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Hedwig
rocks! Totally! So totally, in fact, that if youre not into stage smoke, strobe
lights and amplified instruments, youd better come prepared with a pocketful of
Excedrin. But the people who will be drawn to Hedwig and the Angry Inch, raised
on the ethos of rock concerts, should have no problem. Either way, it's a rockin
good show.
John Cameron Mitchells
little tale of an innocent German lad whose sex change operation went awry has had an
interesting journey from page to stage. Beginning off-Broadway, and starring author
Mitchell in the high-energy title role, it received the Obie and Outer Critics
Circle Awards in 1998. Inevitably, it was made into a film which garnered awards at
festivals in Sundance, Seattle, Deauville, Berlin and both the San Francisco International
and the San Francisco Gay and Lesbian Film Festivals. Mitchell also was nominated for a
Best Actor Golden Globe in 2002.
Meanwhile, the stage production
marched on, all the way to Edinburgh (where Kevin Cahoon, who stars in San Francisco,
replaced Mitchell in the lead at the Fringe Festival), then Boston, Seattle, Austin,
Cleveland, Minneapolis and LA Now, after lengthy negotiations, Hedwig finally has
arrived in San Francisco a city historically hospitable to gender-bending, drag
queens and over-the-top costuming. Its about time.
The venue is as seedy as the
fictional rock club wherein the action is set, the old Victoria Theatre on 16th
Street in the Mission. But not to be discouraged. The Victoria has its charms. You can buy
popcorn and eat it in your seat. And that seat will recline slightly, in the manner of the
best movie house furniture. Moreover, one lucky critic found parking on the street, half a
block away.
And now, on with the show. Ladies
and gentlemen, give it up for Hedwig, who enters in a costume that makes anything Cher
might show up in look ordinary. Feathers, leather, just a touch of fur darlings and a huge
blonde wig, a fashion statement approached only by some of the getups seen in the
audience. And Cahoon looks sensational in it.
Actually, Cahoon is sensational, whether belting out one of composer
Stephen Trasks rock numbers, strutting his/her stuff across the stage in high-heeled
boots, vamping the audience in the manner of a younger Dame Edna or telling the touching
and tragic story of Hedwigs life. And, although it is really a sad story, make no
mistake, as told by Hedwig, this is a hugely funny show.
Seduced by an American GI in
postwar Germany, young Hansel-about-to-become-Hedwig agrees to the sex change operation
desired by his new lover as a wedding gift. The motivation is to escape an unloving mother
and get to America, home of beloved rock n roll which Hansel has heretofore
been forced to listen to in the oven at Mamas insistence. Problem is, the surgeon
botches the job, leaving an inch of male sex organ where the female parts were supposed to
have gone. Poor Hedwig. A year later she finds herself divorced and abandoned in a trailer
park in Kansas.
But the music plays on and soon,
Hedwig, who has decided to become a rock star, and her new young lover, are playing clubs
across the state. It seems that Hedwig has some talent as a songwriter and her guy,
re-christened Tommy Gnosis, really wows the girls as a performer. Hedwig, who has been
searching for her other half since childhood, is in love and teaches Tommy
everything she knows. But, when the young man discovers Hedwigs inch, he
leaves her, taking all her material with him.
Which brings us to the present.
Tommy is an international rock star of some notoriety. Hedwig scrapes by, singing in seedy
clubs with her band of misfits, an oddly-dressed crew with unpronounceable names, fronted
by her latest husband, Yitzhak, a Bosnian Jewish refugee who is essentially mute when it
comes to dialogue but can sing up a storm. Lisa M. Engelken, a San Francisco rocker who
performs as lisa e., plays the role. The band of nebbishes (Perry James, Matthew Black,
Matthew Sperry and Nick Fogler) is terrific, if loud. Jason Eagan directed and the rest of
the story unfolds as the band plays on.
Part rock concert, part Rocky
Horror and part Days of Our Lives German Style, Hedwig and the
Angry Inch has settled down in San Francisco for an open-ended run. Knowing San
Francisco, that should last a long, long time.
San Francisco, November 21, 2002 - Suzanne Weiss