THEATRE PREVIEW
“THE
ROCKY HORROR SHOW” AT THE SAN DIEGO REPERTORY THEATRE
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine May 1991
If "it's the pelvic thrust that really
drives you insane," then get on your high-heeled sneakers. "Let's do the Time Warp again!"
Hot patootie! Lace up your corset and prepare yourself for those sweet,
Transexual Transylvanians: “The Rocky
Horror Show” is landing at the San Diego Repertory Theatre.
If you're totally clueless at this point,
fear not. The instructions for doing
the Time Warp are right in the song:
"It's just a jump to the left.
And a step to the right. Put
your hands on your hips, and bring your knees in tight," etc. (See above for chorus and reprise). You gotta get with the program. This is a cult thing. We're just coming out of the fifteenth
anniversary year of the movie, "The Rocky Horror Picture Show," a
funky, sexy, fun-filled, audience-participation rock 'n' roll spoof of B-movies
of the sci-fi genre that, in a brilliant marketing strategy, could only be seen
at
But we're getting the stage musical, the
version that first opened in
So what's it all about, you ask, you
"Rocky Horror" virgin? Well,
it's about a nerd-couple from
You can check it all out on your home
video, if you want (amazingly, video rental was withheld until last November),
but you'd be missing “everything.” Like
those opening-credit lips, sensuously singing, big enough for you to be sucked
into on a large screen. And you'd miss
the audience. In 1976, the fans started
yelling out at the characters on film.
It was Labor Day when Louis Farese, a kindergarten teacher from
After that, the verbal floodgates were
open. Later that month, September 1976,
fans began dressing up like the characters, donning fishnet stockings, corsets,
outrageous glasses, heavy eye-makeup.
By Halloween, regulars started to jump up on the stage and mimic the
action onscreen. The madness
spread. ("Madness," as the
song goes, "takes its toll.")
The same lines were bellowed out identically in almost 200 theaters
across the country. Resale shops
nationwide did a landmark business in black corsets and high-heeled platform
shoes (for men!), opera-length gloves with no fingers, mega-millimeter pearl
chokers. In 1977, the props began to
appear: rice thrown by the audience
during the wedding scene, water pistols squirted during the rain storm,
newspapers held overhead á là Sarandon.
Toast, cards, toilet paper.
These days, they frisk you before you enter the
So, can fifteen years of programmed
insanity be improved upon? The Rep's
resident rock 'n' roller, director Sam Woodhouse, thinks so. "I only saw the movie for the first
time a couple of months ago," he confesses. "I discovered it's an astonishing but true story: Two Weber's Bread kids from
Woodhouse removes his tongue from his
cheek. "People think it's a silly
story, but it does have a point. It's a
nudge to each of us to take a step out of our own lives, to dance with the
Other... We might even consider mixing
the Master Race with the Aliens in the audience."
The Rep's production will be no museum
theater piece, says Woodhouse. "We
are tipping our hat to the film, but creating our own feel. More funky, more soulful, more
African-American rhythm and blues.
Multi-racial casting. James
Brown meets Liberace. A White-Afroed
black Eddie. An Andy Warhol Riff
Raff. A live onstage water ballet
without any water."
Underwear as outerwear? Yes.
Fishnet stockings? Yes. "And maybe corsets with eyeballs on the
brassieres. We're determined to put a
rocketship onstage. It's
party-in-the-theater time. This will be
the most extravagant rock 'n' roll performance ever done in this theater. I hope steam rises up outside the building
and surrounds the obelisk."
(Personally, I hope it energizes the obelisk and helps it return to
Transexual Transylvania, where it came from).
Now don't get nervous, in case you saw the
Rep's production of “Are You Lonesome Tonight?” Woodhouse did not cast himself
as Frank, or Rocky. Whew. (It'll take years to erase his Elvis from memory). But he might slip onstage for a few choruses
of the Time Warp. Look for him in the
back. He'll be the one in the
eyeball-corset.
“"The Rocky Horror Show" runs
from May 11-June 2 at the Lyceum Theatre.”
©1991
Patté Productions Inc.