas’ Super Live Adventure’s merchandise looks just a little off. A Yoda doll is just slightly too rotund and ugly. A bag printed with the art from the official poster transforms iconic faces into cartoonish caricatures. A hand towel sporting the logos from each film represented in the show looks like it could’ve been put together with clip art.
Other pieces are genuinely cool, and even a little awe-inspiring, like the poster of George Lucas, staring straight ahead in a pair of aviators, presented in an orange-tinged silhouette. In his San Francisco studio, Doug Schmidt still has the show’s official poster, which combines everything from Willow to Star Wars into one image, mounted above his drafting table. That poster manages to capture the essence of the classic hand-painted posters for Star Wars and Indiana Jones, deftly avoiding the campiness of Super Live’s other memorabilia.
Despite the eclectic variety of merch available at the arena show, there were even more designs for pieces that were never made. Feld Entertainment likely made the right call in abandoning the Darth Vader tissue box, but it may have missed out on a hit with the chibi Chewbacca backpack. Sadly, if the props, inflatables, and other set elements of Super Live Adventure hadn’t been thrown away, they’d be coveted by diehard Star Wars collectors today.
Even video evidence of the show is scarce. Neither Faris or Schmidt know if the production was ever recorded by the Japanese broadcasters or aired on television. Footage shot from the audience exists–you can find it on Youtube–but you’ll be hard pressed to see the details of Schmidt’s sets or Krenz’s costumes.
Were George Lucas’ Super Live Adventure to return today, it may have the legs to tour across the world. While Lucas himself is moving into retirement, Star Wars may be bigger than ever. The series is, at the very least, far bigger than it was in 1993, when Timothy Zahn’s Thrawn novels were breathing new life into a dormant franchise. But could Star Wars ever spawn another weird hodgepodge like Super Live Adventure?
Faris believes so. “I was out in Vegas working on a show last month and looking at all these crazy shows around Vegas…and I thought, man, that Lucas show would’ve worked today,” he says.
“Man, that Lucas show would’ve worked today.”
Jonathan Deans feels the same. “To do that show now would be stunning,” he adds. “All the technology, we could do that easily now, in every aspect. Technology has grown up and we’d be able to do that in our sleep almost. But of course, we’d make it a lot better.”
With the Disney empire now behind Lucasfilm, a new arena show celebrating Lucasfilm’s legacy doesn’t sound so outlandish. After all, Star Wars’ 40th anniversary is coming up in 2017.
And Lucas has always enjoyed a spectacle. As that extravagant Japanese press conference wrapped up in Tokyo before GLSLA’s tour, after Lucas’ lunch with Scott Faris and a day devoted to endless interviews, the creator of Star Wars gave the director of Super Live Adventure one piece of advice.
“He said, ‘Hey, have a great show, and just remember: do what I do,’ ” Faris remembers. “I said ‘Yeah, what’s that?’ And he said, ‘Save the big explosion for the end.”
by Wesley Fenlon
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