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- This time Marty McFly and Doc Brown will travel to the theater for a stage adaptation set to land in London next year. January 31, 2014 7:42 AM PST The famous time-traveling DeLorean will make its theatrical debut next year. (Credit: Stephen Shankland/CNET) We're going back...to the future! A full 30 years after the original "Back to the Future" film debuted, the time-traveling adventure is set to return, this time as a musical. Director Robert Zemeckis and screenwriter Bob Gale, who created the original films, will team up with British theater director Jamie Lloyd to write the book for the new production, Variety reported on Friday. Lloyd will direct the stage version, which will gear up to open in London in 2015, just in the nick of time for the film's 30th anniversary. Alan Silvestri and Glen Ballard will write the score, another promising sign since Silvestri wrote the music for the entire movie trilogy. Songs from the film, including those from Huey Lewis and the News and Chuck Berry, will also pop up. The play itself will be produced by Steven Spielberg's Amblin Entertainment, Universal Stage Productions, and producer Colin Ingram. Amblin and Universal pictures were responsible for the original films. No details have yet been revealed for a specific opening date or plans to expand the play to Broadway or other venues. The plot will most probably follow that of the original film as Marty travels back in time, accidentally meets his mother, and then must fix the damage to his timeline before he's wiped out of existence. A musical based on such a popular and iconic film faces a built-in set of challenges. But with so many of the original people on board, we may just have something to look forward to...in the future.
This time Marty McFly and Doc Brown will travel to the theater for a stage adaptation set to land in London next year. January 31, 2014 7:42 AM PST The famous time-traveling DeLorean will make its theatrical debut next year. (Credit: Stephen Shankland/CNET) We're going back...to the future! A full 30 years after the original "Back to the Future" film debuted, the time-traveling adventure is set to return, this time as a musical. Director Robert Zemeckis and screenwriter Bob Gale, who created the original films, will team up with British theater director Jamie Lloyd to write the book for the new production, Variety reported on Friday. Lloyd will direct the stage version, which will gear up to open in London in 2015, just in the nick of time for the film's 30th anniversary. Alan Silvestri and Glen Ballard will write the score, another promising sign since Silvestri wrote the music for the entire movie trilogy. Songs from the film, including those from Huey Lewis and the News and Chuck Berry, will also pop up. The play itself will be produced by Steven Spielberg's Amblin Entertainment, Universal Stage Productions, and producer Colin Ingram. Amblin and Universal pictures were responsible for the original films. No details have yet been revealed for a specific opening date or plans to expand the play to Broadway or other venues. The plot will most probably follow that of the original film as Marty travels back in time, accidentally meets his mother, and then must fix the damage to his timeline before he's wiped out of existence. A musical based on such a popular and iconic film faces a built-in set of challenges. But with so many of the original people on board, we may just have something to look forward to...in the future.
This time Marty McFly and Doc Brown will travel to the theater for a stage adaptation set to land in London next year.
The famous time-traveling DeLorean will make its theatrical debut next year.
(Credit: Stephen Shankland/CNET)
We're going back...to the future!
A full 30 years after the original "Back to the Future" film debuted, the time-traveling adventure is set to return, this time as a musical. Director Robert Zemeckis and screenwriter Bob Gale, who created the original films, will team up with British theater director Jamie Lloyd to write the book for the new production, Variety reported on Friday.
Lloyd will direct the stage version, which will gear up to open in London in 2015, just in the nick of time for the film's 30th anniversary. Alan Silvestri and Glen Ballard will write the score, another promising sign since Silvestri wrote the music for the entire movie trilogy. Songs from the film, including those from Huey Lewis and the News and Chuck Berry, will also pop up.
The play itself will be produced by Steven Spielberg's Amblin Entertainment, Universal Stage Productions, and producer Colin Ingram. Amblin and Universal pictures were responsible for the original films.
No details have yet been revealed for a specific opening date or plans to expand the play to Broadway or other venues. The plot will most probably follow that of the original film as Marty travels back in time, accidentally meets his mother, and then must fix the damage to his timeline before he's wiped out of existence.
A musical based on such a popular and iconic film faces a built-in set of challenges. But with so many of the original people on board, we may just have something to look forward to...in the future.