Showbiz
Related: About this forum'Hair' 50 Years Later: Readers Tell Us When They Let the Sunshine In.
'All sorts of factors go into picking a Broadway shows opening night, but April 29, 1968, is very likely the only one to have been selected by the producers astrologer.
It was 50 years ago this week that all signs pointed to a propitious debut for the era-defining Hair at the Biltmore Theater. The American Tribal Love-Rock Musical, as it was known, quickly became an inescapable part of American culture. Audiences would flock to the Biltmore and, in a tradition that continues to this day, storm the stage and dance with the cast during the curtain call for an alternately ebullient and harrowing primer in hippiedom.
Everyone the 5th Dimension, Three Dog Night and Sesame Street, to name a few covered songs like Aquarius and Good Morning Starshine. The Broadway cast recording spent 13 weeks on top of the Billboard charts, and Ebony magazine called it the biggest outlet for black actors in the history of the American theater. (A brief, dimly lit nude scene at the end of Act 1 didnt hurt its popularity, either.)
But not everyone was won over by its raw language and irreverent treatment of the American flag. Leonard Bernstein walked out of the production, as did two of the three Apollo 13 astronauts. When touring companies of the anti-Vietnam War show headed into the heartland, the actors brought an eight-page pamphlet advising what to do if you are detained, harassed or arrested by the police. Two separate United States Supreme Court cases dealt with attempts to shut down productions.
James Rado and Gerome Ragni could hardly have expected this response in late 1964 when they started writing material on their Hoboken landlords typewriter. At the time, hippies didnt even exist at least not by that name: The word hippie first surfaced in a San Francisco newspaper article a few months later. But their creation, augmented enormously by the addition of the composer Galt MacDermot, did as much as anything to define the subculture for mainstream America.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/29/theater/hair-50-years-later-readers-tell-us-when-they-let-the-sunshine-in.html?
The Velveteen Ocelot
(120,858 posts)I usually don't even like musicals, but this one was different; the music was actually good. And yes, they did get naked, which was a bit startling for the time.
SCantiGOP
(14,239 posts)We have a really good local theater group that puts on cutting edge performances, unlike the usual "Brigadoon" fare of the normal theaters.
About 20 years ago they put on a performance of Hair. At one point during a song, two of the females on stage, who are obviously not wearing anything under their T shirts, step to the front of the stage and start to pull up their shirts.
"Is this the part of the play where we all get naked?" said one.
"Are you kidding me, we are in Columbia, SC," the other replied.
With that, they both looked very disappointed, as did the audience, and the song proceeded with everyone clothed.
More surprising to me than the nudity however, is the completely routine inclusion in the cast of a minor character who is a young gay man, or homosexual as would have been the term then. Even among the hippies and liberal elements that loved the show's content and philosophy, being gay was still not considered mainstream.
murielm99
(31,436 posts)during the first week it ran there. We were all sure that Mayor Daley would shut it down.
I have the CD of the original cast songs. I listen to it every once in awhile. My youngest daughter, in her thirties, still finds it amusing. She thinks some it is still timely as well. She thinks the same thing about my Phil Ochs CDs.
elleng
(136,071 posts)I had the vinyl album, but it's long gone.