Florida's Classical Music Station
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

A 'Jaws' star's son offers a behind-the-scenes look at the filming

Actors from Jobsite Theater's production of "The Shark is Broken" sit in the maw of a shark
James Zambon Productions
Actors from Jobsite Theater's production of "The Shark is Broken" sit in the maw of a shark

"The Shark is Broken," at Jobsite Theater, was co-written by Ian Shaw, son of late actor Robert Shaw.

Many documentaries have told the stories of the magnificent dysfunction on the set of "Jaws." The mechanical shark didn't work for a lot of the time. There were massive cost overruns, and it took 159 days to make a movie that should have taken about two months.

And on top of all the technical and mechanical troubles, there were interpersonal clashes spawned by big egos and discord over acting styles.

Still, a film that might have sunk Stephen Spielberg's career before it ever got started is now considered the first summer blockbuster.

Actors from Jobsite Theater's production of "The Shark is Broken."
James Zambon/James Zambon / 2026.0215 SHARK - Jobsite (trio)
/
2026.0215 SHARK - Jobsite (trio)
Actors from Jobsite Theater's production of "The Shark is Broken."

Tampa's Jobsite Theater is taking its audiences behind the projector with a play called "The Shark is Broken." It was co-written by Ian Shaw. He's the son of the late British Actor Robert Shaw, who starred as the irascible Quint, who captained "The Orca" in the film.

David Jenkins is Jobsite's producing artistic director. He's also directing the play.

He said not only was Ian Shaw on the "Jaws" film set as a child, but he also had the benefit of his father's "drinking diary" to propel the story forward.

"In finding this diary and reading a lot of these stories that some of them he probably knew, some of them maybe he didn't know. And that sort of like that flood of memories, not only of the experience, but the man, I feel like, that's probably where this came from," Jenkins said.

Jenkins said the younger Shaw also hauled up stories from television interviews stars Roy Scheider, his dad Robert Shaw and Richard Dreyfuss did to promote the movie. And on-scene accounts from others involved in it.

Despite what you might expect, Jenkins said the play is a comedy. The humor, he said, is born from the character's challenges.

"The humor comes out of these men in the circumstance, too, because they're literally trapped on this boat. They can't do anything about it. And, you know, Dreyfuss is a neurotic and Shaw's sort of an old, stodgy British drunk. And these two really meet like oil and water, with Roy Scheider being the one in between the two of them," Jenkins said.

If you've seen "Jaws" you may know the famous USS Indianapolis scene where Robert Shaw's character Quint recounts the terror of that true story from World War Two. First, the ship was torpedoed by the Japanese. And then the survivors had to try to live through the heat and exposure. More than 100 were killed by shark attacks.

"That scene by so many is referred to as, like the heart and soul of that movie. And it's the crown jewel in the "Jaws" crown. And we do get to see sort of the evolution of that. But I think that over the course of this 90 or so minutes that the audience sits with it, you get the idea that this shows off how these three guys really did help carry that film, and how the dynamics between the two of them started off-screen," Jenkins said.

Jenkins said the play "The Shark is Broken" has a lot of fun things to say about art and acting fathers.

"All three of the men in the show have points where they sort of tell their dad story. And I think that people also enjoy insider baseball, sort of behind-the-scenes stuff. So, I think that part of the show's appeal with folks is that they kind of feel like they get to be a fly on the room and listen to these three guys, you know, spill the tea, as the kids say," Jenkins said.

Jobsite Theater's production of "The Shark is Broken" runs through April 5 at the Straz Center in Tampa. You can get more information through its website.

Copyright 2026 WUSF 89.7

Susan Giles Wantuck
Susan Giles Wantuck is our midday news host, and a producer and reporter for WUSF Public Media who focuses her storytelling on arts, culture and history.