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I don't get the idea behind a theatrical showing of Rocky. How hard would it be to just project the movie behind the actors, like the real friggin' productions do it?
Posts: 37449 | Registered: May 1999
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My memories of my first and only viewing are not very clear. The event was mainly connected with hanging out with a hot guy. Alas, my love for him continued unrequited for yet a long while.
Posts: 11017 | Registered: Apr 2003
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Oy vey. Maybe it's just me thinking like me, but I definetely wasn't thinky of the show Rocky.
Posts: 1934 | Registered: Jun 2001
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I said she was "a little" creepy, because she was staring at me with these big huge eyes and grinning predatorially. O_o;
The show was awesome. The actors blew my mind and of course, Dana's brother was there adding audience participation. He and a guy sitting about four o'clock from me were the only ones shouting crap. It was the excellent. I guess you could call me a virgin, technically, despite the fact that I've seen the movie on the small screen about a hundred times (not the same, I know) and performed a lip sync to the Time Warp with a large group of my friends for our school talent show. So I'm well versed in the show, albeit not the shouting part of it. (sadness)
Of course, about halfway through the show I realized that there was a woman over 50 to my left, a minister to my right, and three seats away, a ten-year-old boy. But I decided not to let that bother me.
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*shrug* I've been to the movie version, so the question is purely a curiousity as far as I'm concerned.
Posts: 7954 | Registered: Mar 2004
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Ohhh. The kilt guy. He rocked. I saw him outside the theater and said to myself. KILT. Awesome.
Posts: 4816 | Registered: Apr 2003
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I'm not sure that 10 is an acceptable age for that show, but I assume the boy's mother was there too. Hmm...
Oh, Rocky!
Brad!
Janet!
LOL...
I must be the only person on the planet who lacks a real appreciation for the audience participation aspect of that show. I mean, I enjoy the jokes that people shout out, and dancing along to the Time Warp is nearly impossible to avoid. But still, when I first saw the show it was in the original theatrical release of the movie and nobody was doing all that stuff. I still remember it that way and loved it.
Also, I hate missing dialog or lyrics because of audience noise, so the audience participation stuff is sometimes annoying to me.
But...having seen the movie again a year or so ago, I have to admit that it lacks a certain something. It sort of begs for real-time lampooning just to make sitting through it multiple times more appealing. I suppose after seeing it a dozen times or so, I'd be interested in it only to shout stuff at the screen too.
Silly movie, really.
But the songs...
The same guy wrote another play that also had excellent songs (as I recall), but didn't do anywhere near as well. It never developed a cult following and has, sadly, disappeared from the Earth.
I still find the first song that Riff Raff sings to be among the best ever written. It comes on teh heals of the "There's a Light" intro that Brad & Janet sing and I think it's just perfect...
And Tim Curry was so amazingly funny in the movie version...
So, ...
Come up to the lab And see... What's on the slab...
I see you shiver with antici- - - - - - - -- - - - pation...
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Sorry, Bob. It just hasn't been the same since I found out you were taken.
Also, the other musical that Richard O'Brien wrote was called Shock Therapy, I believe, and made into a movie with a few of the same actors and the same types of characters.
Rocky Horror is definitely one of my favorite movies. I've only seen it acted out once (with movie playing behind, not pure theatrical).
I think the first time I saw it I was around 15? I don't remember what I knew of it beforehand, but I watched it on TV alone in my parents' room from start to finish. Loved it ever since.
Posts: 1892 | Registered: Mar 2002
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I can't imagine the audience participation at a stage production being the same intensity as at the movie -- was it?
I mean -- that is the predominate feature/draw of the whole cult following -- the audience participation! Did they bring newspapers, and lighters and the entire thing?
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I've got to admit that I would find it considerably harder to heckle someone performing the play than I would someone merely mimicing the action on screen. I have no idea why.
Posts: 37449 | Registered: May 1999
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Bob, do you mean the Time Warp song or the part where Riff is singing up in the window ("Dark-ness must flow down the river...")?
Oh, and Shock Treatment is complete crap, with the exception of one song (can't remember the name) and the voice of the woman who plays Janet. There's a reason Curry refused to be any part of it.
Posts: 779 | Registered: Dec 2003
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They very much encouraged the audience participation. You could buy packs in the lobby that had newspapers, tp, confetti, and such (glow sticks instead of lighters, though.) And one page of the program had some of the response lines printed. Plus, I think the kilt guy was a plant.
Re: kilts -- ElJay, I didn't make your boyfriend that kilt because I like them. Bob already knows my particular clothes fetish, and that ain't it. (Come to think of it, half of Hatrack knows. You must have missed that thread. )
Posts: 9866 | Registered: Apr 2002
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Oh, the kilt guy was totally a plant. But even though they encouraged audiance participation, there weren't very many people there who knew the lines. I was glad we had bPw.
I was wondering if they had brought in people during dress rehersal, so the actors would be aclimatized to people shouting at them.
And dkw, shhhhhhh. I know that's not why you made the kilt... spoil all my fun. Yes, I missed your clothing fetish thread, but I'm sure I know anyway.... that one's never been a secret.
Posts: 7954 | Registered: Mar 2004
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