300x250

Ahoy There! Brooke Astor

Social and Ocean Liner History: Brooke Astor sailed on scores of ocean liners from the 1910 into the 1950s.  This video looks at some of these great ocean liners.

Roberta Brooke Astor (née Russell, previously Kuser and Marshall) (March 30, 1902 – August 13, 2007) was an American philanthropist and socialite who was the chairwoman of the Vincent Astor Foundation, which had been established by her third husband, Vincent Astor, son of John Jacob Astor IV (who died in the sinking of the RMS Titanic) and great-great grandson of America’s first multi-millionaire, John Jacob Astor.

She was the last of the American branch of the Astors, a family whose financial and social prestige was once synonymous with the wealth and power of the Rockefellers and the Morgans. The family’s holdings at various times included the St. Regis Hotel, the Empire State Building’s site and Newsweek magazine. One of the Astors died on the Titanic.

Astor was “an energetic, charming but level-headed municipal fairy godmother, who found and made adventure out of conventional upper-class life until some curious fate gave her the magical power of the Astor money,” the New York Times said in a review of her 1980 memoir, “Footprints.”

She faded from public view after a lavish 100th birthday party organized by David Rockefeller until 2006, when a feud over her estate thrust her back into the limelight. Her grandson, Philip Marshall, filed suit seeking the removal of his father as Astor’s guardian, saying she was a victim of “elder abuse.”

The court filing alleged Anthony Marshall, then 82, had “intentionally and repeatedly” ignored his mother’s health and personal well-being “while enriching himself with millions of dollars.”

[Read more...]

facebooktwittergoogle_plusredditlinkedinmail

RMS Titanic: World’s Largest Museum Attraction dedicated to the doomed White Star liner opens in Branson, Missouri!

RMS Titanic: World’s Largest Museum Attraction dedicated to the doomed White Star liner opens in Branson, Missouri!

The new Titanic Museum Attraction in Pigeon Forge, Tenn (Branson, Missouri) opened April 8 – with a star-studded Grand Opening hosted by Regis Philbin (pictured left with the Titanic’s museum capatain).  The event, which was open to the public, was also attended by descendants and family members of those on board the Titanic and included a christening of the ship.  More than 4,000 people toured the Titanic Museum Attraction by the end of its opening day.

You’re asking – is this a joke – could there be an RMS Titanic museum in a place called Pigeon Forge, near Branson, Missouri!? Yes, it’s true.  There it is – the largest Titanic museum in the world – right next to Dolly Parton shrines, Tony Orlando meets the Lennon Sisters, and summer performances of Kathy Rigby starring in “Peter Pan”!  And for any Titanic obsessed fan – the museum is worth a visit.

(Left: Museum visitors viewing model of Titanic) The 1912 sinking of the Titanic offers a storyline that would tempt any tourism mogul. But unless you can bankroll a fun-house/motion-master IMAX ride that puts hundreds of visitors in the center of the calamity — and thus far no one has — you’re sunk. You could open a museum of artifacts instead, but that presents a problem: most of the ocean liner’s contents ended up at the bottom of the North Atlantic.

In the late 1980s, John Whitman of Sidney, Ohio, tried to navigate around this obstacle by opening a Titanic theme park, which combined entertaining distractions with a handful of artifacts. Whitman wanted to build a huge replica of the ship (he owned the original blueprints) and a fake Liverpool wharf through which visitors could wander. But his dreams were premature, and without support from the town, or almost anyone else in Ohio, his attraction folded.

(The exhibits are exceptional and very well presented.  This is a room dedicated to passengers – including an original life-vest.)

Then came the movie in 1997, and suddenly the Titanic was a hot property. Two businessmen opened Titanic: Ship of Dreams in a strip mall in Orlando. They sweetened their collection of Titanic stuff with items from Titanic’s sister ships, so that you could look at stuff that was nearly identical to the stuff lost on the Titanic. They also significantly upped the “attraction” ante by building a replica of the ship’s Grand Staircase, and its bridge, and by populating the museum with actors dressed as the crew.

(Museum entrance, the RMS Titanic re-created and the fateful iceberg.)

[Read more...]

facebooktwittergoogle_plusredditlinkedinmail

Belfast Celebrates The RMS Titanic – The 98th Anniversary of the Sinking – April 15th…

Excellent photos of the TITANIC from this youtube video.

The City of Belfast once again is commemorating and celebrating the world’s most famous ocean liner, the RMS Titanic. The 98th Anniversary of the Sinking – April 15th…

Be sure to visit this excellent website – THE ENCYCLOPEDIA TITANIC – one of the best websites dedicated to the RMS TITANIC and famous tragedy.

[Read more...]

facebooktwittergoogle_plusredditlinkedinmail

TITANIC THE MUSICAL

VIDEO of the Australian premiere production of Titanic the Musical.

CRUISE HISTORY: TITANIC THE MUSICAL TO BE DONE AT KENNEDY CENTER. PRESIDENT OBAMA IS A BIG FAN OF THE MUSICAL ABOUT THE SINKING OF THE RMS TITANIC. THE MUSICAL WILL MAKE NEW CRUISE HISTORY AND IS A GREAT VIEW INTO CRUISING THE PAST.

TITANIC THE MUSICAL

The discovery of the wreckage of the RMS Titanic in 1985 attracted Yeston’s interest in writing a musical about the famous disaster. “What drew me to the project was the positive aspects of what the ship represented – 1) humankind’s striving after great artistic works and similar technological feats, despite the possibility of tragic failure, and 2) the dreams of the passengers on board: 3rd Class, to immigrate to America for a better life; 2nd Class, to live a leisured lifestyle in imitation of the upper classes; 1st Class, to maintain their privileged positions forever. The collision with the iceberg dashed all of these dreams simultaneously, and the subsequent transformation of character of the passengers and crew had, it seemed to me, the potential for great emotional and musical expression onstage.”

Stone and Yeston knew that the idea was an unusual subject for a musical. “I think if you don’t have that kind of daring damn-the-torpedos, you shouldn’t be in this business. It’s the safe sounding shows that often don’t do well. You have to dare greatly, and I really want to stretch the bounds of the kind of expression in musical theater,” Yeston explained.[2] Yeston saw the story as unique to turn-of-the-century British culture, with its rigid social class system and its romanticization of progress through technology. “In order to depict that on the stage, because this is really a very English show, I knew I would have to have a color similar to the one found in the music of the great composers at that time, like Elgar or Vaughan Williams; this was for me an opportunity to bring in the musical theater an element of the symphonic tradition that I think we really haven’t had before. That was very exciting.”

[Read more...]

facebooktwittergoogle_plusredditlinkedinmail