"Only heaven knows how glory goes; What each of us was meant to be". That manifest destiny is what our doomed cave explorer ponders in Bohemian Theatre Ensemble's majestic new production of Floyd Collins, the 1996 musical written by Steppenwolf's Tina Landau and Adam Guettel (The Light In The Piazza).
Based on true events, Floyd Collins was a Kentucky cave explorer who in January of 1925, became entrapped 150 feet underground and ultimately perished more then two weeks later. The musical recounts how the attempted rescue became a nationwide media circus– the first of its kind in America, and was the third largest news story between the World Wars. More interestingly, the play also focuses inward on Floyd and his relationship with his family including a tyrannical father, a brother who wants nothing more than to leave the family behind and a sister, who is mentally frail but who has nothing but love for her brother.
The play opens with Collins planning to make his fortune by opening a cave for tourists to visit. He strikes a deal with some local farmers whose land the cave encroaches upon and in exploring a remote shaft, becomes trapped. After a newspaper reporter, Skeets Miller (Greg Foster) files the story on Collins, the media descends en masse, on the rural town. A mirror is held up to their society and conflict soon arises on how to best rescue Collins. Ego's are inflated and what is in the best interest of our victim is soon eclipsed as people's own self interest take hold in the media spotlight . The story grows larger each day making Collins' a national celebrity. However, as his fame grows on the outside world, Floyd becomes more introspective as his body grows weaker and weaker. This counterpoint in the narrative gives the musical its center. Floyd is able to reconcile himself to his fate, and the piece ends as he, much like a child, asks God what heaven is like, finally questioning "Will my mother be there waiting for me?"