- Showboat
A showboat, or show boat, was a form of
theatre that travelled along the waterways of theUnited States , especially along the Mississippi andOhio river s. A showboat was basically a barge that resembled a long, flat-roofed house, and in order to move down the river, it was pushed by a smalltugboat (misleadingly labeled atowboat ) which was attached to it. It would have been impossible to put a steam engine on it, since it would have had to have been placed right in the auditorium. However, since the box-office success ofMGM 's 1951 motion picture version of the musical "Show Boat ", in which the boat was inaccurately redesigned as a deluxe, self-propelledsteamboat , the image of a showboat as a twin-stacked steamboat with a hugepaddle wheel has taken hold in popular culture. (Earlier film versions of "Show Boat", and most stage productions of it, feature a historically accurately designed vessel, rather than the kind built for the 1951 film. Modern-day showboats, however, with their more advanced technology, "are" designed as steamboats.)British-born actor William Chapman, Sr. created the first showboat, named the "Floating Theatre," in Pittsburgh in 1831. He and his family performed plays with added music and dance at stops along the waterways. After reaching New Orleans, they got rid of the boat and went back to Pittsburgh in a steam boat in order to perform the process once again the year after.
Showboats had declined by the Civil War, but began again in 1878 and focused on
melodrama andvaudeville . Major boats of this period included the "New Sensation", "New Era", "Water Queen", and the "Princess". With the improvement of roads, the rise of the automobile, motion pictures, and the maturation of the river culture, showboats declined again. In order to combat this development, they grew in size and became more colorful and elaborately designed in 1900's. These boats included the "Golden Rod", the "Sunny South", the "Cotton Blossom", and the "New Showboat".Jerome Kern andOscar Hammerstein II 's musical play "Show Boat " (1927) and its film versions (1929, 1936, 1951) showed this type of theater.howboating
Based on the gaudy look of showboats, the term "showboat" also came to mean someone who wants his or her ostentatious behavior to be seen at all costs. This term is particularly applied in sports, where a showboat (or sometimes "showboater") will do something flashy before actually achieving his or her goal. The word is also used as a verb. British television show
Soccer AM has a section appropriately named "Showboat", dedicated to flashy tricks from the past week's games.Oft-cited examples of showboating include
Leon Lett 's grocery-bag-carrying of a recovered football (which he then had swatted out of his hand before the goal line) inSuper Bowl XXVII ;Bill Shoemaker 's standing in the saddle before the finish line of the 1957Kentucky Derby , costing him the win;Lindsey Jacobellis 's grab of hersnowboard which caused her to crash right before the finish of theSnowboard Cross final at the2006 Winter Olympics , costing her a first-place finish; andUsain Bolt pumping his chest before winning the 100m final at2008 Summer Olympics , likely adding one or more tenths of a second to his world record time of 9.69 seconds.In boxing, showboating often takes the form of taunting, dropping one's gloves and daring an opponent to throw a punch, or engaging other risky behaviors while the match is ongoing.
ee also
*Old Profanity Showboat
References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.