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Sold Date:
May 24, 2020
Start Date:
April 27, 2020
Final Price:
$18.99
(USD)
Seller Feedback:
1534
Buyer Feedback:
0
This item is not for sale. Gripsweat is an archive of past sales and auctions, none of the items are available for purchase.
RED VINYL VERSION.
For the 1975 film version of The Rocky Horror Picture Show, American
producer Lou Adler wisely mixed the best of the London and Los Angeles
stage versions, shooting the movie in England with Tim Curry and several
of the other original cast members, plus Meatloaf (years before Bat Out
of Hell), and Americans Barry Bostwick and Susan Sarandon as the
innocent couple Brad and Janet. Adler also brought back original London
stage musicians in place of the slick studio musicians who had marred
the L.A. cast album. The film version resequenced the songs and
reassigned some of the vocals, with Brad's song "Once in a While"
dropped. But it all worked out fine. The strings that were added to
ballads like "Science Fiction/Double Feature" only improved them; the
rockers rocked out; Bostwick and Sarandon proved to be the best Brad and
Janet ever; the original cast members, especially Curry, reveled in the
opportunity to immortalize their portrayals; and Rocky Horror's
potential as a witty parody of cheap movies, rock & roll, and sexual
mores was fully realized. The film soundtrack album became the
definitive version of the score, despite lacking the songs "Planet
Shmanet Janet" and "The Sword of Damocles." The Rocky Horror Picture
Show was not successful in its initial theatrical run, but then a
strange thing happened. In 1976, the Waverly Theater in New York's
Greenwich Village began showing the film at midnight on Fridays and
Saturdays. Soon, a cult of repeat viewers began turning up every week;
they began to dress like the characters, call out their own comments at
strategic moments, sing along, and add their own theatrical effects. The
phenomenon spread across the U.S., with fans rivaling Trekkies and
Deadheads for loyalty and eccentricity, and The Rocky Horror Picture
Show took on a life Richard O'Brien never could have anticipated. ~
William Ruhlmann
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