[3 articles] Looking back on the age of Aquarius
http://www.greenwichtime.com/ci_12021620 By Ray Hogan Staff Writer Posted: 03/28/2009 No one seemed to be paying much attention to the slow-moving hippie on the stage of the Al Hirschfeld Theatre on a recent Tuesday night. But when the lights went down and the actors entered the stage through the aisles, the audience knew exactly why they were there. "When the moon is in the seventh house/And Jupiter aligns with Mars/Then peace will guide the planets/And love will steer the stars." "This is the dawning of the age of Aquarius. Aquarius! Aquarius!" "Hair" is back on Broadway "Hair" is back on Broadway 42 years after it became a theater sensation by harnessing youth culture, an up-to-the-minute soundtrack and a general re-imagination of the American musical. With a fully integrated cast, on-stage nudity and songs that became pop hits soon after their stage premieres, "Hair" wasn't a rock opera. It was, however, remarkable in its channeling of youth culture in almost real time. When it opened in 1967 at the Public Theater, it fulfilled Joseph Papp's mission of bringing the issues of the day directly to the Public's stage. After opening on Broadway in April 1968, the show ran for 1,750 performances, followed by nearly 2,000 in London. Songs like "Aquarius," "Good Morning Starshine" and "Let the Sun Shine In" became theatrical and popular standards. Songs from the score have been recorded by Nina Simone, Three Dog Night and The Fifth Dimension. "Hair" officially opens Tuesday but the revival's success has already been tested: A Public Theater production in Central Park became one of the premiere cultural events of last summer. James Rado, who wrote the book and lyrics to "Hair" with the late Gerome Ragni, isn't sure how the musical has connected with a new audience. "That's a mystery to me," he admits. "All I could think of was that maybe their parents may have had the album. There's still a youthfulness to the story and there are modern concerns plus the tribal thing of kids their own age. 'Hair' kind of reinforces the (President) Obama message of change, it reinforces that hope for something new and wonderful to take place. It's very timely." The "Hair" on stage now is a return to Ragni and Rado's original vision, which was altered along the way from The Public Theatre presentation in 1967 to the Great White Way in 1968. "We wanted to break the mold," Rado says. "Coming from a background of loving musicals, we felt this was the time"¦We knew we were breaking form. It was kind of like a little crusade we had to excite and thrill the audience. Things were very human and thrilling to us on the street. We were bringing real life and the street into the theater." "Hair" is the story of a group of New York City teenagers undergoing extreme awakenings (politically, sexually, psychedelically) against the backdrop of Vietnam and the traditional ways of their parents. The two central male characters, Berger, the extroverted dreamer; and Claude, the conflicted ideologist, are based on Ragni and Rado, respectively, both of whom played the roles when the show first opened on Broadway. Rado stops short of calling "Hair" autobiographical. He and Ragni met in 1964 while both were acting off-Broadway in "Hang Down Your Head and Die." "I think there's something of Claude's temperament that was probably me," Rado says. "I also wrote a lot of Berger and Jerry wrote a lot of me." Seeing "Hair" in preview, it's not surprising to see the audience treating the songs as classics, anticipating them and singing along. Although re-creating the fashion of the hippies appears slightly forced, the rest of this show has effortlessly transitioned into the 21st century. It could be easy for many of the songs to be lost in hippie-dippie nostalgia. Instead, the cast finds new life in them. The band on stage includes a horn section, but the driving guitars provide the music's constant. Martha LoMonaco, director of Fairfield University's Theatre Program, remembers taking a bus trip as an eighth-grader from her home in Allentown, Pa., to see the Broadway production. "My friend and I were so loquacious, filling in the suburban adults," she says. "The suburban people were allured and fascinated by the phenomenon of the hippies. This was a safe way to experience the hippie environment." In 1999, producing her own version of "Hair" in Fairfield as part of a campuswide project focusing on the 1960s, LoMonaco's research led her to The Joseph Papp/New York Shakespeare Festival Archives at The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. As she had suspected, there were significant differences in the show that opened at the Public Theatre in 1967 and the one that wound up on Broadway the following year (there was a pit stop at a midtown discotheque in between). She has published two essays on her experience with "Hair." Her research led to the discovery that Rado and Ragni were really aiming to document a new youth culture, aka the Tribe. In her articles, LoMonaco traces the show from its counter-cultural origins to its success as a mainstream commodity. More than a dozen actors were added for the show's Broadway opening. The plot, not overly strong to begin with, was loosened even further. LoMonaco's research proved that "Hair" had moved from a conventional book musical at the Public to a concept musical, or happening, when it opened on Broadway. When she produced "Hair" in 1999, LoMonaco focused on what she believed were the authors' original intentions. In her production, "Let the Sun Shine In" becomes a hymn for those like Claude, who were killed in the war. Her production made Claude's agonizing over the draft central to its plot. "The show opens with 'Aquarius' and I did see it as an anthem, coming to the rite and the ritual," she says. "It was huge at the time. The whole notion of a global community. Now this is trite. Then these were new ideas, to find community and grounding in new ideas that young people were parlaying." "Hair" is returning at a time when the country is in the middle of a drawn-out war. The draft is central to the plot. Most of the cast burn their draft cards. Claude is torn and at the show's end we learn he becomes a casualty of war. How much of that plays with today's audience remains to be seen. "The staying power is that it was the first concept musical, the story line didn't drive it, but the political overtones made it unique. There really wasn't a rock musical until then," says Robert Thompson, interim dean at the Purchase Conservatory of Music, who saw the musical on Broadway in the late 1960s. "What I found unique about it, it embodied everything about the 1960s with hair being the great equalizer, making people sort of androgynous." Thompson recently suggested "Hair" as a Purchase College performance because students were outside protesting tuition increases while they discussed what shows to stage in the coming season. "I have not seen a protest on a college campus in 40 years," he says with pride. Thompson says he believes today's college students realize the significance of the cultural upheaval of the 1960s, when rock and folk music were viewed as vehicles for social change and poets were respected community voices. "They seem to understand the significance of it and are longing for authenticity and connection between music and society in their own lives," Thompson says. This year also marks the 30th anniversary of the movie "Hair," which was directed by Milos Forman, stars Treat Williams and Beverly D'Angelo and took extreme liberties with the narrative. The film made the Claude character a Midwesterner who was spending a few days in New York before being shipped off to war. D'Angelo played Sheila, who in the musical is the intellectual and wealthy college student with a left-leaning heart of gold. In Forman's story, she is an outsider who becomes the object of Claude's affection. The film takes some very strange twists and turns at the end with Berger mistaken for Claude and shipped off to war. Reaction to the film, especially by the theater community, is still largely negative. John Farr, who operates the Best Movies by Farr Web site and until recently wrote the DVD Detective column for The Advocate and Greenwich Time, thinks the movie gets a bad rap. "When you talk about a movie that's been made from a play, there is always a weird kind of dynamic of people who see the movie and can't accept it the way they accepted the play," he says. "It successfully takes what was a series of vignettes and songs, Milos Forman had the job of making a film here and come up with a story that glued the thing together and allowed it to travel, all the things you can do with film that you can't do with theater." Yet Farr admits that he didn't see the film, which also boasts choreography by Twyla Tharp, when it came out because he didn't want it to diminish his experience of having seen the play. He also remembers that by the time the movie was released, American youth culture had moved to disco and "Saturday Night Fever." "Maybe not enough time had passed to make it fresh," he says. "Now that the play is being revived, what is the point of seeing the movie? The play is going to come off better." "I didn't see the movie until I was doing my research for the show," says LoMonaco. "The whole thing was very strange. It's another example of how 'Hair' permutated in all kinds of directions." It would seem the closest thing "Hair" has to a historical antecedent is "Rent," which chronicled youth on New York's Lower East Side at the height of the AIDS epidemic. Is there any other of era American youth culture begging for theatrical treatment? "The grunge era or the punk thing was visually exciting and mysterious, and just the opposite of the hippie lifestyle," Rado says. "The hippie would take you and the punk wanted to keep you out." -- Staff Writer Ray Hogan can be reached at 964-2290 or [email protected]. -------- It's the Age of Aquarius on Broadway for Hamilton actor http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20090329.whair0330/BNStory/Entertainment by SIMON HOUPT March 29, 2009 New York Eight shows a week, Caissie Levy finds herself sandwiched between a couple of hot men on the stage of the Al Hirschfeld Theatre, and she hasn't quite figured out how she got there. "I don't know what to tell you," she giggled the other day at an Italian restaurant on Ninth Avenue. "I do enjoy the offbeat." Levy is something of a free spirit. In the fall of 2001, after she'd decided she wanted to make her living as an actor, she left her home in Hamilton to study at the American Musical and Dramatic Academy here in New York rather than one of the classical conservatory programs offered by Montreal's National Theatre School or George Brown College in Toronto. "I wouldn't have stayed," she says of those other programs. "I'm very disciplined when it comes to being in a show, playing a role, but I'm not good just being in that whole framework of: paper's due at a certain time." Even at AMDA, where the program runs less than two years, she was restless. "I didn't want to be in school all that much," she admits. "Really, I wanted to be onstage." How appropriate, then, that these days she is onstage playing a young woman who is rarely in school. Levy is starring in Broadway's highly anticipated new production of Hair, opening tomorrow night, as Sheila Franklin, a New York University student who spends most of her time hanging out with a tribe of hippies, protesting the Vietnam War and embodying the ethos of free love. Sheila's sweet on the hippie leader, a long-haired hunk named Berger, though she's also got room in her heart (and her bed) for Claude Bukowski, a kid from Queens who just got drafted. Everyone seems so friendly and free up there on the stage of the Hirschfeld, so Summer of Love-ish, that, by the end of the show, audience members just want to get up and join them. Which, in fact, many of them do. One of the loveliest aspects of the new production is an impromptu dance party that breaks out on stage after the curtain call as the show's powerful house band blasts out a full-throated rendition of Let the Sunshine In. Hundreds of audience members swarm the stage, often taking the opportunity to share with cast members how affected they are. "They're just overflowing with emotion: 'This is the best show I've seen!'" says Levy. Many people share their memories with her of seeing the original production, which began at the Public Theater in 1967 and then transferred to Broadway the following spring for a run of almost four years. "People get up and dance, young and old, they are ready to get on that stage. I think that's just the energy building throughout the show," says Levy, nibbling on a Caesar salad. "The other night, I met someone who played Sheila in one of the original companies in San Francisco, so I introduced her to our director who was onstage dancing. It's just so cool to be able to do that, to interact with everyone, to hear everyone's stories." Levy's own story is fairly straightforward. Now 27, she grew up in Hamilton, the youngest child and only daughter of a family doctor whose wife runs the office. The family was, she says, always very arts-oriented, which is one reason she doesn't think the nudity at the end of Act One in Hair is such a big deal. "It doesn't seem that far from who I am," explains Levy, who has the quiet confidence young actors develop after years of fending for themselves. "I luckily come from a very liberal household where my parents are, like, It's art, man." Still, she admits, having her parents and two brothers there on opening night tomorrow, "I'll be a little freaked out when they're in the audience and I'm getting naked, let's be honest." Hair marks the first time Levy is originating a role for Broadway, though she's been in the industry since graduating from AMDA in the spring of 2002. With every other job, she was stepping into a machine already running. There was the role of Maureen in the non-Equity tour of Rent that she landed right out of school, a year understudying Penny Pringle in the Toronto production of Hairspray, more than a year actually playing Penny during a subsequent tour and on Broadway, and almost two years in Wicked as Elphaba: first as an understudy on Broadway, then in the role itself during a stint in Los Angeles. Which is one reason Hair means so much to her. "This has been, for sure, the most creatively satisfying experience I've had, just because I've been able to bring so much of my own ideas to the table and make them part of the show. I wasn't able to do that before." There is also Hair's anti-war, pro-love message. "Where we're at with politics right now and what's going on in our world, I think people are ready to hear this kind of message again. It's very relevant and it's very relatable, and I think the young people are just thrilled that there's something [such as a play] saying something of meaning onstage. There's a place for all the fun musicals, and all the spectacle musicals and I've been a part of both of those things and cherish those but I'm also really proud to be part of something that's talking about what we're facing in the world." The show, suggests Levy, is almost Canadian in its outlook. "I have to say this right," she begins: she doesn't want to offend the U.S., which has given her a rewarding livelihood and many friends. "I've always been really proud to be a Canadian living in the U.S., and making that distinction," she says. "I feel like we embody a lot of the things in Hair, more so than the U.S. does, currently, and now with Barack in office and hopefully the war's ending, I think the U.S. is catching up a little bit without sounding completely condescending. And so I feel really proud to be part of spreading this message. Kind of representing the Canadian hippies." -------- March 30 Preview of Broadway's Hair Canceled http://www.playbill.com/news/article/127667.html By Andrew Gans and Adam Hetrick 25 Mar 2009 The March 30 preview performance of the current revival of Hair, which officially opens March 31 at the Al Hirschfeld Theatre, has been canceled. The performance was canceled "to allow the actors a day of rest in the midst of a long string of consecutive performances," according to a show spokesperson. The 1968 rock musical Hair, which officially introduced Broadway to the counterculture movement four decades ago, began previews at the Hirschfeld March 6. Diane Paulus stages the new production that began life as a 40th anniversary concert presentation by the Public Theater/New York Shakespeare Festival at the Central Park's Delacorte Theater in 2007. The Public later fully produced Hair in summer 2008 as part of its Shakespeare in the Park season. The al fresco Paulus production extended three times, and now resurfaces on Broadway. The revival of Hair reunites much of the young cast from the Central Park stagings, including Will Swenson as Berger, Allison Case as Crissy, Kacie Sheik as Jeanie, Bryce Ryness as Woof, Darius Nichols as Hud, Megan Lawrence as Mother and Andrew Kober as Margaret Mead/Dad. Returning tribe members also include Steel Burkhardt, Lauren Elder, Allison Guinn, Anthony Hollock, John Moauro, Ato Blankson-Wood, Brandon Pearson, Paris Remillard, Maya Sharpe, Theo Stockman, Tommar Wilson, Jackie Burns, Kaitlin Kiyan, Nicole Lewis, Megan Reinking and Saycon Sengbloh. Newly added for Hair's Broadway transfer are Tony nominee Gavin Creel as Claude, Sasha Allen as Dionne and Caissie Levy as Sheila. The iconic tribal rock musical has book and lyrics by the late Gerome Ragni and James Rado and music by Galt MacDermot. "With a score including such enduring musical numbers as 'Let the Sun Shine In,' 'Aquarius,' 'Hair' and 'Good Morning Starshine,' Hair depicts the birth of a cultural movement in the 60's and 70's that changed America forever: the musical follows a group of hopeful, free-spirited young people who advocate a lifestyle of pacifism and free-love in a society riddled with intolerance and brutality during the Vietnam War," according to Broadway production notes. "As they explore sexual identity, challenge racism, experiment with drugs and burn draft cards, the 'tribe' in Hair creates an irresistible message of hope, peace and change that continues to resonate with audiences 40 years later." The Hair creative team includes set designer Scott Pask, costume designer Michael McDonald, lighting designer Kevin Adams, sound designer Acme Sound Partners and choreographer Karole Armitage. For tickets phone (212) 239-6200 or visit Telecharge. For further information visit HairBroadway. http://hairbroadway.com/ The Al Hirschfeld Theatre is located at 302 West 45th Street. . --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Sixties-L" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/sixties-l?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
