[Mb-hair] FW: Variety.com - Hair

richard haase hotprojects at nyc.rr.com
Fri Mar 31 07:54:14 PST 2006


i dont agree
i can only tell you
we did an updated one that got much kudos
and it was also very very true to the original
and i cant be the only one
its very very hard to pull off something like that
but not impossible

that war in hair has to be the war in the middle east
its doing hair as a period piece that makes it dead
i think
just my opinion
i can be wrong
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Robin McNamara 
  To: mb-hair at islandlists.com 
  Sent: Friday, March 31, 2006 9:32 AM
  Subject: Re: [Mb-hair] FW: Variety.com - Hair


  It is a period piece, period.

  Love forever
  Robin 
    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Jonathon Johnson 
    To: mb-hair at islandlists.com 
    Sent: Friday, March 31, 2006 9:15 AM
    Subject: Re: [Mb-hair] FW: Variety.com - Hair


    "If it ain't broken - don't fix it." 

    Sorry folks, but no one can convince me that "Hair" needs to be rewritten or updated.
    Not even Jim Rado who I love and admire deeply. Just go back to the Tom O'Horgan
    Broadway version (which WAS the HIT), and the people will get it. Do not stray too far 
    from the playing field or you'll get lost in the tall grass.

    Just an opinion of an old tribe member who is set in his ways ;)

    Peace, Love and Blessings ~ Jonathon

    Michael Butler <michael at michaelbutler.com> wrote:


      Posted: Thurs., Mar. 30, 2006, 8:00pm PT

      Hair

      (Bluma Appel Theater, Toronto; 876 Seats; C$89 $77 top)

      A CanStage and Dancap Private Equity presentation of a musical in two
      acts with music by Galt MacDermot, book by Gerome Ragni and James Rado.
      Directed by Robert A. Prior. Musical director, Steve Hunter.
      Choreographer, Stephen Hues.

      Grasshopper, Margaret Mead, Scarlett O'Hara - Matthew Boden
      Hud, Sergeant - Matthew Brown
      Berger, General Grant - Craig Burnatowski
      Sheila - Karen Burthwright
      Crissy, Monk - Kimmy Choi
      Stroodel, Dad, Hubert Mead - Kevin Dennis
      Brain, Rock Band Soloist - Gerrard Everard
      Justice - Ryan Field
      Dionne, Lincoln - Alana Hibbert
      Apache - Bryan Hindle
      Woof - Andrew Kushnir
      Claude - Jamie McKnight
      Pumpkin, Mom - Adrienne Merrell
      Thistle - David Mongar
      Karisma - Katrina Reynolds
      Karma, The God Aquarius, Monk - Julius Sermonia
      Lala - Valerie Stanois
      Hotdog, Principal, Clark Gable,
      Uncle Sam - Zachary Stevenson
      Moonchild, Aquarius Soloist - Sheena Turcotte
      Jeanie - Cleopatra Williams
      Angela - Naomi Zara


      _____ 

      By RICHARD OUZOUNIAN

      _____ 

      Quick, get the Rogaine. The new production of "Hair" now on view in
      Toronto supposedly boasts a series of enriching rewrites by author James
      Rado. But rather than help the material, they make the iconic
      flower-power, antiwar musical seem thinner than ever. A lot of the
      blame, however, must be laid at the feet of director Robert A. Prior,
      choreographer Stephen Hues and a decidedly inferior cast.

      Prior is the founder of L.A.'s Fabulous Monsters Performance Group, and
      Hues has collaborated with him on numerous occasions. They have a
      reputation for doing edgy, innovative productions, which is probably why
      Rado demanded that CanStage import the American duo for this production.

      But something has gone horribly wrong along the way: The brightly
      colored, insipidly staged mess being performed at the Bluma Appel
      Theater would be more at home in a theme park than at Canada's largest
      regional theater.

      It was their rough-hewn charm and political intensity that made the
      original productions of "Hair" work. The people who created, produced
      and performed the early versions of the show were united in their anger
      over the war in Vietnam. And so, despite an initially breezy air, some
      fetching tunes from Galt MacDermot and the inventive staging of Tom
      O'Horgan, the musical showed its rage in act two, which is largely a
      drug-fueled fantasy of U.S. involvement in Vietnam.

      This is territory artists can still revisit with sincerity and passion,
      as Twyla Tharp proved in "Movin' Out."

      But Prior and company have opted instead for Peter Max-colored designs
      and costumes that look like they stepped out of an episode of
      "Laugh-In." No one actually comes out and says, "Sock it to me!," but
      you wouldn't be surprised if they did.

      Yes, there's a nude scene at the end of act one, but where it used to be
      a personal statement for the cast, tied into their reaction to Claude's
      moving "Where Do I Go?," it now features the whole cast in what looks
      like a merely egregious way to bring down the curtain.

      When it was announced that Rado was working on rewrites of the script,
      some people assumed he might be honing the political message to make it
      more relevant to today. Nothing could be further from the truth.

      Instead, he has expanded the book scenes in which Claude, Berger and
      Sheila work out the details of their not-quite-menage a trois. Maybe the
      material has personal resonance for Rado (the show supposedly mirrors
      his offstage relationship with co-author and co-star Ragni), but the
      cliched dialogue further drains the show's political intensity.

      In a city known for a deep talent pool of young musical theater
      performers, Prior and Hues have largely contented themselves with
      fishing in the shallow end. Most of the company doesn't sing well, take
      the stage with confidence or seem to have any idea what they're doing.
      From the moment Sheena Turcotte feebly warbles opening song "Aquarius,"
      you know you're in trouble.

      There are a few exceptions. In the leading role of Claude, Jamie
      McKnight shows the energy, vocal power and charm that he developed in
      Toronto productions of "The Producers" and "Annie Get Your Gun." Andrew
      Kushnir, Matthew Boden and Adrienne Merrell find solid comedy in what
      they've been asked to do, but they stand alone.

      Craig Burnatowski is a single-expression Berger (sneering), and Karen
      Burthwright has one vocal note as Sheila (loud); the rest of the actors
      are inept or forgettable.

      This limp version of "Hair" is unlikely to attract a new generation of
      theatergoers to the work. Sadly, it may even dim the reputation this
      piece holds in musical theater history.



      Sets and costumes, Dany Lyne; lighting, John Munro; sound, John Lott;
      projections, Yo Suzuki, Lovemushroom Studio. Opened March 30, 2006.
      Reviewed March 29. Runs through June 17. Running time: 2 HOURS, 40 MIN.



      Read the full article at:
      http://www.variety.com/story.asp?l=story&r=VE1117930092&c=33


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    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Good HAIR Days: A Personal Journey with the American Tribal Love-Rock Musical HAIR, by Jonathon Johnson. For more information on the book and how to order it, visit www.goodhairdays.net. 


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