Hair: The American Tribal Love-Rock
Musical is a
rock musical
with a book and lyrics by
James Rado and
Gerome Ragni and music by
Galt MacDermot. A product of the
hippie counter-culture and
sexual revolution of the 1960s, several of
its songs became anthems of the
anti-Vietnam War peace movement. The musical's profanity, its
depiction of the use of illegal drugs, its treatment of
sexuality, its irreverence for the
American flag, and its nude scene caused much
comment and controversy. The musical broke new ground in
musical theatre by defining the genre of
"rock musical", using a racially integrated cast, and inviting the
audience onstage for a "
Be-In"
finale.
Hair tells the story of the "tribe",
a group of politically active, long-haired
hippies of the "Age of Aquarius"
living a bohemian life in New York City
and fighting against conscription into the Vietnam War. Claude, his good friend
Berger, their roommate Sheila and their friends struggle to balance
their young lives, loves and the sexual revolution with their
rebellion against the war and their conservative parents and
society. Ultimately, Claude must decide whether to
resist the draft as his friends have
done, or to compromise his
pacifistic
principles and risk his life by serving in Vietnam.
After an
off-Broadway debut in October 1967 at
Joseph Papp's Public
Theater
and a subsequent run in a midtown discothèque space, the show opened on
Broadway
in April
1968 and ran for 1,750 performances. Simultaneous
productions in cities across the United States and Europe followed
shortly thereafter, including a successful London production, which
ran for 1,997 performances. Since then, numerous productions
have been staged around the world, spawning dozens of recordings of
the musical. Some of the songs from its score became
Top 10 hits, and a
feature
film adaptation was released in 1979. A Broadway revival opened
on March 31, 2009, earning strong reviews and winning the
Tony Award and
Drama Desk Award for best revival
of a musical. In 2008,
Time magazine
wrote, "Today
Hair seems, if anything, more daring than
ever."
History
Hair was conceived by actors
James
Rado and
Gerome Ragni. The two met
in 1964 when they performed together in the
off-Broadway flop
Hang Down Your Head and
Die, and they began writing
Hair together in late
1964. The main characters were autobiographical, with Rado's Claude
being a pensive romantic and Ragni's Berger an extrovert. Their
close relationship, including its volatility, was reflected in the
musical. Rado explained, "We were great friends. It was a
passionate kind of relationship that we directed into creativity,
into writing, into creating this piece. We put the drama between us
on stage."
Rado described the inspiration for
Hair as "a combination
of some characters we met in the streets, people we knew and our
own imaginations.
We knew this group of kids in the East
Village
who were dropping out and dodging the
draft, and there were also lots of articles in the press about
how kids were being kicked out of school for growing their hair
long". He recalled, "There was so much excitement in the
streets and the parks and the hippie areas, and we thought if we
could transmit this excitement to the stage it would be
wonderful.... We hung out with them and went to their
Be-Ins [and] let our hair grow." Many cast
members (
Shelley Plimpton in
particular) were recruited right off the street. Rado said, "It was
very important historically, and if we hadn't written it, there'd
not be any examples. You could read about it and see film clips,
but you'd never
experience it. We thought, 'This is
happening in the streets,' and we wanted to bring it to the
stage."
Rado and Ragni came from different artistic backgrounds. In
college, Rado wrote musical
revues and aspired
to be a Broadway composer in the
Rodgers and Hammerstein tradition.
He went on to study acting with
Lee
Strasberg. Ragni, on the other hand, was an active member of
The Open Theater, one of several
groups, mostly
Off-off Broadway,
that were developing
experimental
theatre techniques. He introduced Rado to the modern theatre
styles and methods being developed at The Open Theater. In 1966,
while the two were developing
Hair, Ragni performed in The
Open Theater's production of
Megan
Terry's play,
Viet Rock, a story about young men being
deployed to the Vietnam War. In addition to the war theme,
Viet
Rock employed the improvisational exercises being used in the
experimental theatre scene and later used in the development of
Hair.
Rado and Ragni brought their drafts of the show to producer Eric
Blau who, through common friend
Nat
Shapiro, connected the two with Canadian composer Galt
MacDermot. MacDermot had won a
Grammy
Award in 1961 for his composition "African Waltz" (recorded by
Cannonball Adderley).
The
composer's lifestyle was in marked contrast to his co-creators: "I
had short hair, a wife, and, at that point, four children, and I
lived on Staten
Island
." "I never even heard of a hippie when I met
Rado and Ragni." But he shared their enthusiasm to do a rock and
roll show. "We work independently," explained MacDermot in May
1968. "I prefer it that way. They hand me the material. I set it to
music." MacDermot wrote the first score in three weeks, starting
with the songs "I Got Life", "Ain't Got No", "Where Do I Go" and
the title song. He first wrote "Aquarius" as an unconventional art
piece, but later rewrote it into an uplifting anthem.
Off-Broadway productions
The
creators pitched the show to Broadway
producers
and received many rejections. Eventually Joe Papp, who ran the New York Shakespeare Festival,
decided he wanted Hair to open the new Public Theater
(still under construction) in New York City's
Greenwich
Village
. The musical was Papp's first non-
Shakespeare offering. The production did not go
smoothly: "The rehearsal and casting process was confused, the
material itself incomprehensible to many of the theater’s staff.
The director,
Gerald Freedman, the
theater's associate artistic director, withdrew in frustration
during the final week of rehearsals and offered his resignation.
Papp accepted it, and the choreographer
Anna Sokolow took over the show.... After a
disastrous final dress rehearsal, Papp wired Mr. Freedman in
Washington, where he'd fled: 'Please come back.' Mr. Freedman
did."
Hair premiered
off-Broadway at
the Public on October 17, 1967 and ran for a limited engagement of
six weeks. The lead roles were played by Walker Daniels as Claude,
Ragni as Berger, Jill O'Hara as Sheila, Steve Dean as Woof,
Arnold Wilkerson as Hud,
Sally Eaton as Jeanie and Shelley Plimpton as
Crissy. Set design was by
Ming Cho Lee,
costume design by Theoni Aldredge, and although Anna Sokolow began
rehearsals as choreographer, Freedman received choreographer
credit. Although the production had a "tepid critical reception",
it was popular with audiences.
Chicago businessman
Michael
Butler was planning to run for the
U.S. Senate on an
anti-war platform. After seeing an ad for
Hair in
The New York Times that
led him to believe the show was about
Native Americans, he
watched the Public's production several times and decided to
purchase the rights and move it to Broadway. Papp and Butler first
moved the show to
The Cheetah, a
discothèque at 53rd Street and Broadway. It opened there on
December 22, 1967 and ran for 45 performances. There was no nudity
in either the Public Theater or Cheetah production.
Revision for Broadway
Before the move to Broadway, the creative team hired director
Tom O'Horgan, who had built a
reputation directing experimental theater at the
La MaMa Experimental Theatre
Club. He had been the authors' first choice to direct the
Public Theater production, but he was in Europe at the time.
Newsweek described O'Horgan's
directing style as "sensual, savage, and thoroughly musical... [he]
disintegrates verbal structure and often breaks up and distributes
narrative and even character among different actors.... He enjoys
sensory bombardment."
Hair underwent a thorough overhaul between its closing at
the Cheetah in January 1968 and its Broadway opening three months
later. The Off-Broadway book, already light on plot, was loosened
even further, and were added. The song "Let the Sun Shine In" was
added so that the ending would be more uplifting. In rehearsals,
O'Horgan used techniques passed down by
Viola Spolin and
Paul
Sills involving role playing and improvisational "games". Many
of the improvisations tried during this process were incorporated
into the Broadway script. O'Horgan and new choreographer Julie
Arenal encouraged freedom and spontaneity in their actors,
introducing "an organic, expansive style of staging" that had never
been seen before on Broadway. The inspiration to include nudity
came when the authors saw an anti-war demonstration in Central Park
where two men stripped naked as an expression of defiance and
freedom, and they decided to incorporate the idea into the show.
O'Horgan had used nudity in many of the plays he directed, and he
helped integrate the idea into the fabric of the show.
Papp declined to pursue a Broadway production, and so Butler
produced the show himself. For a time it seemed that Butler would
be unable to secure a Broadway theater, as the Shuberts,
Nederlanders and other theater owners deemed the material too
controversial.
However, he pulled some political strings
through family connections and convinced theater owner David Cogan
to make the Biltmore Theatre
available.
Synopsis
- Act I
Claude, the nominal leader of the "tribe", sits center stage as the
tribe mingles with the audience.
Tribe members Sheila, a New York
University
student who is a determined political activist, and Berger, an
irreverent free spirit, cut a lock of Claude's hair and burn it in
a receptacle. After the tribe converges in slow-motion
toward the stage, through the audience, they begin their
celebration as children of the Age of Aquarius ("Aquarius"). Berger
removes his trousers to reveal a loincloth. Interacting with the
audience, he introduces himself as a "psychedelic teddy bear" and
reveals that he is "looking for my Donna" ("Donna").
The tribe recites a list of pharmaceuticals, legal and illegal
("Hashish"). Woof, a gentle soul, extols several sexual practices
("Sodomy") and says, "I grow things." He loves plants, his family
and the audience, telling the audience, "We are all one." Hud, a
militant
African-American, is
carried in upside down on a pole. He declares himself "president of
the United States of love" ("Colored Spade").
In a fake English
accent, Claude says that he is "the most beautiful beast in the
forest" from "Manchester
, England". A tribe member reminds him that
he's really from . Hud, Woof and Berger declare what color they are
("I'm Black"), while Claude says that he's "invisible". The tribe
recites a list of things they lack ("Ain't Got No"). Four
African-American tribe members recite street signs in symbolic
sequence ("Dead End").
Sheila is carried onstage ("I Believe in Love") and leads the tribe
in a protest chant. The tribe reprises "Ain't Got No (Grass)".
Jeanie, an eccentric young woman, appears wearing a gas mask,
satirizing pollution ("Air"). She is pregnant and in love with
Claude. Although she wishes it was Claude's baby, she was "knocked
up by some crazy speed freak". The tribe link together LBJ
(President
Lyndon B. Johnson), FBI (the Federal
Bureau of Investigation
), CIA (the Central Intelligence Agency) and
LSD ("Initials"). Six members of the
tribe appear dressed as Claude's parents, berating him for his
various transgressions – he doesn't have a job, and he collects
"mountains of paper" clippings and notes. They say that they will
not give him any more money, and "the army'll make a man out of
you". In defiance, Claude leads the tribe in celebrating their
vitality ("I Got Life").
After handing out imaginary pills to the tribe members, saying the
pills are for high profile people such as
Richard Nixon,
the
Pope, and "
Alabama Wallace",
Berger relates how he was expelled from high school ("Goin' Down").
Claude returns from his
draft board
physical, which he passed. He pretends to burn his Vietnam War
draft card, which Berger reveals as a library card. Claude agonizes
about what to do about being drafted.
Two tribe members dressed as tourists come down the aisle to ask
the tribe why they have such
long hair. In
answer, Claude and Berger lead the tribe in explaining the
significance of their "Hair". The tourist lady states that kids
should "be free, no guilt" and should "do whatever you want, just
so long as you don't hurt anyone." She observes that long hair is
natural, like the "elegant plumage" of male birds ("My
Conviction"). She opens her coat to reveal that she's a man in
drag. As the couple leaves, the
tribe calls her
Margaret Mead.
Sheila gives Berger a yellow shirt. He goofs around and ends up
tearing it in two. Sheila voices her distress that Berger seems to
care more about the "bleeding crowd" than about her ("Easy to be
Hard"). Jeanie summarizes everyone's romantic entanglements: "I'm
hung up on Claude, Sheila's hung up on Berger, Berger is hung up
everywhere. Claude is hung up on a cross over Sheila and Berger."
The tribe runs out to the audience with fliers inviting them to a
Be-In. Berger, Woof and another tribe member
pay satiric tribute to the American flag as they fold it ("Don't
Put it Down"). After young and innocent Crissy describes "Frank
Mills", a boy she's looking for, the tribe participates in the
"Be-In". The men of the tribe burn their draft cards. Claude puts
his card in the fire, then changes his mind and pulls it out. He
asks, "where is the something, where is the someone, that tells me
why I live and die?" ("Where Do I Go"). The tribe emerges naked,
intoning "beads, flowers, freedom, happiness."
- Act II
Four tribe members have the "Electric Blues". After a
black-out, the tribe enters worshiping "Oh Great God of Power."
Claude returns from the induction center, and tribe members act out
an imagined conversation from Claude's draft interview, with Hud
saying "the draft is white people sending black people to make war
on the yellow people to defend the land they stole from the red
people". Claude gives Woof a
Mick Jagger
poster, and Woof, excited about the gift, says he's in love with
Jagger. Three white women of the tribe tell why they like "Black
Boys" ("black boys are delicious..."), and
three black women of the tribe, dressed like
The Supremes, explain why they like "White
Boys" ("white boys are so pretty...").
Berger gives a joint to Claude that is laced with a
hallucinogen. Claude starts to trip as the
tribe acts out his visions ("Walking in Space"). He hallucinates
that he is skydiving from a plane into the jungles of Vietnam.
Berger appears as General
George
Washington and is told to retreat because of an Indian attack.
The Indians shoot all of Washington's men. General
Ulysses S. Grant appears and begins a roll call:
Abraham Lincoln (played by a black
female tribe member),
John Wilkes
Booth,
Calvin Coolidge,
Clark Gable,
Scarlett
O'Hara,
Aretha Franklin, Colonel
George Custer. Claude Bukowski is
called in the roll call, but Clark Gable says "he couldn't make
it". They all dance a
minuet until three
African
witch doctors kill them – all
except for Abraham Lincoln who says, "I'm one of you". Lincoln,
after the three Africans sing his praises, recites an
alternate version of the Gettysburg Address ("Abie Baby"). Booth
shoots Lincoln, but Lincoln says to him, "I ain't dying for no
white man".
As the visions continue, enter. One monk pours a can of gasoline
over another monk, who is set afire (reminiscent of the
self-immolation of
Thích Quảng Đức)
and runs off screaming. strangle the . shoot the nuns with
ray guns. people stab the astronauts with knives.
kill the Chinese with bows and tomahawks. kill the Native Americans
with machine guns and then kill each other. A Sergeant and
two parents appear holding up a suit on a hanger. The parents
talk to the suit as if it is their son and they are very proud of
him. The bodies rise and play like children. The play escalates to
violence until they are all dead again. They rise again ("Three
Five Zero Zero") and, at the end of the trip sequence,
two tribe members sing, over the dead bodies, a melody
set to a
Shakespeare lyric about
the nobility of Man ("What A Piece of Work Is Man").
After the trip, Claude says "I can't take this moment to moment
living on the streets.... I know what I want to be... invisible".
As they "look at the moon" Sheila and the others enjoy a light
moment ("
Good Morning
Starshine"). The tribe pays tribute to an old mattress ("The
Bed"). Claude is left alone with his doubts. He leaves as the tribe
enters wrapped in blankets in the midst of a snow storm. They start
a protest chant and then wonder where Claude has gone. Berger calls
out "Claude! Claude!" Claude enters dressed in a military uniform,
his hair short, but they don't see him because he is an invisible
spirit. Claude says, "like it or not, they got me."
Claude and everyone sing "Flesh Failures". The tribe moves in front
of Claude as Sheila and Dionne take up the lyric. The whole tribe
launches into "Let the Sun Shine In", and as they exit, they reveal
Claude lying down center stage on a black cloth. During the curtain
call, the tribe reprises "Let the Sun Shine In" and brings audience
members up on stage to dance.
(Note:
This plot summary is based on the original Broadway
script. The script has varied in subsequent
productions.)
Early productions
Broadway
Hair opened on Broadway at the
Biltmore
Theatre
on April 29, 1968. The production was
directed by Tom O'Horgan and choreographed by Julie Arenal, with
set design by
Robin Wagner,
costume design by Nancy Potts, and lighting design by
Jules Fisher. The original Broadway "tribe"
(i.e., cast) included authors Rado and Ragni, who played the lead
roles of Claude and Berger, respectively, and Lynn Kellogg as
Sheila, Lamont Washington as Hud, Sally Eaton and Shelley Plimpton
reprising their off-Broadway roles as Jeanie and Crissy,
Melba Moore as Dionne, Steve Curry as Woof,
Ronnie Dyson (who sang "Aquarius"),
Paul Jabara and
Diane Keaton (both Moore and Keaton later
played Sheila). Among the performers who appeared in
Hair
during its original Broadway run were
Ben
Vereen,
Keith Carradine,
Barry McGuire,
Ted Lange,
Meat Loaf,
Kenny Seymour (of
Little Anthony and The
Imperials),
Joe Butler (of the
Lovin' Spoonful), Peppy Castro (of
the
Blues Magoos),
Robin McNamara, Heather MacRae (daughter of
Gordon MacRae),
Eddie Rambeau and
Kim
Milford.
The
Hair team soon became embroiled in a lawsuit with the
organizers of the
Tony Awards. After
assuring producer Michael Butler that commencing previews by April
3, 1968 would assure eligibility for consideration for the 1968
Tonys, the New York Theatre League later ruled
Hair
ineligible, moving the cutoff date to March 19. The producers
brought suit but were unable to force the League to reconsider. At
the 1969 Tonys,
Hair was nominated for
Best Musical and
Best Director but
lost out to
1776 in both
categories. The production ran for four years and
1,750 performances, closing on July 1, 1972.
Early regional productions
The
West Coast version
played at the Aquarius Theatre on
Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles
beginning about six months after the Broadway
opening and running for an unprecedented two years. The Los
Angeles tribe included Rado, Ragni,
Robert Rothman, Ben Vereen (who replaced
Ragni), Red Shepard,
Ted Neeley (who
replaced Rado),
Meat Loaf,
Gloria Jones,
Táta
Vega,
Jobriath,
Jennifer Warnes (Warren) and
Dobie Gray.
There were soon nine simultaneous productions in U.S. cities,
followed by national tours. Among the performers in these were
Joe Mantegna and
André DeShields (Chicago),
David Lasley,
David Patrick Kelly and
Shaun Murphy (Detroit),
Arnold McCuller (tour), and
Philip Michael Thomas (San Francisco).
The creative team from Broadway worked on
Hair in Los
Angeles, Chicago and San Francisco, as the Broadway staging served
as a rough template for these and other early regional productions.
One notable addition to the team in Los Angeles was
Tom Smothers, who served as co-producer.
Regional casts consisted mostly of local actors, although a few
Broadway cast members reprised their roles in other cities.
O'Horgan or the authors sometimes took new ideas and improvisations
from a regional show and brought them back to New York, such as
when live chickens were tossed onto the stage in Los Angeles.
It was rare for so many productions to run simultaneously during an
initial Broadway run. Producer Michael Butler, who had declared
that
Hair is "the strongest anti-war statement ever
written", said the reason that he opened so many productions was to
influence public opinion against the Vietnam War and end it as soon
as possible.

London programme
West End
Hair opened at the Shaftesbury
Theatre
in London on September 27, 1968 with the same
creative team as the Broadway production. The opening night
was delayed until the abolition of
theatre censorship in England under the
Theatres Act 1968. As with other
early productions, the London show added a sprinkling of local
allusions and other minor departures from the Broadway
version.
The original London tribe included
Sonja
Kristina,
Paul Nicholas,
Richard O'Brien, Melba Moore,
Elaine Paige,
Paul
Korda,
Marsha
Hunt,
Floella Benjamin,
Alex Harvey ,
Oliver Tobias and
Tim
Curry. This was Curry's first full-time theatrical acting role,
where he met future
Rocky Horror
Show collaborator O'Brien.
Hair's engagement in
London surpassed the Broadway production, running for 1,997
performances until its closure was forced by the roof of the
theatre collapsing in July 1973.
Early international productions
The job of leading the foreign language productions of
Hair was given to
Bertrand
Castelli, Butler's partner and executive producer of the
Broadway show. Castelli was a writer/producer who traveled in Paris
art circles and rubbed elbows with
Pablo
Picasso and
Jean Cocteau. Butler
described him as a "crazy showman... the guy with the business suit
and beads". Castelli made the decision to do the show in the local
language of each country at a time when Broadway shows were always
done in English. The translations followed the original script
closely, and the Broadway stagings were used. Each script contained
various local references, such as street names and the names or
depictions of local politicians and celebrities. Castelli produced
companies in France, Germany, Mexico and other countries, sometimes
also directing the productions.
A German
production, directed by Castelli, opened in 1968 in Munich
; the tribe
included Donna Summer and Liz Mitchell (of Boney
M). A successful Parisian
production of Hair opened on June 1,
1969. The original Australian production premiered in Sydney
on 6 June
1969. It was produced by
Harry
M. Miller and directed by
Jim Sharman, who also designed the
production. The tribe included Keith Glass and then
Reg Livermore as Berger,
John Waters as Claude and
Sharon Redd as The Magician and other roles.
Redd was one of six African-Americans brought to Australia to
provide a racially-integrated tribe.
The production broke
local box-office records and ran for two years, but because of some
of the language in the show, the cast album was banned in Queensland
and New Zealand. It transferred to
Melbourne
in 1971 and then had a national tour.
The
production also marked the stage debut of Boston
-born
Australian vocalist Marcia
Hines.
Another
notable production was in the former Yugoslavia
(Belgrade
), the first Hair to be produced in a
communist country. Directed by local female
producer-director
Mira Trailović
and attended by president
Tito, the
Belgrade production was a favorite of authors Rado and Ragni, with
Ragni declaring "there's no middle class prejudices here".
Local
references added to the script included barbs aimed at Mao Ze-dong as well as Albania
, Yugoslavia's traditional rival.
By 1970,
Hair was a huge financial success, and nineteen
productions had been staged outside of North America, including
productions in Sweden
, Brazil
, Argentina
, Finland
, Italy
, Israel
, Japan
, Denmark
, Norway
, Canada
, the
Netherlands
, Switzerland
and Austria
. According to
Billboard, the
various productions of the show were raking in almost $1 million
every ten days, and royalties were being collected for 300
different recordings of the show's songs, making it "the most
successful score in history as well as the most performed score
ever written for the Broadway stage."
Themes
Hair explores many of the themes of the hippie movement of
the '60s. Theatre writer Scott Miller described these themes in
terms of the hippies' goals, targets and beliefs, as follows:
[T]he youth of America, especially those on college
campuses, started protesting all the things that they saw wrong
with America: racism, environmental destruction, poverty, sexism
and sexual repression, violence at home and the war in Vietnam,
depersonalization from new technologies, and corruption in
politics....
Contrary to popular opinion, the hippies had great
respect for America and believed that they were the true patriots,
the only ones who genuinely wanted to save our country and make it
the best it could be once again....
[Long] hair was the hippies' flag – their... symbol not
only of rebellion but also of new possibilities, a symbol of the
rejection of discrimination and restrictive gender roles (a
philosophy celebrated in the song "My Conviction").
It symbolized equality between men and
women.
In addition... the hippies' chosen clothing also made
statements.
Drab work clothes (jeans, work shirts, pea coats) were
a rejection of materialism.
Clothing from other cultures, particularly the Third
World and native Americans, represented their awareness of the
global community and their rejection of U.S. imperialism and
selfishness.
Simple cotton dresses and other natural fabrics were a
rejection of synthetics, a return to natural things and simpler
times.
Some hippies wore old World War II or Civil War jackets
as way of co-opting the symbols of war into their newfound
philosophy of nonviolence.
Race and the tribe
Extending the precedents set by
Show
Boat (1927) and
Porgy and
Bess (1935),
Hair opened the Broadway musical to
racial integration; fully one-third of the cast was African
American. Except for satirically in skits, the roles for the black
members of the tribe portrayed them as equals, breaking away from
the traditional roles for blacks in entertainment as slaves or
servants. An
Ebony magazine article
declared that the show was the biggest outlet for black actors in
the history of the U.S. stage.
Several songs and scenes from the show address racial issues.
"Colored Spade", which introduces the character Hud, a militant
black male, is a long list of racial slurs ("jungle bunny... little
black sambo") topped off with the declaration that Hud is the
"president of the United States of love". At the end of his song,
he tells the tribe that the "boogie man" will get them, as the
tribe pretends to be frightened. "Dead End", sung by black tribe
members, is a list of street signs that symbolize black frustration
and alienation ("keep out... mad dog... hands off"). One of the
tribe's protest chants is "What do we think is really great? To
bomb, lynch and segregate!" "Black Boys/White Boys" is an exuberant
acknowledgement of
miscegenation; the
U.S. Supreme Court had struck down laws against the practice in
1967. Another of the tribe's protest chants is "Black, white,
yellow, red. Copulate in a king-sized bed."
"Abie Baby" is part of the Act 2 "trip" sequence: four African
witch doctors, who have just killed various American historical,
cultural and fictional characters, sing the praises of Abraham
Lincoln, portrayed by a black female tribe member, whom they decide
not to kill. The first part of the song contains stereotypical
language that black characters used in old movies, like "I's
finished ... pluckin' y'all's chickens, fryin' mothers oats and
grease" and "I's free now thanks to y'all Master Lincoln". The
Lincoln character then recites a modernized version of the
Gettysburg Address, while a white female
tribe member polishes Lincoln's shoes with her blond hair.
The many references to Native Americans throughout the script are
part of the anti-civilization, anti-consumerism, naturalism focus
of the hippie movement and of
Hair. The characters in the
show are referred to as the "tribe", borrowing the term for Native
American communities. The cast of each production chooses a tribal
name: "The practice is not just cosmetic ... the entire cast must
work together, must like each other, and often within the show,
must work as a single organism. All the sense of family, of
belonging, of responsibility and loyalty inherent in the word
"tribe" has to be felt by the cast." To enhance this feeling,
O'Horgan put the cast through sensitivity exercises based on trust,
touching, listening and intensive examination that broke down
barriers between the cast and crew and encouraged bonding.
These
exercises were based on techniques developed at the Esalen
Institute
and Polish Lab Theater. The idea of Claude,
Berger and Sheila living together is another facet of the '60s
concept of
tribe.
Nudity, sexual freedom and drug use
The brief nude scene at the end of Act I was a subject of
controversy and notoriety. Miller writes that "nudity was a big
part of the hippie culture, both as a rejection of the sexual
repression of their parents and also as a statement about
naturalism, spirituality, honesty, openness, and freedom. The naked
body was beautiful, something to be celebrated and appreciated, not
scorned and hidden. They saw their bodies and their sexuality as
gifts, not as 'dirty' things."
Hair glorifies sexual freedom in a variety of ways. In
addition to acceptance of miscegenation, mentioned above, the
characters' lifestyle acts as a sexually and politically-charged
updating of
La bohème; as
Rado explained, "The love element of the peace movement was
palpable." In the song "Sodomy", Woof exhorts everyone to "join the
holy orgy
Kama Sutra". Toward the end of
Act 2, the tribe members reveal their
free
love tendencies when they banter back and forth about who will
sleep with whom that night. As
Clive
Barnes wrote in his original
New York Times review of
Hair, "homosexuality is not frowned upon." Woof has a
crush on Mick Jagger, and a three-way embrace between Claude,
Berger and Sheila turns into a Claude-Berger kiss.
Various illegal drugs are taken by the characters during the course
of the show, most notably a hallucinogen during the trip sequence.
The song "Walking in Space" starts off the sequence, and the lyrics
celebrate the experience declaring "how dare they try to end this
beauty ... in this dive we rediscover sensation ... our eyes are
open, wide, wide, wide". Similarly, in the song "Donna", Berger
sings that "I'm evolving through the drugs that you put down." At
another point, Jeanie smokes a
marijuana cigarette and says that anyone
who thinks "pot" is bad is "full of shit". Generally, the tribe
favors hallucinogenic or "mind expanding" drugs, such as LSD and
marijuana, while disapproving of other drugs such as speed and
depressants. For example, Jeanie, after revealing that she is
pregnant by a "
speed freak", says that
"
methedrine is a bad scene". The song
"Hashish" provides a list of pharmaceuticals, both illegal and
legal, including
cocaine, alcohol, LSD,
cough syrup,
opium and
Thorazine, which is used as an
antipsychotic.
Pacifism and environmentalism
The theme of opposition to the war that pervades the show is
unified by the plot thread that progresses through the book –
Claude's
moral dilemma over
whether to
burn his draft card.
Pacifisim is explored throughout the
extended trip sequence in Act 2. The lyrics to "
Three-Five-Zero-Zero", which is sung
during that sequence, evoke the horrors of war ("ripped open by
metal explosion"). The song is based on
Allen Ginsberg's 1966 poem, "
Wichita Vortex Sutra". In the poem,
General Maxwell Taylor proudly reports to the press the number of
enemy soldiers killed in one month, repeating it digit by digit,
for effect: "Three-Five-Zero-Zero." The song begins with images of
death and dying and turns into a manic dance number, echoing
Maxwell's glee at reporting the enemy casualties, as the tribe
chants "Take weapons up and begin to kill". The song also includes
the repeated phrase "Prisoners in niggertown/ It's a dirty little
war".
"Don't Put It Down" satirizes the unexamined patriotism of people
who are literally "crazy" for the American flag. "Be In (Hare
Krishna)" praises the peace movement and events like the
San Francisco and
Central Park Be-Ins. Throughout the show,
the tribe chants popular protest slogans like "What do we want?
Peace – When do we want it? Now!" and "Do not enter the
induction center". The upbeat song, "Let the Sun Shine In", is a
call to action, to reject the darkness of war and change the world
for the better.
Hair also aims its satire at the pollution caused by our
civilization. Jeanie appears from a trap door in the stage wearing
a gas mask and then sings the song "Air": "Welcome, sulfur dioxide.
Hello carbon monoxide. The air ... is everywhere". She suggests
that pollution will eventually kill her, "vapor and fume at the
stone of my tomb, breathing like a sullen perfume". In a comic,
pro-green vein, when Woof introduces himself, he explains that he
"grows things" like "beets, and corn ... and sweet peas" and that
he "loves the flowers and the fuzz and the trees".
Religion and astrology
Religion appears both overtly and symbolically throughout the
piece, and it is often made the brunt of a joke. Berger sings of
looking for "my Donna", which takes on the double meaning of the
woman he's searching for and the
Madonna. During "Sodomy", a hymn-like
paean to all that is "dirty" about sex, the cast strikes evocative
religious positions: the
Pietà and Christ
on the cross. Before the song, Woof recites a modified
rosary. In Act II, when Berger gives imaginary pills
to various famous figures, he offers "a pill for the Pope". In
"Going Down", after being kicked out of school, Berger compares
himself to
Lucifer: "Just like the angel
that fell / Banished forever to hell / Today have I been expelled /
From high school heaven." Claude becomes a classic
Christ figure at various points in the script.
In Act I, Claude enters, saying, "I am the Son of God. I shall
vanish and be forgotten," then gives benediction to the tribe and
the audience.
Claude suffers from indecision, and, in his
Gethsemane
at the end of Act I, he asks "Where Do I
Go?". There are textual allusions to Claude being on a
cross, and, in the end, he is chosen to give his life for the
others. Berger can be seen as a
John
the Baptist figure, preparing the way for Claude.
Excerpt from
"Aquarius"
Harmony and understanding
Sympathy and trust abounding.
No more falsehoods or derisions
Golden living dreams of visions
Mystic crystal revelation
And the minds true liberation.
Aquarius
|
|
Songs like "Good Morning, Starshine" and "
Aquarius" reflect the '60s cultural interest
in astrological and cosmic concepts. "Aquarius" was the result of
Rado's research into
his own
astrological sign. The company's
astrologer, Maria Crummere, was consulted about casting: Sheila was
usually played by a
Libra or
Capricorn and Berger by a
Leo, although Ragni, the original
Berger, was a
Virgo. Crummere was
also consulted when deciding when the show would open on Broadway
and in other cities. The 1971 Broadway
Playbill reported that she chose April 29,
1968 for the Broadway premiere. "The 29th was auspicious ...
because the moon was high, indicating that people would attend in
masses. The position of the 'history makers' (
Pluto,
Uranus,
Jupiter) in the 10th house made the show unique,
powerful and a money-maker. And the fact that
Neptune was on the ascendancy foretold that
Hair would develop a reputation involving sex."
In
Mexico
, where
Crummere did not pick the opening date, the show was closed down by
the government after one night. She was not pleased
with the date of the Boston
opening
(where the producers were sued over the show's content) saying,
"Jupiter will be in opposition to naughty Saturn, and the show opens the very day of the sun's
eclipse. Terrible." But there
was no astrologically safe time in the near future.
Literary themes and symbolism
Hair makes many references to
Shakespeare's plays, especially
Romeo and Juliet and
Hamlet, and, at times, takes lyrical material
directly from Shakespeare. For example, the lyrics to the song
"What a Piece of Work Is Man" is from
Hamlet
(II: scene 2) and portions of "Flesh Failures" ("the rest
is silence") are from Hamlet's final lines. In "Flesh Failures/Let
The Sun Shine In", the lyrics "Eyes, look your last!/ Arms, take
your last embrace! And lips, O you/ The doors of breath, seal with
a righteous kiss" are from
Romeo and Juliet (V: iii,
111–14). According to Miller, the
Romeo suicide imagery
makes the point that, with our complicity in war, we are killing
ourselves.
Symbolically, the running plot of Claude's indecision, especially
his resistance to burning his draft card, which ultimately causes
his demise, has been seen as a parallel to
Hamlet: "the
melancholy hippie". The symbolism is carried into the last scene,
where Claude appears as a ghostly spirit among his friends wearing
an army uniform in an ironic echo of an earlier scene, where he
says, "I know what I want to be ... invisible". According to Public
Theater Artistic Director
Oskar Eustis,
"Both [
Hair and
Hamlet] center on idealistic
brilliant men as they struggle to find their place in a world
marred by war, violence, and venal politics. They see both the
luminous possibilities and the harshest realities of being human.
In the end, unable to effectively combat the evil around them, they
tragically succumb."
Other literary references include the song "Three-Five-Zero-Zero",
based on Ginsberg's poem "Wichita Vortex Sutra", and, in the
psychedelic drug trip sequence, the portrayal of
Scarlett O'Hara, from
Gone with the Wind, and activist
African-American poet
LeRoi Jones.
Dramatics
In his introduction to the published script of
Viet Rock,
Richard Schechner says,
"performance, action, and event are the key terms of our theatre –
and these terms are not literary." In the 1950s, Off-off Broadway
theaters began experimenting with non-traditional theater roles,
blurring the lines between playwright, director, and actor. The
playwright's job was not just to put words on a page, but to create
a theatrical experience based around a central idea. By 1967,
theaters such as the Living Theatre, La MaMa E.T.C., and The Open
Theatre were actively devising plays from improvisational scenes
crafted in the rehearsal space, rather than following a traditional
script.
Viet Rock and Hair
Megan Terry's
Viet Rock was created this way. Scenes in
Viet Rock were connected in "prelogical ways": a scene
could be built from a tangent from the scene before, it could be
connected psychologically, or it could be in counterpoint to the
previous scene. Actors were asked to switch roles in the middle of
a show, and frequently in mid-scene. In her stage directions for a
Senate hearing scene in
Viet Rock, Terry wrote, "The
actors should take turns being senators and witnesses; the
transformations should be abrupt and total. When the actor is
finished with one character he becomes another, or just an
actor."
Hair was designed in much the same way. Tom O'Horgan, the
show's Broadway director, was intimately involved in the
experimental theatre movement. In the transition to Broadway,
O'Horgan and the writers rearranged scenes to increase the
experimental aspects of the show.
Hair asks its actors to
assume several different characters throughout the course of the
piece, and, as in Claude's psychedelic trip in Act 2, sometimes
during the same scene. Both
Hair and
Viet Rock
include rock music, borrowed heavily from mass media, and
frequently break down the invisible "
fourth
wall" to interact with the audience. For example, in the
opening number, the tribe mingles with audience members, and at the
end of the show, the audience is invited on stage.
Production design
In the original Broadway production, the stage was completely open,
with no curtain and the fly area and grid exposed to the audience.
The proscenium arch was outlined with climb-ready scaffolding.
Wagner's spare set was painted in shades of grey with street
graffiti stenciled on the stage. The stage
was raked, and a tower of abstract scaffolding upstage at the rear
merged a Native American totem pole and a modern sculpture of a
crucifix-shaped tree. This scaffolding was
decorated with found objects that the cast had gathered from the
streets of New York. These included a life-size
papier-mâché bus driver, the head of
Jesus, and a neon marquee of the Waverly movie theater in Greenwich
Village. Potts' costumes were based on hippie street clothes, made
more theatrical with enhanced color and texture. Some of these
included mixed parts of military uniforms, bell bottom jeans with
Ukrainian embroidery, tie dyed t-shirts and a red white and blue
fringed coat. Early productions were primarily reproductions of
this basic design.
Nude scene
"Much has been written about that scene... most of it silly," wrote
Gene Lees in
High
Fidelity. Inspired by two men who took off their clothes
to antagonize the police during an informal anti-war gathering,
during "Where Do I Go?", the stage was covered in a giant
scrim, beneath which those choosing to
participate in the scene removed their clothes. At the musical cue,
"they [stood] naked and motionless, their bodies bathed in Fisher's
light projection of floral patterns. They chant[ed] of 'beads,
flowers, freedom, and happiness.'" It lasted only twenty seconds.
Indeed, the scene happened so quickly and was so dimly lit that it
prompted
Jack Benny, during the
interval at a London preview, to quip, "Did you
happen to notice if any of them were Jewish?"
The nudity was optional for the performers. The French cast was
"the nudest of the foreign groups". In some early performances, the
Germans played their scene behind a big sheet labeled "CENSORED".
The London cast "found the nudity the hardest to achieve." Original
Broadway cast member Natalie Mosco said, "I was dead set against
the nude scene at first, but I remembered my acting teacher having
said that part of acting is being private in public. So I did it."
According to Melba Moore, "It doesn't mean anything except what you
want it to mean. We put so much value on clothing our bodies, but
it doesn't mean a damn thing. It's like so much else people get
uptight about. Sure, I was scared the first time. I thought
'Everybody's looking at me. I've got no protection.' Now I'm still
kind of surprised that I'm standin' there naked, but I'm not
embarrassed, the audience is." Donna Summer, who was in the German
production, said that "it was not meant to be sexual in any way. We
stood naked to comment on the fact that society makes more of
nudity than killing. We worry more about someone walking around
half dressed than somebody who's walking around shooting people."
Rado said that "being naked in front of an audience, you're baring
your soul. Not only the soul but the whole body was being exposed.
It was very apt, very honest and almost necessary."
Music

In these two measures of "What a Piece
of Work Is Man", the red notes indicate a weak syllable on a strong
beat.
After
studying the music of the Bantu at
Cape Town
University
, McDermot incorporated African rhythms into the
score of Hair. He listened to "what [the Bantu]
called quaylas... [which have a] very characteristic beat, very
similar to rock. Much deeper though....
Hair is very
African – a lot of [the] rhythms, not the tunes so much."
Quaylas stress beats on unexpected syllables, and this
influence can be heard in songs like "What a Piece of Work Is Man"
and "Ain't Got No Grass". MacDermot said, "My idea was to make a
total funk show. They said they wanted rock & roll – but to me
that translated to 'funk.'" That
funk is
evident throughout the score, notably in songs like "Colored Spade"
and "Walking in Space".
MacDermot has claimed that the songs "can't all be the same. You've
got to get different styles.... I like to think they're all a
little different." As such, the music in
Hair runs the
gamut of rock: from the
rockabilly
sensibilities of "Don't Put it Down" to the
folk rock rhythms of "Frank Mills" and "What a
Piece of Work is Man". "Easy to be Hard" is pure
rhythm and blues, and
protest rock anthems abound: "Ain't Got No" and
"The Flesh Failures". The
acid rock of
"Walking in Space" and "Aquarius" are balanced by the mainstream
pop of "Good Morning Starshine". Scott
Miller ties the music of
Hair to the hippies' political
themes: "The hippies... were determined to create art of the people
and their chosen art form, rock/folk music was by its definition,
populist. ...[T]he hippies' music was often very angry, its anger
directed at those who would prostitute the Constitution, who would
sell America out, who would betray what America stood for; in other
words, directed at their parents and the government." Theatre
historian
John Kenrick
explains the application of rock music to the medium of the
stage:
The music did not resonate with everyone.
Leonard Bernstein remarked "the songs are
just laundry lists" and walked out of the production.
Richard Rodgers could only hear the beat and
called it "one-third music".
John
Fogerty said, "
Hair is such a watered down version of
what is really going on that I can’t get behind it at all." Gene
Lees, writing for
High Fidelity, claimed that
John Lennon found it "dull", and he wrote, "I do
not know any musician who thinks it's good."
Songs
The score had many more songs than were typical of Broadway shows
of the day. Most Broadway shows had about per act;
Hair's
total is in the thirties. This list reflects the most common
Broadway lineup.
- Act I
- Aquarius – Tribe and
soloist (often Dionne)
- Donna – Berger and Tribe
- Hashish – Tribe
- Sodomy – Woof and Tribe
- I'm Black/Colored Spade – Hud, Woof, Berger, Claude and
Tribe
- Manchester England – Claude and Tribe
- Ain't Got No – Woof, Hud, Dionne and Tribe
- I Believe in Love – Sheila and Tribe trio
- Air – Jeanie, Crissy and Dionne
- Initials (L.B.J.) – Tribe
- I Got Life – Claude and Tribe
- Going Down – Berger and Tribe
- Hair – Claude, Berger, and
Tribe
- My Conviction – Margaret Mead (tourist lady)
- Easy to Be Hard – Sheila
- Don't Put It Down – Berger, Woof and male Tribe
member
- Frank Mills – Crissy
- Be-In (Hare Krishna) –
Tribe
- Where Do I Go? – Claude and Tribe
- Act II
- Electric Blues – Tribe quartet
- Black Boys – Tribe sextet (three male, three female)
- White Boys – Tribe Supremes trio
- Walking in Space – Tribe
- Yes, I's Finished/Abie Baby – Abraham Lincoln and Tribe
trio (Hud and two men)
- Three-Five-Zero-Zero –
Tribe
- What a Piece of Work Is Man – Tribe duo
- Good Morning
Starshine – Sheila and Tribe
- The Bed – Tribe
- Aquarius (reprise) – Tribe
- Manchester England (Reprise) – Claude and Tribe
- Eyes Look Your Last – Claude and Tribe
- The Flesh Failures (Let the Sun
Shine In) – Claude, Sheila, Dionne and Tribe
The show was under almost perpetual re-write. Thirteen songs
were added between the production at the Public Theater and
Broadway, including "I Believe in Love". "The Climax" and "Dead
End" were cut between the productions, and "Exanaplanetooch" and
"You Are Standing on My Bed" were present in previews but cut
before Broadway. The Shakespearean speech "
What a piece of work is a man"
was originally spoken by Claude and musicalized by MacDermot for
Broadway, and "Hashish" was formed from an early speech of
Berger's. Subsequent productions have included "Hello There", "Dead
End", and "Hippie Life" – a song originally written for the film
that Rado included in several productions in Europe in the
mid-nineties. The current Broadway revival includes the ten-second
"Sheila Franklin" and "O Great God of Power", two songs that were
cut from the original production.
Recordings
The first recording of
Hair was made in 1967 featuring the
off-Broadway cast. The original 1968 Broadway cast recording (RCA
LSO-1150) received a Grammy Award in 1968 for
Best Score from an
Original Cast Show Album and sold nearly 3 million copies
in the U.S. by December 1969.
The New York Times noted in
2007 that "The cast album of
Hair was... a must-have for
the middle classes. Its exotic orange-and-green cover art imprinted
itself instantly and indelibly on the psyche.... [It] became a
pop-rock classic that, like all good pop, has an appeal that
transcends particular tastes for genre or period." The 1993 London
revival cast album contains new music that has been incorporated
into the standard rental version.
RCA also released
DisinHAIRited (RCA LSO-1163): an album
of songs that had been written for the show, but saw varying
amounts of stage time. Some of the songs were cut between the
Public and Broadway, some had been left off the original cast album
due to space, and a few were never performed onstage.
- The Thousand-Year-Old Man
- So Sing the Children of the Avenue
- Manhattan Beggar
- Sheila Franklin/Reading the Writing
- Washing the World
- Exanaplanetooch
- Hello There
- Mr. Berger
- I'm Hung
- The Climax
- Electric Blues
- I Dig
- Going Down
- You Are Standing on My Bed
- The Bed
- Mess O' Dirt
- Dead End
- Oh Great God of Power
- Eyes Look Your Last/Sentimental Ending

The 5th Dimension, "Aquarius"
Songs from
Hair have been recorded by numerous artists,
including
Shirley Bassey,
Barbra Streisand and
Diana Ross. "Good Morning Starshine" was sung on
a 1969 episode of
Sesame
Street by cast member
Bob
McGrath, and versions by artists such as
Sarah Brightman,
Petula Clark, and
Strawberry Alarm Clock have been
recorded. Artists as varied as
Liza
Minelli and
The Lemonheads have
recorded "Frank Mills", and
Andrea
McArdle,
Jennifer Warnes, and
Sérgio Mendes have each
contributed versions of "Easy to be Hard".
Hair also
helped launch recording careers for performers
Bert Sommer, Ronnie Dyson and Melba Moore, among
others.
The score of
Hair saw chart successes, as well.
The 5th Dimension released "
Aquarius/Let the Sunshine In"
in 1969, which won
Record of the
Year and
topped the charts for
six weeks.
The Cowsills's
recording of the title song "Hair" climbed to #2 on the
Billboard charts while
Oliver's rendition
of "Good Morning Starshine" reached #3.
Three Dog Night's version of "Easy to Be
Hard" went to #4, and
Nina Simone's 1968
medley of "Ain't Got No / I Got Life" reached the top 5 on the
British charts. In 1970,
ASCAP announced that
"Aquarius" was played more frequently on U.S. radio and television
than any other song that year.
Productions in England, Germany, France, Sweden, Japan, Israel,
Holland, Australia and elsewhere released cast albums, and over
1,000 vocal and/or instrumental performances of individual
songs from
Hair have been recorded. Such broad attention
was paid to the recordings of
Hair that, after an
unprecedented bidding war,
ABC Records
was willing to pay a record amount for MacDermot's next Broadway
adaptation
Two
Gentlemen of Verona. The 2009 revival recording, released
on June 23, debuted at #1 on
Billboard's "Top Cast Album"
chart and at #63 in the
Top 200,
qualifying it as the highest debuting album in
Ghostlight Records history.
Critical reception
Reception to
Hair upon its Broadway premiere was, with
exceptions, overwhelmingly positive. Clive Barnes wrote in the
New York Times: "What is so likable about
Hair...? I think it is simply that it is so likable. So
new, so fresh, and so unassuming, even in its pretensions." John J.
O'Connor of
The Wall Street
Journal said the show was "exuberantly defiant and the
production explodes into every nook and cranny of the Biltmore
Theater". Richard Watts Jr. of the
New
York Post wrote that "it has a surprising if perhaps
unintentional charm, its high spirits are contagious, and its young
zestfulness makes it difficult to resist."
Television reviews were even more enthusiastic. Allan Jeffreys of
ABC said the actors were "the most talented
hippies you'll ever see... directed in a wonderfully wild fashion
by Tom O'Horgan." Leonard Probst of
NBC
said "
Hair is the only new concept in musicals on Broadway
in years and it's more fun than any other this season".
John
Wingate of WOR
TV
praised MacDermot's "dynamic score" that "blasts
and soars", and Len Harris of CBS said
"I've finally found the best musical of the Broadway season... it's
that sloppy, vulgar, terrific tribal love rock musical
Hair."
A reviewer from
Variety,
on the other hand, called the show "loony" and "without a story,
form, music, dancing, beauty or artistry.... It's impossible to
tell whether [the cast has] talent. Maybe talent is irrelevant in
this new kind of show business." Reviews in the news weeklies were
mixed; Jack Kroll in
Newsweek wrote, "There is no denying
the sheer kinetic drive of this new
Hair... there is
something hard, grabby, slightly corrupt about O'Horgan's
virtuosity, like Busby Berkeley gone bitchy." But a reviewer from
Time wrote that although the
show "thrums with vitality [it is] crippled by being a bookless
musical and, like a boneless fish, it drifts when it should
swim."
Reviews were mixed when
Hair opened in London. Irving
Wardle in
The Times wrote, "Its
honesty and passion give it the quality of a true theatrical
celebration – the joyous sound of a group of people telling the
world exactly what they feel." In
The Financial Times, B. A. Young
agreed that
Hair was "not only a wildly enjoyable evening,
but a thoroughly moral one." However, in his final review before
retiring after 48 years, 78-year-old W. A. Darlington of
The Daily Telegraph
wrote that he had "tried hard", but found the evening "a complete
bore – noisy, ugly and quite desperately funny."
Acknowledging the show's critics, Scott Miller wrote in 2001 that
"some people can't see past the appearance of chaos and randomness
to the brilliant construction and sophisticated imagery
underneath." Miller notes, "Not only did many of the lyrics not
rhyme, but many of the songs didn't really have endings, just a
slowing down and stopping, so the audience didn't know when to
applaud.... The show rejected every convention of Broadway, of
traditional theatre in general, and of the American musical in
specific. And it was brilliant."
Social change
>
Excerpts
from "Hair"
I let it fly in the breeze and get
caught in the trees,
Give a home to the fleas in my hair.
A home for fleas, a hive for bees
A nest for birds, there ain't no words
For the beauty, the splendor, the wonder of my Hair....
Flow it, show it, long as God can grow it, my hair....
Oh say, can you see my eyes? If you can
Then my hair's too short....
They'll be ga ga at the Go Go when they see me in my toga,
My toga made of blond, brilliantined, biblical hair.
My hair like Jesus wore it,
Hallelujah, I adore it....
|
|
Hair challenged many of the
norms held by Western society in 1968. The
name itself, inspired by the name of a
Jim
Dine painting depicting a comb and a few strands of hair, was a
reaction to the restrictions of civilization and consumerism and a
preference for naturalism. Rado remembers that long hair "was a
visible form of awareness in the consciousness expansion. The
longer the hair got, the more expansive the mind was. Long hair was
shocking, and it was a revolutionary act to grow long hair. It was
kind of a flag, really."
The musical caused controversy when it was first staged. The Act I
finale was the first time a Broadway show had seen totally naked
actors and actresses, and the show was charged with the desecration
of the American flag and the use of
obscene
language. These controversies, in addition to the anti–Vietnam
War theme, attracted occasional threats and acts of violence during
the show's early years and became the basis for legal actions both
when the show opened in other cities and on tour.
Two cases eventually
reached the U.S.
Supreme Court
.
Legal challenges and violent reactions
The touring company of
Hair met with resistance throughout
the United States.
In , the Morris Civic Auditorium refused
booking, and in Evansville, Indiana
, the production was picketed by several church
groups. In Indianapolis, Indiana
, the producers had difficulty securing a theater,
and city authorities suggested that the cast wear body stockings as
a compromise to the city's ordinance prohibiting publicly displayed
nudity. Productions were frequently confronted with the
closure of theaters by the
fire
marshal, as in .
Chattanooga
's 1972 refusal to allow the play to be shown at the
city-owned Memorial Auditorium
was later found by the U.S. Supreme Court to
be an unlawful
prior
restraint.
The legal challenges against the Boston production were appealed to
the U.S. Supreme Court.
The Chief of the Licensing Bureau took
exception to the portrayal of the American flag in the piece,
saying, "anyone who desecrates the flag should be whipped on
Boston
Common
." Although the scene was removed before
opening, the
District Attorney's
office began plans to stop the show, claiming that "lewd and
lascivious" actions were taking place onstage.
The Hair
legal team obtained an injunction against
criminal prosecution from the Superior Court, and the D.A. appealed
to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial
Court
. At the request of both parties, several of
the justices viewed the production and handed down a ruling that
"each member of the cast [must] be clothed to a reasonable extent."
The cast defiantly played the scene nude later that night, stating
that the ruling was vague as to when it would take effect. The next
day, April 10, 1970, the production closed, and movie houses,
fearing the ruling on nudity, began excising scenes from films in
their exhibition. After the Federal
appellate bench reversed the Massachusetts court's
ruling, the D.A. appealed the case to the U.S. Supreme Court. In a
4–4 decision, the Court upheld the lower court's decision, allowing
Hair to re-open on May 22.
In April 1971, a bomb was thrown at the exterior of a theater
in that had been housing a production, bouncing off the marquee and
shattering windows in the building and in nearby storefronts. That
same month, the families of cast member Jonathan Johnson and stage
manager Rusty Carlson died in a fire in the Cleveland hotel where
33 members of the show's troupe had been staying. The Sydney,
Australia production's opening night was interrupted by
a bomb scare in June 1969.
Worldwide reactions
Local reactions to the controversial material varied greatly. San
Francisco's large hippie population considered the show an
extension of the street activities there, often blurring the
barrier between art and life by meditating with the cast and
frequently finding themselves onstage during the show. An
18-year-old
Princess Anne was seen
dancing onstage in London, and in Washington DC,
Henry Kissinger attended. In , a protesting
clergyman released 18 white mice into the lobby hoping to frighten
the audience.
Capt. Jim Lovell and
Jack
Swigert, after dubbing
Apollo 13's
lunar module "Aquarius" after
the song, walked out of the production at the Biltmore in protest
of perceived anti-Americanism and disrespect of the flag.
A Mexican production of
Hair, directed by Castelli, opened
in 1969 for one performance. The show, whose theater was
located across the street from a popular local bordello, was shut
down by the government, which said the production was "detrimental
to the morals of youth." The cast members were forced to leave
Mexico to avoid arrest.
Hair effectively marked the end of
stage censorship in the United
Kingdom
. London's stage censor, the
Lord Chamberlain, originally refused to
license the musical, and the opening was delayed until Parliament
passed a bill stripping him of his licensing power.
In Munich,
authorities threatened to close the production if the nude scene
remained; however, after a local Hair spokesman declared
that his relatives had been marched nude into Auschwitz
, the authorities relented. In Stockholm
, Sweden
, where the
show opened in 1968, choreographer Julie Arenal found the cast very
reluctant to shed their clothes for the nude scene.
In
Bergen
, Norway
, local
citizens formed a human barricade to try to prevent the
performance.
Conversely, in Copenhagen
, the Danish cast thought the nudity too tame and
decided to walk naked up and down the aisle during the show's
prelude. The Parisian production encountered little
controversy, and the cast disrobed for the nude scene "almost
religiously" according to Castelli, nudity being common on stage in
Paris. Even in Paris there was nevertheless occasional opposition,
such as when a member of the local
Salvation Army used a portable loud speaker
to exhort the audience to halt the presentation.
Beyond the '60s
1970s
A Broadway revival of
Hair opened in 1977 for a run of
43 performances. It was produced by Butler, directed by
O'Horgan and performed in the Biltmore Theater, where the original
Broadway production had played. The cast included
Ellen Foley and
Annie
Golden. Reviews were generally negative, and critics accused
the production of "showing its gray". Few major revivals of
Hair followed until the early 1990s.
A movie version of
Hair, with a screenplay by
Michael Weller, was directed by
Miloš Forman and released in 1979.
Filmed
primarily in New York City's Central Park
and Washington Square Park
, the cast includes Treat Williams, Beverly D'Angelo, John Savage, Foley and Golden.
Several of the songs were deleted, and the film's storyline departs
significantly from the musical.
The character of Claude is rewritten as an
innocent draftee from Oklahoma
, newly arrived in New York to join the military,
and Sheila is a high-society debutante who
catches his eye. In perhaps the greatest diversion from the
stage version, a mistake leads Berger to go to Vietnam in Claude's
place, where he is killed.
Original writers Rado and Ragni were unhappy with the film.
According to the writers, Forman portrayed the hippies as
"oddballs" and "some sort of aberration" without any connection to
the peace movement, failing to capture the essence of the original
stage production. Both are quoted as saying: "Any resemblance
between the 1979 film and the original Biltmore version, other than
some of the songs, the names of the characters, and a common title,
eludes us." In their view, the screen version of
Hair has
not yet been produced.
However, the film received generally favorable reviews. Writing in
The New York Times,
Vincent Canby called it "a rollicking
musical memoir.... Weller's inventions make this
Hair seem
much funnier than I remember the show's having been. They also
provide time and space for the development of characters who, on
the stage, had to express themselves almost entirely in song....
[T]he entire cast is superb.... Mostly... the film is a
delight."
1980s and 1990s
A 20th anniversary concert event was held in May 1988 at the
United Nations General
Assembly to benefit children with
AIDS. The
event was sponsored by
First Lady Nancy Reagan with
Barbara Walters giving the night's opening
introduction. Rado, Ragni and MacDermot reunited to write nine new
songs for the concert. The cast of 163 actors included former
stars from various productions around the globe: Melba Moore, Ben
Vereen, Treat Williams and Donna Summer, as well as guest
performers
Bea Arthur,
Frank Stallone and
Dr. Ruth Westheimer. Ticket prices
ranged from $250 to $5,000 and the proceeds went to the United
States Committee for
UNICEF and the Creo
Society's Fund for Children with AIDS.
A 1985 production of
Hair mounted in Montreal was
reportedly the 70th professional production of the musical.
In
November 1988, Michael Butler produced Hair at Chicago's
Vic
Theater
to celebrate the shows'
20th anniversary. The production was well-received and
ran until February 1989.
From 1990 to 1991, Pink Lace Productions ran
a U.S. national tour of Hair that included stops in
South
Carolina
, Georgia
, Tennessee
and Kentucky
. After Ragni died in 1991, MacDermot and
Rado continued to write new songs for revivals through the 1990s.
Hair
Sarajevo, AD 1992 was staged during the Siege of
Sarajevo
as an appeal for peace. Rado directed a $1
million, 11 city national tour in 1994 that featured actors
Luther Creek, Kent Dalian, Sean Jenness
and Catrice Joseph. With MacDermot returning to oversee the music,
Rado's tour celebrated the show's 25th anniversary. A small 1990
"bus and truck" production of
Hair toured Europe for over
3 years, and Rado directed various European productions from
1995 to 1999.
A
production opened in Australia in 1992 and a short-lived London
revival starring John Barrowman and
Paul Hipp opened at the Old
Vic
in London in 1993, directed by Michael Bogdanov. While the London
production was faithful to the original, a member of the production
staff said the reason it "flopped" was because the tribe consisted
of "
Thatcher's children who didn't
really get it". Other productions were mounted around the world,
including South Africa, where the show had been banned until the
eradication of
Apartheid.
In 1996, Butler
brought a month-long production to Chicago, employing the Pacific
Musical Theater, a professional troupe in residence at California State University,
Fullerton
. Butler ran the show concurrently with the
1996 Democratic
National Convention, echoing the last time the DNC was in
Chicago:
1968.
2000s
In 2001, the Reprise! theatre company in Los Angeles performed
Hair at the Wadsworth Theatre, starring
Steven Weber as Berger,
Sam Harris as Claude and Jennifer Leigh
Warren as Sheila. That same year,
Encores! Great American Musicals in
Concert ended its 2001
City Center
season with a production of
Hair starring Luther Creek,
Idina Menzel, Jessica-Snow Wilson and
Tom Plotkin, and featuring
Hair
composer Galt MacDermot on stage playing the keyboards.
An
Actors' Fund benefit of the show was performed for one night
at the New
Amsterdam Theater
in New York City in 2004. The Tribe included
Shoshana Bean,
Raul Esparza,
Jim
J. Bullock,
Liz Callaway,
Gavin
Creel,
Harvey Fierstein,
Ana Gasteyer, Annie Golden,
Jennifer Hudson,
Julia Murney,
Jai
Rodriguez,
RuPaul,
Michael McKean,
Laura Benanti and
Adam
Pascal.
In 2005, a London production opened at the Gate Theatre, directed
by Daniel Kramer. James Rado approved an updating of the musical's
script to place it in the context of the
2003 Gulf War instead of the Vietnam War.
Kramer's modernized interpretation included "Aquarius" sung over a
megaphone in Times Square, and nudity that called to mind images
from
Abu
Ghraib. In March 2006, Rado collaborated with director Robert
Prior for a
CanStage production of
Hair in Toronto, and a revival produced by
Pieter Toerien toured South Africa in 2007.
Directed by Paul Warwick Griffin, with choreography by Timothy Le
Roux, the show ran at the Montecasino Theatre in Johannesburg and
at Theatre on the Bay in Cape Town.
Michael Butler produced
Hair at the MET Theatre in Los
Angeles from September 14 through December 30, 2007. The show was
directed and choreographed by Bo Crowell, with musical direction
from Christian Nesmith (son of
Michael
Nesmith). The Tribe featured James Barry, Lee Ferris, Johanna
Unger, Dawn Worrall and Trance Thompson. Butler's production of
Hair won the
LA Weekly
Theater Award for Musical of the Year.
For
three nights in September 2007, Joe's
Pub and the Public Theatre presented a 40th anniversary
production of Hair at the Delacorte Theater
in Central Park. This concert version,
directed by
Diane Paulus, featured
Jonathan Groff as Claude and Galt
MacDermot on stage on the keyboards. The cast also included
Karen Olivo,
Will Swenson as Berger, Darius Nichols as Hud
and Megan Lawrence. Actors from the original Broadway production
joined the cast on stage during the encore of "Let the Sun Shine
In." Demand for the show was overwhelming, as long lines and
overnight waits for tickets far exceeded that for other Delacorte
productions such as
Mother Courage and Her
Children toplined by
Meryl
Streep and
Kevin Kline. Nine months
later, The Public Theater presented a fully-staged production of
Hair at the Delacorte in a limited run from July 22, 2008
to September 14, 2008. Paulus again directed, with choreography by
Karole Armitage. Groff and Swenson
returned as Claude and Berger, together with others from the
concert cast. Caryn Lyn-Manuel played Sheila, and
Christopher J. Hanke replaced Groff as Claude on August
17. Reviews were generally positive, with
Ben Brantley of
The New York Times writing that
"this production establishes the show as more than a vivacious
period piece.
Hair, it seems, has deeper roots than anyone
remembered".
Time magazine
wrote, "
Hair... has been reinvigorated and reclaimed as
one of the great milestones in musical-theatre history.... Today
Hair seems, if anything, more daring than ever."

2009 Broadway Revival poster
2009 Broadway revival
The Public Theater production transferred to Broadway at the
Al Hirschfeld Theatre,
beginning previews on March 6, 2009, with an official opening on
March 31, 2009. Paulus and Armitage again directed and
choreographed and most of the cast returned from the production in
the park. A pre-performance ticket lottery is held each night for
$25 box-seat tickets. The cast includes
Gavin Creel as Claude, Will Swenson as Berger,
Caissie Levy as Sheila, Allison Case as
Crissy, Darius Nichols as Hud, Bryce Ryness as Woof, Kacie Sheik as
Jeanie, Megan Lawrence as Mom, Andrew Kober as Dad and Margaret
Mead, and
Sasha Allen as Dionne.
Designers included
Scott Pask (sets),
Michael McDonald (costumes) and
Kevin
Adams (lighting).
Critical response to the revival has been almost uniformly
positive. The
New York Daily
News headline proclaimed "
Hair Revival's High
Fun". Praising the daring direction, "colorfully kinetic"
choreography and technical accomplishments of the show, especially
the lighting, the paper commented that "as a smile-inducing
celebration of life and freedom, [
Hair is] highly
communicable". The review warned, however: "If you're seated on the
aisle, count on [the cast] to be in your face or your lap or...
braiding your tresses." The
New York
Post wrote that the production "has emerged triumphant....
These days, the nation is fixated less on war and more on the
economy. As a result, the scenes that resonate most are the ones in
which the kids exultantly reject the rat race."
Variety
enthused, "Director Diane Paulus and her prodigiously talented cast
connect with the material in ways that cut right to the 1967 rock
musical's heart, generating tremendous energy that radiates to the
rafters.... What could have been mere nostalgia instead becomes a
full-immersion happening.... If this explosive production doesn't
stir something in you, it may be time to check your pulse."
The Boston Globe
dissented, saying that the production "felt canned" and "overblown"
and that the revival "feels unbearably naive and unforgivably
glib". Ben Brantley, writing for
The New York Times,
reflected the majority, however, delivering a glowing review:
The Public Theatre encountered some difficulty in raising the $5.5
million budgeted for the Broadway transfer, because of severity of
the
economic recession in late
2008, but it reached its goal by adding new producing partners.
In addition, director Diane Paulus helped keep costs low by using
an inexpensive set. After opening to very favorable reviews, the
show grossed a healthy $822,889 in its second week.
On April 30, 2009 on
the Late Show with David
Letterman, the cast recreated a performance on the same stage
at the Ed Sullivan
Theater
by the original tribe. The production
won the
Tony
Award for Best Revival of a Musical, the
Drama Desk Award for
Outstanding Revival of a Musical and the
Drama League Award for Distinguished
Revival of a Musical. By August 7, 2009 the revival had recouped
its entire $5,760,000 investment, becoming one of the
fastest-recouping musicals in Broadway history.
2010 West End revival
The
production is scheduled to be repeated at the Gielgud
Theatre
in London's West End
in 2010, with previews beginning April 1 and an
official opening on April 14. The producers are the Public
Theatre, together with
Cameron
Mackintosh and
Broadway
Across America. The entire New York cast is expected to
relocate to London. According to the producers, this is the first
time in recent memory that an entire cast has made the trip across
the Atlantic. The Broadway production will feature a replacement
cast beginning March 9, as the original Broadway cast is committed
to the West End production through October 2.
International success
Hair has been performed in most of the countries of the
world.
According to Rado, the only places where the
show hasn't been performed are "China
, India
, Vietnam,
the Arctic and Antarctic continents as well as most African
countries."
After the
Berlin
Wall
fell, the show traveled for the first time to
Poland, Lebanon, the Czech Republic, and Sarajevo (featured on
ABC's Nightline with
Ted Koppel, when Phil Alden Robinson visited that city
and discovered a production of Hair there in the midst of
the war). In 1999, Michael Butler and director Bo
Crowell helped produce Hair in Russia at the Stas Namin Theatre located in Moscow's Gorky
Park
. The Moscow production caused a similar
reaction as the original did 30 years earlier because Russian
soldiers were fighting in Chechnya at the time.
Cultural impact
Popular culture
The
New York Times noted, in 2007, that "
Hair was
one of the last Broadway musicals to saturate the culture as shows
from the golden age once regularly did."
Songs from the show continue to be recorded by major artists. In
the 1990s,
Evan Dando's group
The Lemonheads recorded "Frank Mills" for
their 1992 record
It's A
Shame About Ray, and
Run DMC
sampled "Where Do I Go" for their 1993 single "Down With the King"
which went to #1 on the Billboard rap charts and reached the top 25
in the Billboard Hot 100 chart. In 2004, "Aquarius" was honored at
number 33 on
AFI's 100
Years... 100
Songs.
Songs from the musical have been featured in films and television
episodes. For example, in the 2005 movie
Charlie and the Chocolate
Factory, the character
Willy
Wonka welcomed the children with lyrics from "Good Morning
Starshine". "Aquarius/Let the Sunshine In" was performed in the
final scene in the film
The
40-Year-Old Virgin, and Three Dog Night's recording of
"Easy to be Hard" was featured in the first part of David Fincher's
film
Zodiac. On the
Simpsons episode "
The Springfield Files", the
townspeople,
Leonard Nimoy,
Chewbacca,
Dana Scully
and
Fox Mulder all sing "Good Morning
Starshine." In addition,
Head of
the Class featured a two-part episode in 1990 where the
head of the English department is determined to disrupt the
school's performance of
Hair. The continued popularity of
Hair is seen in its number ten ranking in a 2006
BBC Radio 2 listener
poll of the "[United Kingdom]'s Number One
Essential Musicals."
Because of the universality of its pacifist theme,
Hair
continues to be a popular choice for high-school and university
productions. Amateur productions of
Hair are also popular
worldwide.
In 2002, Peter
Jennings featured a Boulder
, Colorado
high school production of Hair for his ABC
documentary series "In Search of America". A September 2006
community theater production at the 2,000-seat Count Basie Theater
in Red
Bank
, New
Jersey
, was praised by original producer Michael Butler,
who said it was "one of the best Hairs I have seen in a
long time." Another example of a recent large-scale
amateur production is the Mountain Play production at the
4,000-seat Cushing Memorial Amphitheatre in Mount
Tamalpais
State Park
in Mill
Valley
, California
in the spring of 2007.
Legacy
Hair was Broadway's first
concept musical, a form that dominated the
musical theater of the seventies.
Hal
Prince's forays into the concept musical –
Company,
Follies and
Pacific Overtures – refined the
genre, while
Michael Bennett's
A Chorus Line popularized it.
Like
Hair,
A Chorus Line was crafted during an
extended experimental workshop period at the Public Theatre.
While the development of the concept musical was an unexpected
consequence of
Hair's tenure on Broadway, the expected
rock music revolution on Broadway turned out to be less than
complete. MacDermot followed
Hair with three successive
rock scores:
Two Gentlemen of Verona (1971);
Dude (1972), a second collaboration with
Ragni; and
Via Galactica
(1972). While
Two Gentlemen of Verona found receptive
audiences and a Tony for Best Musical,
Dude failed after
just sixteen performances, and
Via Galactica flopped
after a month. According to Horn, these and other such "failures
may have been the result of producers simply relying on the label
'rock musical' to attract audiences without regard to the quality
of the material presented."
Jesus Christ Superstar (1970)
and
Godspell (1971) were two
religiously-themed successes of the genre.
Grease (1975) reverted to the rock
sounds of the Fifties, and black-themed musicals like
The Wiz (1975) were heavily influenced by
gospel,
R&B and
soul music. By the late 1970s, the genre had
played itself out.
Except for a few outposts of rock, like
Dreamgirls (1981) and
Little Shop of Horrors
(1982), audience tastes in the 1980s turned to
megamusicals with pop scores, like
Les Miserables
(1985) and
The Phantom of the
Opera (1986). Some later rock musicals, such as
Rent (1996) and
Spring Awakening (2006), as well as
jukebox musicals featuring rock
music, like
We Will Rock
You, have found success. But the rock musical did not come
to dominate the musical theatre stage after
Hair. Critic
Clive Barnes commented, "There really
weren't any rock musicals. No major rock musician ever did a rock
score for Broadway.... You might think of the musical
Tommy, but it was never conceived as
a Broadway show.... And one can see why. There's so much more money
in records and rock concerts. I mean, why bother going through the
pain of a musical which may close in Philadelphia?
On the other hand,
Hair had a profound effect not only on
what was acceptable on Broadway, but as part of the very social
movements that it celebrated. As
Ellen
Stewart, La MaMa's founder, noted:
Hair came with blue jeans, comfortable
clothing, colors, beautiful colors, sounds,
movement....
And you can go to AT&T and see a secretary today,
and she's got on blue jeans....
You can go anywhere you want, and what Hair
did, it is still doing twenty years
later....
A kind of emancipation, a spiritual emancipation that
came from [O'Horgan's] staging....
Hair until this date has influenced every
single thing that you see on Broadway, off-Broadway,
off-off-Broadway, anywhere in the world, you will see elements of
the experimental techniques that Hair brought not just to
Broadway, but to the entire world.
Notes
- Pacheco, Patrick (June 17, 2001). "Peace, Love and Freedom Party; Cast and crew knew
Hair wasn't just exhilarating, it was groundbreaking",
Los Angeles Times, p. 1. Retrieved on June 10, 2008
- Zoglin,
Richard. "A New Dawn for Hair", Time
magazine, July 31, 2008 (in August 11, 2008 issue, pp. 61–63)
- Haun, Harry. "Age of Aquarius", Playbill, April 2009,
from Hair at the Al Hirschfeld Theatre, p. 7
- Rado, James
(February 14, 2003). "Hairstory - The Story Behind the Story",
hairthemusical.com. Retrieved on April 11, 2008.
- "Viet Rock". Lortel Archives: The
Internet Off-Broadway Database. Retrieved on April 11,
2008.
- Taylor, Kate (September 14, 2007). "The
Beat Goes On". The New York Sun. The New York Sun,
One, SL, LLC. Retrieved on May 27, 2008.
- Miller, pp. 54–56
- Horn, p. 23
- Horn, pp. 18–19
- Horn, p. 27
- "Galt MacDermot Biography".
musiciansguide.com. Retrieved on April 11, 2008.
- Whittaker, Herbert (May 1968). "Hair: The Musical That Spells Good-bye
Dolly!". The Canadian Composer. Retrieved on April 18,
2008.
- Isherwood, Charles (September 16, 2007). "The Aging of Aquarius". The New York
Times. Retrieved on May 25, 2008.
- Horn, p. 34
- Horn, pp. 32-33
- Zolotow, Sam
(January 23, 1968). "Hair Closes Sunday" The New York
Times, reproduced at michaelbutler.com. Retrieved on May 23,
2009
- Horn, pp. 87–88
- Horn, p. 29
- Junker, Howard (June 3, 1968). "Director of the Year". Newsweek,
orlok.com. Retrieved on April 11, 2008.
- Horn, pp. 39–40
- Horn, p. 53
- Horn, p. 42
- "Hair". Internet Broadway Database. Retrieved on
April 11, 2008.
- "Producer Sues N.Y. Theatre League On Hair
Exclusion as Tony Entry". Variety, michaelbutler.com
(March 10, 1968). Retrieved on April 11, 2008.
- Zoltrow, Sam (March 22, 1968). "Happy Time Gets 10 Mentions Among Tony
Award Candidates". New York Times, p. 59. Retrieved on
April 11, 2008.
- "Past Winners, 1969". tonyawards.com.
Retrieved on April 11, 2008
- King, Betty Nygaard. "Hair". Encyclopedia of Music in
Canada. Historica Foundation of Canada. Retrieved on May 31,
2008.
- Johnson, p. 87
- Hair program, Detroit, 1970
- Johnson, p. 134
- Johnson, p. 82
- Johnson, pp. 33, 81, 87–88
- Horn, pp. 100–01
- Butler, Michael. "How and Why I Got Into Hair". Pages from
Michael Butler's Journal. michaelbutler.com. Retrieved on
April 11, 2008.
- Lewis, Anthony. "Londoners Cool To Hair's Nudity: Four Letter Words
Shock Few at Musical's Debut", The New York Times,
September 29, 1968
- Horn, p. 105
- "Tim Curry – Actor". Edited Guide Entry.
bbc.uk.co (January 2, 2007). Retrieved on April 11, 2008.
- "Shaftesbury Theatre, London".
thisistheatre.com. Retrieved on April 17, 2008.
- Horn, pp. 103–10
- Horn, p. 37
- Blumenthal, Ralph (October 26, 1968). "Munich Audience Welcomes Hair; Applause
and Foot Stamping Follow Musical Numbers". New York
Times, p. 27. Retrieved on April 11, 2008.
- "Translated Hair Cheered in Paris; Title
Lends Itself to Jest at Candidate's Expense". New York
Times (June 2, 1969), p. 53. Retrieved on June 7, 2008.
- "Hair Reaches Australia", The New
York Times (June 7, 1969), p. 26, reproduced at the
Hair Online Archives. Retrieved on April 29, 2009.
- Hair: Original Australian production,
MILESAGO: Australasian Music & Popular Culture 1964-1975,
accessed April 29, 2009.
- "Hair Around the World".
Newsweek, michaelbutler.com (July 7, 1969). Retrieved on
April 11, 2008.
- Lemon, Richard. "Here, There, Everywhere Hair",
Performing Arts Magazine, October 1969. Retrieved on July
28, 2008.
- Miller, Scott (2001). "HAIR – An analysis by Scott Miller"; excerpt
from Rebels with applause: Broadway's groundbreaking
musicals. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann. ISBN
0-325-00357-2
- Horn, p. 134
- Ragni,
Gerome and James
Rado (Lyricists), Galt MacDermot (Composer), and Lamont
Washington (Vocalist). (1968). Hair [Audio Recording].
RCA Victor. Event
occurs at Track 5, "Colored Spade".
- Ragni,
Gerome and James
Rado (Lyricists), Galt MacDermot (Composer), and Diane Keaton, Suzannah
Norstrand, Natalie Mosco, Melba Moore, Lorrie Davis, and Emmaretta
Marks (Vocalists). (1968). Hair [Audio Recording].
RCA Victor. Event
occurs at Track 25, "White Boys".
- Loving v. Virginia, 388 U.S. 1; 87
S. Ct. 1817; 18 L. Ed. 2d 1010; 1967 U.S. LEXIS 1082
- Ragni,
Gerome and James
Rado (Lyricists), Galt MacDermot (Composer), and Lorrie Davis,
Lamont Washington, Ronald Dyson, and Donnie Burks (Vocalists).
(1968). Hair [Audio Recording]. RCA Victor. Event occurs at Track 27, "Abie
Baby".
- The 1960s concept of a menage-a-trois as a tribe is
illustrated by the cover of the book The Love Tribe, Mathewson, Joseph (1968).
Signet. Retrieved on April 18, 2008.
- "Musical Hair opens as censors
withdraw". On this Day. bbc.co.uk (November 27, 1968).
Retrieved on April 11, 2008.
- Ragni,
Gerome and James
Rado (Lyricists), Galt MacDermot (Composer), and Steve Curry
(Vocalist). (1968) Hair [Audio Recording]. RCA Victor. Event occurs at
Track 4, "Sodomy".
- Barnes, Clive (April 30, 1968).
"Theater: Hair – It's Fresh and Frank;
Likable Rock Musical Moves to Broadway", New York
Times, p. 40. Retrieved on April 11, 2008.
- Rado, James;
Gerome Ragni
[1966, 1969]. Hair, Original Script, Tams Whitmark.
- Ragni,
Gerome and James
Rado (Lyricists), Galt MacDermot (Composer), and Original
Broadway Cast (Vocalists). (1968) Hair [Audio Recording].
RCA Victor. Events
occur at Track 2 "Donna" and Track 26, "Walking in Space".
- Miller, p. 116
- Ragni,
Gerome and James
Rado (Lyricists), Galt MacDermot (Composer), and Original
Broadway Cast (Vocalists). (1968) Hair [Audio Recording].
RCA Victor. Event
occurs at Track 28, "Three-Five-Zero-Zero".
- Miller, pp. 110–11
- McNeill, Don (March 30, 1967). "Be-In, be-in, Being". The Village
Voice, The Village Voice, LLC. Retrieved on April 17,
2008.
- Ragni,
Gerome and James
Rado (Lyricists), Galt MacDermot (Composer), and Sally Eaton, Shelly Plimpton,
Melba Moore, and
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References
- Davis, Lorrie and Rachel Gallagher. Letting Down My Hair:
Two Years with the Love Rock Tribe (1973) A. Fields Books ISBN
0525630058
- Horn, Barbara Lee. The Age of Hair: Evolution and the
Impact of Broadway's First Rock Musical (New York, 1991) ISBN
0313275645
- Johnson, Jonathon. Good Hair Days: A Personal Journey with
the American Tribal Love-Rock Musical Hair (iUniverse, 2004)
ISBN 0595312977
- Miller, Scott. Let the Sun Shine In: The Genius of
Hair (Heinemann, 2003) ISBN 0325005567
- Wollman, Elizabeth Lara, The Theatre Will Rock: A History
of the Rock Musical from Hair to Hedwig (University of
Michigan Press, 2006) ISBN 0472115766
External links