Synopsis The year is 1967, and the Vietnam War is at its height. In New York City, a tribe of hippies rails against the establishment, protesting intolerance, brutality, and the dehumanization of society. When Claude, one of their own, gets drafted, he must make a decision about what values are worth fighting for. Songs include ‘Aquarius’, ‘Good Morning Starshine’, ‘Let the Sunshine In’ A version of the 70s musical hit updated to 2005 with James Rado.
Originally billed as a "tribal love rock musical", the arrival of Hair in 1967 marked a revolution in musical theatre history, bringing the spirit of youth and a contemporary rock idiom to a genre that had been long languishing in the musical as well as theatrical past. This was a show that spoke to the young generation of the day, and addressed some of the most urgent concerns that preoccupied them, like Vietnam and the protest movement. But as a revival at the Old Vic demonstrated in 1993, the show had by then itself become a historic relic, as quaint and as dated as Show Boat or Oklahoma!.
Now the Gate has reclaimed it from history and reinvigorated it as a show for today in every way. Under the direction of Daniel Kramer, this is surely one of the most radical makeovers of an old musical I have ever seen, hurtling it forwards from the late 1960s right into the embrace of the 21st century.
As Hair wilfully scandalises and thrills in equal measure, Kramer has, in collaboration with the original authors James Rado (who co-wrote the book and lyrics with Gerome Ragni) and Galt MacDermot (who composed the music), played loose with the original text and score, re-scripting, updating and re-arranging it throughout.
A musical about "tribal love" has, in the process, become a far grittier, hard-edged story of contemporary hatreds, with images torn from newspapers, such as the famous torture scenes from Abu Ghraib prison. It is also a story of the terrors of youth, and how confusing trying to make sense of the world might be. Especially now, when the ideals of free love that the show so famously espoused could mean death (the spectre of HIV hangs heavy over the show, one actor even has the initials tattooed to his chest), and everyone is immersed in a heavy drug culture.
Kramer, who is in his mid-20s and was therefore not even born when Hair was first staged, has done what all brilliant directors do - namely interrogated it for fresh meaning through his own eyes and times. The show proves both resilient and responsive to his vision, fuelled as it is by some truly great songs and a production galvanised by Ann Yee's kinetic choreography that explodes across the wide stage the Gate has been newly configured to create.
While Hair was originally notorious for introducing full-frontal nudity to the British stage - the original London production opened the day after stage censorship was abolished - this time things get downright raunchy. You might want to leave your hang-ups at the door, but this production is otherwise Prozac for the soul.
This must surely be the best show in London. I went with low expectations and came out on a million-dollar high. It closes today. Everyone who loves theatre should have seen it... - 81.3.119.218)
29 Oct 05
Outstanding direction, performances, choreography, lighting,music, sound - deserves highest possible recognition - Olivier and all other Awards, here comes the new HAIR !!!
Where is the transfer ? - 86.137.2.239)
27 Oct 05
Astonishing. Extremely powerful, beautiful, fun and with great performances from an extremely energetic cast. This is an absolutely thrilling production, I could simply go on complimenting it but I won't since you probably are not able to see it anyway. I hope it transfers to an appropriate space. - 86.136.191.127)
23 Oct 05
WOW! That's about all I can say about this production. Talk about taking an period piece and bringing it bang up to date. I have read that when it was first released it was quite controversial, well this update is exactly that. The references to Iraq and the Abu Graib prisoners make powerful points. It certainly beats watching a family sitting in their living room talking about World affairs endlessly!
The cast are all excellent and bring a lot of energy to the piece. I haven't seen a show with this much energy since Rent first opened in london. I really hope a producer manages to find an appropriate space in London to give this a longer run and allow more people to see it. I'd certainly like to see it again! - 193.201.196.10)
13 Oct 05
Daniel Kramer's stunning reinvention of this strange but ultimately irresistible piece is a triumph for the Gate, and one that will surely have a longer life in transfer if a space can be found that will preserve the immediacy and sheer theatrical excitement of this staging. In updating from 60s hippies to modern-day student/dropouts a certain amount has inevitably been lost (the sheer terror and inevitability of the Vietnam draft, the sweetness and comparative sexual innocence of the characters, the shock value of the drug-taking) and the book is still as incoherent as ever, only really reaching anything like a coherent plot in the last 20 minutes or so, and some of the up-dating jars slightly. Nonetheless, the anger, bite and sheer subversiveness of the piece rings out in a way that the (hugely enjoyable but inevitably dated) '93 Old Vic revival missed. Kramer has created a number of unforgettable (and occassionally deeply upsetting) stage pictures: the enthralling opening which says more about youthful alienation, inner city paranoia and rampant consumerism in 5 minutes than some films and plays take hours to do; the distressing allusion to the US abuse of Iraqi prisoners; Claude's breakdown where he symbolically covers himself with food; the heartbreaking finale where the company sing Let The Sunshine In while bearing Claude's flowerladen soldiers coffin. On top of all this to completely bowl you over, there's Soutra Gilmour's evocative design, Ann Yee's exhilarating choreography, and maybe the greatest rock score ever written for the theatre. The cast are uniformly magnificent: hugely committed performers with passion, presence and terrific voices. I particularly liked Charles Aitken's fallen angel Claude, Kevin Wathen's charming and aggressively sexy Berger, Golda Rosheuvel's outrageous Hud and Robyn Isaac's delightfully strung-out Jeanie. Only maybe Joanna Ampil's slightly-too-smart college girl Sheila doesn't quite fit, although her voice takes the breath away. This production reminded me at times of Mitch Sebastian's magical, power-packed reworking of "Pippin" at the Bridwell 5 years or so ago: I hope this one achieves a longer life. Something very special is happening at the Gate. - 195.82.123.181)
06 Oct 05
Having read most of the press reviews for the show I feel that the reviwers have missed the point. The production has given Hair a new lease of life, I for one am glad that they have done it, not all of it works but it still beats most shows out there! I really hope it gets an extension as this is a show which could have a big impact on people. - 213.86.133.215)
28 Sep 05
An absolutely outstanding production.I was left speechless and pensive from this powerful and sometimes disturbing performance. An outstanding cast of young talent, many I am sure, will now be thrust into the West End. In particular, praise must go to Craig Perry, Graham Tudor & Charles Aitken on their individual performances. This is a MUST to transfer. Congrats to The Gate for providing a great starting venue - The intimacy with the characters felt all the more real being only a few feet away. - 195.93.21.100)
27 Sep 05
I saw HAIR last week and feel extremely lucky to say that I've managed to get four tickets for 6th October. I went with very low expecations. I knew a couple of the songs. It TOTALLY BLEW ME AWAY. I go to the theatre all the time. Far more than I watch TV and I've seen the hights over the years Amy's View, Janet McTeer in A Dolls House and musically the First night of Jerry Springer at ther National was special but this show smacks you around the head and makes it spin with excitement. Truly, truly sensational. - 81.3.119.218)
26 Sep 05
Well 3.5 really, but I'm trying to tone down my over-the-top predecessors! It's a production full of energy, good singing, and great choreography.....but it really isn't a very good musical. It lacks a proper narrative thread and comes over as a clumsy hotchpotch of ideas and messages. I suspect it's original success was due to shock value and originality. This is 2005, and it is no longer either. Nice to see a musical at The Gate, though. - 81.157.178.43)
23 Sep 05
Well what can I say, I attended one of the preview performances of Hair, I was totally blown away by the energy,enthusiasium, great singing and brilliant acting of each and every member of the brilliant cast. It has been totally updated to 2005, if the intention is to shock in this day and age then this show really does!!! seeing is believing!! Well done one and all and I look forward to seeing it in the West End!!! Keep up the good work and keep warm (excuse the pun)!! see it and you'll know what I mean.
Lauren Betty. - 86.133.255.137)
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