Following protests on Syros and Rhodes, a demonstration was also held in Agios Nikolaos, Crete, against the arrival of the Israeli cruise ship Crown Iris.
According to public broadcaster ERT, hundreds of citizens gathered by the lake in Agios Nikolaos, displaying protest banners and Palestinian flags.
Reportedly, there were brief scuffles with the police, who used tear gas and detained three people.
The cruise ship, carrying 1,500 Israeli tourists, docked at the port and passengers were transported by bus, crossing the lake’s bridge next to the demonstrators.
Norwegian Cruise Line CEO Harry Sommer opens up about the impact of tariffs on cruise lines and travel on ‘Barron’s Roundtable.’
A dream vacation took a dark turn after passengers on board a Celebrity Cruises vessel reportedly experienced a temporary loss of power over the weekend, leaving it adrift for several hours.
The ship, Constellation, was sailing near the Italian coast on Saturday, Aug. 2, when it encountered a power outage that a spokesperson for Royal Caribbean Group, Celebrity Cruises’ parent company, described as a “technical issue.”
Reports indicate the vessel was without electricity and air conditioning for under three hours, though the cruise line has not specified what caused the issue or how it was resolved.
Despite the outage, passengers were reportedly still able to use their cellphones, as the ship was sailing close enough to shore to maintain service, according to a statement to Fox News Digital from the cruise line.
Large cruise ship Celebrity Constellation in Boka Kotorska Bay, Montenegro. ( / Getty Images)
Cruise tracking website CruiseMapper shows the ship is currently on an 11-day itinerary that began on July 28 from Porto Corsini in Ravenna, Italy. Scheduled stops include destinations in Croatia and Montenegro, with the cruise concluding on Aug. 8 in Civitavecchia, the nearest port to Rome.
Celebrity Constellation cruise ship docked in the Dubrovnik cruise port near the old town. ( / Getty Images)
In the event of a power loss, an occurrence not uncommon in the cruise industry, Royal Caribbean notes that emergency generators are automatically activated.
The cruise ship Celebrity Constellation off the coast of Palma de Mallorca. (Clara Margais/dpa (Photo by Clara Margais/picture alliance via / Getty Images)
These generators, located on the upper decks with an independent fuel supply, according to the website, are designed to support essential systems, including emergency lighting, fire detection, elevators and even engine restarts. They also ensure that communication through radio, fax and email remains functional.
The recent incident echoes concerns raised in a June Netflix docuseries titled “Trainwreck: Poop Cruise,” which recounted the infamous 2013 incident aboard the Carnival Triumph. During that cruise, a fire in the engine room destroyed electrical cables, leaving the vessel powerless in the Gulf of Mexico.
Passengers on that cruise endured several days without lighting, air conditioning, refrigeration or functioning restrooms, ultimately having to use plastic bags for waste and cope with raw sewage onboard.
“Disney Hercules” will be a brand-new, Broadway-style retelling of the Walt Disney Animation Studios film developed exclusively for the Disney Destiny. Embodying the ship’s theme of “heroes and villains,” the show will feature epic battles and heroic moments, including Hercules’ battle with the Titans of the Underworld, featuring monumental, cutting-edge exoskeleton technology. (Disney)
Disney Cruise Line
The Disney Destiny, Disney Cruise Line’s seventh cruise ship, will launch later this year. The vessel is themed around the stories of heroes and villains. One story that will be performed inside the Walt Disney Theater is Disney Hercules, a Broadway-style retelling of the classic animated film. The show will feature larger-than-life musical numbers, puppets, cutting-edge technology and more to bring new energy to the stage adaptation of Hercules.
For Disney Cruise Line, the ship’s crown jewel is the Walt Disney Theater, where each night guests onboard will see performances featuring Disney characters and retelling Disney stories. What makes the Disney Destiny stand out among its other Wish-class ships (the Disney Wish and Disney Treasure) is the immense level of storytelling and technology that is blended together to make each stage performance top-notch.
Although shows don’t just appear onstage overnight, and Disney Hercules is no exception, new technology and storytelling techniques have enabled Disney to enhance its entertainment offerings onboard its new ships. A massive team of performers, choreographers, musicians and more has worked for nearly three years to bring Disney Hercules to life for the Disney Destiny, which will take its maiden voyage on November 20, 2025, from Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
“We’re so proud that we get to make theater that, for many people, is their first exposure to this art form that we’re all so incredibly passionate about,” says Jenny Weinbloom, Vice President of Live Entertainment at Disney Signature Experiences. “We’re always incredibly thoughtful as we’re developing these shows that we’re making them for everybody.”
Disney Cruise Line mainly draws nuclear and extended families who want to cruise together. Adults without children is also a growing segment for the brand, which makes sense since this is a booming guest segment at Disney Parks as adults look to tap into the nostalgia of their childhood.
Why Disney Cruise Line Chose ‘Hercules’ For The Disney Destiny
“Disney Hercules” will be a brand-new, Broadway-style retelling of the Walt Disney Animation Studios film developed exclusively for the Disney Destiny. Embodying the ship’s theme of “heroes and villains,” the show will feature jaw-dropping puppetry to represent the mythological behemoths that Hercules must defeat to fulfill his hero’s journey, such as the multi-headed Hydra monster. (Disney)
Disney Cruise Line
Disney has a deep vault of intellectual property to choose from for live performances. When it was announced that the Disney Destiny would be themed to heroes and villains, the theater creatives knew Hercules had to be the premier show inside the Walt Disney Theater. Not only was it already a musical with a classic score and soundtrack by Alan Menken, it was also one of the ultimate hero and villain stories from Disney’s Renaissance era of the late 1980s and early 1990s.
“Hercules is kind of having a moment right now,” explains Weinbloom. “Hercules is on the West End too, which is a delightful coincidence, but it’s because this music is so incredible, the story is so incredible and it’s kind of a perfect time to tap into the nostalgia of this amazing source material and to build upon it.”
The new show, while telling the same story as the West End rendition, will be exclusive to the Disney Destiny.
“Our task is to take that story, take that music and reimagine it through the lens of a theatrical vocabulary,” says Weinbloom. “[We are] taking what’s inherently animated about this story, stripping that away, and taking the story to its core and rebuilding it again for the stage.”
Cutting-edge technology will bring Disney Hercules from Mount Olympus to the Disney Destiny.
This isn’t the first time the Greek god has made its way to a Disney Cruise Line ship. Hercules: The Muse-ical could be seen on the Disney Magic and Disney Wonder from 1998 through 2008, and was earmarked as a musical comedy.
While these two smaller ships have fantastic shows inside The Walt Disney Theater, the Disney Destiny has some major upgrades that have allowed the Disney Hercules production team to enhance the story through technology that was just not possible in the early 2000s.
One of the biggest jumps in technology is the theater itself. “Not all of our ships have the same theater. The Destiny is in the Wish-class of ships, so the Wish, the Treasure and the Destiny. They have significantly larger Walt Disney Theater venues than the smaller, older ships in the fleet. So they have different capabilities attached based on that scale and also based on the technology embedded within those venues,” explains Weinbloom.
Another leap forward in technology is the on-stage puppets. Disney Hercules will have eight total puppets, including two towering Titan puppets. But these Titans aren’t going to be manned behind a curtain like a marionette.
The puppets are actually Exo-frames that were developed in partnership with Walt Disney Imagineering’s research and development team. The puppet style was play-tested at the Disneyland Resort as an Incredible Hulk figure. For the show, there will be an earth Titan and a frost Titan that tower 9 feet and 13 feet tall, respectively, with actual performers inside the puppet.
Additionally, Disney Cruise Line’s rehearsal facility in Toronto, Canada, is a technological marvel. The facility’s multiple rehearsal rooms are designed and marked just like the stage inside the Walt Disney Theater on each of Disney’s cruise ships. There are also dedicated rooms for stunts and flying rigs, which are exactly the same systems used onboard each cruise ship, just in a different space, so performers can get plenty of practice in before heading to the ship.
“From a new show development standpoint, having the facility here has been integral to our process. We did a workshop on the ship and had all of these ideas about what we were going to do, but when we got here and into the actual space, lots of things changed,” explains Arin Dale, theProducer of “Disney Hercules.”
For Disney Cruise Line and Disney Live Entertainment, the goal for Disney Hercules, or any show inside The Walt Disney Theater, is for guests to be truly immersed in Hercules, going from zero to hero as he fights Titans and Hydras.
As “wow” moments come to life on stage, the idea that this may be Disney Cruise Line’s most advanced stage show yet should fade into the background, as storytelling is the prime reason theater exists after all.
After having cruises on two of its ships canceled or significantly disrupted by technical issues in July, Celebrity Cruises is seeing its string of bad luck continue into August.
A third Celebrity Cruises ship has now joined Celebrity Infinity and Celebrity Beyond in experiencing technical difficulties this summer.
The cruise line’s troubles began in early July when a minor electrical fire on board Celebrity Infinity led to major problems. The ship experienced a power failure and technical issues afterward that forced it to cancel the rest of its port stops and stay docked in Kusadasi, Turkey for days as emergency repairs were completed.
Then, Celebrity Beyond, one of the cruise line’s newest Edge Class ships, began experiencing propulsion problems that are now slowing down the rest of its summer cruise season in the Caribbean. Despite canceling a cruise in July so the ship could undergo emergency repair work, the cruise line had to adjust cruise itineraries through October to accommodate the ship’s reduced sailing speed.
Now, another Celebrity Cruises ship sailing in the Mediterranean experienced a sudden setback that left many passengers concerned.
Doug Parker shared details on the latest Celebrity Cruises snag, and other cruise news, including how Royal Caribbean is tightening a key beverage package policy, on the Aug. 4 edition of Cruise News Today.
Celebrity Constellation loses power while sailing in Italy
Cruise News Today Transcript:
This is Cruise News Today with Doug Parker.
Good morning, here’s your cruise news for Monday, August 4th.
Passengers aboard the Celebrity Constellation experienced a full power outage while the ship was sailing off the coast of southern Italy over the weekend.
Now, for about two hours, the ship had no air conditioning, no flushing toilets or hot meals. It drifted at a low speed before power was eventually restored and the ship resumed course up to Messina.
A report to our tip line says guests were given a free drink and WiFi for the inconvenience. Celebrity Cruises has not commented at the time of broadcast and passengers described poor communication during the blackout.
The incident follows other technical issues across two other ships over the past month with Celebrity. In early July, Celebrity Infinity broke down in Turkey where it stayed for five days for repairs while closer to the states, Celebrity Beyond was out of service for a week due to propulsion issues, which are still ongoing.
Royal Caribbean stops making exceptions to drink package rule
And Royal Caribbean is tightening enforcement of its drink package policy. Yeah, now while the cruise line has long required all adults in the stateroom buy the Deluxe Beverage Package if one person does, it used to grant exceptions, especially for pregnancies or non-drinking guests. But as of August 1st, that flexibility is long gone.
According to Royal Caribbean Blog, a company spokesperson confirmed saying, quote: “Royal Caribbean will no longer be able to grant exceptions to our policy.”
This move follows a rise in people asking for exemption requests and concerns about guests sharing drink packages.
Norwegian Cruise Line cuts costs while upholding standards
And during a business update, Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings says its 200 million dollars in cost savings this year and 300 million projected by next year won’t impact the guest experience.
CEO Harry Sommer said that these savings are coming from smarter purchasing and operational efficiencies, not service cuts. He did add that some of the money is actually being reinvested, including upgrading food offerings across the company’s 34 ships.
CFO Mark Kempa said that guest satisfaction remains strong and that NCL will continue tightening costs while maintaining its onboard standards.
Last week, Norwegian reported a total of 2.52 billion in revenue in Q2. That’s up six percent from the same quarter last year.
And cruise line stocks were down on Friday. Carnival Corporation: down 2.3%, 29.07. Royal Caribbean: down 1%, 314.25. Norwegian: down 4%, 24.50. And Viking: down 2%, 57.56.
If you have a lead on a story, let us know: tips@cruiseradio.net.
Here in Seoul, South Korea, I’m Doug Parker with Cruise News Today. Have yourself a great Monday.
(The Arena Group will earn a commission if you book a cruise.)
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