Waterfront Barge Showboat & Museum

Showboat Artifacts

Showboat Artifacts

David showing off the barge
Small bell

curtain Bell

Captain Tom MacGuire rang this bell to get the audience’s attention at the start of each show on the Driftwood Showboat

David Sharps recalls:
I asked Captain Tom, “How many times would you ring it?”
“Oh, that’s a good bell–once!”

— Gift of Captain Tom MacGuire, the Driftwood Theatre Showboat

Lobby Bell

The lobby bell from The Driftwood Showboat. This bell would sound when the boat was open for the general public to come aboard.

— Gift of Captain Tom MacGuire, the Driftwood Theatre Showboat

Large bell

Cash Box

This cash box was used for ticket sales at the Driftwood Showboat. It has a false bottom secured by a chain that it takes two people to release, making a more secure place to store the large bills,

There is also a battery powered alarm that sounded when the false bottom was removed.

— Gift of Captain Tom MacGuire, the Driftwood Theatre Showboat

Concessionaire’s Jacket

Jacket worn by Captain Tom, while selling candy and popcorn during intermission.

David Sharps remembers, “He was a magician, but as the showboat captain he often did the candy sales….It was a lot of entertainment and a lot of hype to get people to buy popcorn and support the boat.”

— Gift of Captain Tom MacGuire, the Driftwood Theatre Showboat

Concessionaires Jacket
paper model of the Driftwood Theatre showboat barge, white with red trim, multicolor pennants strung over the top, and the words SHOW BOAT on the side in red

Paper Showboat Model

Paper model of the Driftwood Theatre Showboat.

This was sold as a souvenir for attendees to take home, cut out, and build.

The Driftwood was built by Captain Edward Furbush on Staten Island using parts of several barges similar to the Lehigh Valley No. 79

David Sharps remembers

[Captain] Tom [MacGuire] had told me that when Ed Furbush started working they said, oh these barges are obsolete and not going to be used anymore, take any of this lumber from the barges that you want, and he did just that and built himself a double decker barge that very much resembled the mississippi showboats, unlike the Periwinkle, which was a blue barge that we know of that was used in 1934 that was similar to the [Lehigh Valley No.] 79, which carried actors about in the New York Harbor.

— Gift of Captain Tom MacGuire, the Driftwood Theatre Showboat

Driftwood Theatre Showboat Poster

This poster offers the paper model of the Driftwood Theatre showboat for sale.

— Gift of Captain Tom MacGuire, the Driftwood Theatre Showboat

Olio Curtain

Olio Curtain

This olio curtain is a replica of one chosen by the Waterfront Museum from the collection of University Art Museum at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. We commissioned scenic painters to recreate the design for Showboats ‘Round the Bend, an exhibit produced in collaboration with the Theatre Museum.

David Sharps searched University Art Museum at the University of Minneapolis, Minnesota collection website for rivers, lakes, streams, tugboats, barges, whatnot and this was one of the choices, which reminded him of the Palisades.

It served as the model for this replica for an exhibit on showboats that was a partnership between The Theatre Museum and The Waterfront Museum. Helen Guditis and David Sharps with Mary Habstritt as curator, filled the barge with panels that explained the showboat era both in New York and in general. The exhibition on showboats was donated to the Maritime Industry Museum at Fort Schuyler, SUNY Maritime in the Bronx.

Videos

The Driftwood in action

The Driftwood Floating Theatre Showboat: the end of a 150 year tradition?
1989 DOCUMENTARY ABOUT THE DRIFTWOOD THEATRE SHOWBOAT BARGE

Captain Billy Bryant’s daughter Betty Bryant was on the barge in 1991 at South Street Seaport when we did a month-long showboat run,  Serious Foolishness had our four person company do a show several evenings and we also did some other entertainment and we featured Betty Bryant who came here from–I believe Ohio, I want to say–and I had found out about Betty Bryant many years before from Steve Zeitlin(?) at City Lore. 

She had worked with the Smithsonian and later with the Ohio River Celebration that talked about the showboats. Her father, Billy Bryant, I think their boat dated back to 1898 and Betty told stories of performing from the age of 5 years old, what it was really like. 

The video lasts about an hour. She does a small dance at the end and dispels a lot of false information that has been spread because of the movie Showboat, which was on a steamboat. The showboats were barges. Betty claims people were concerned about the explosions that were aboard the steamboats which led to keeping the general public away from the steam equipment.
Videography by Stephen Labovsky

Skip to content