Most Popular
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Ambush at Channel 5: One TV type gets a dose of her own hidden-camera-style investigation and finds it "uncool"
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How Not to Be a Rap Star
Flying high on Ecstasy, Grey Goose and his own hype, Paul Mussan blew through 100 G's in six months.
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A college drop-out abandons a lucrative tech career for a life of inner-city poverty and hopes to save an urban school district from oblivion
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Kansas Citys Corona Cantina #1 still has some problems to work out, but well raise a few bottles to the concept
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PB&J Restaurants Inc. comes to the rescue of Union Stations historic Harvey House Diner
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Ambush at Channel 5: One TV type gets a dose of her own hidden-camera-style investigation and finds it "uncool" (22)
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Kansas Citys Corona Cantina #1 still has some problems to work out, but well raise a few bottles to the concept (15)
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No one feels sorry for Councilman Terry Riley as much as Terry Riley (7)
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How Not to Be a Rap Star (6)
Flying high on Ecstasy, Grey Goose and his own hype, Paul Mussan blew through 100 G's in six months.
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Here's a bit more on why a journalist might be curious about Councilman Terry Riley (4)
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Body of War
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Semi-Pro
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Be Kind Rewind
Michel Gondry attempts to celebrate DIY filmmaking but comes up short, stale and flat.
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Patterns of Abuse
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Daily Briefs: Big 12, Crack Toddlers, Pervy News Writing
10:06AM 03/14/08 -
Kansas City Ballet Gets Props from the NYT
02:23PM 03/13/08 -
The Other Basketball Tourney, Day Two
02:11PM 03/13/08 -
SXSW: N.E.R.D. = G.E.N.I.U.S.
09:47AM 03/14/08 -
SXSW: I Saw Lou Reed Kissing Moby
09:41AM 03/14/08 -
New Innate Sounds Crew Tracks, Parties
08:00AM 03/14/08
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Recent Articles By SCOTT FOUNDAS
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Pregnant Pause
On a rock with the director and star of 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days.
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Wide-Open Spaces
Sean Penn delivers a soulful road movie and refuses to define his subject.
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Splattered
Will Death Sentence bring life to the revenge genre?
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Nerd Love
Geeky, freaky teen virgins attempt to get knocked up in Superbad.
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The Popcorn King
Rush Hour 3 director Brett Ratner has been called a fauxteur, a womanizer and, worse, over budget. Why you should take him seriously anyway.
National Features
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Phoenix New Times
Canine Crusaders
That drug-sniffing dog up ahead? He may not be your best friend.
By Ray Stern -
Broward-Palm Beach New Times
The Muscle Men
Thanks to a string of Florida "anti-aging clinics," baseball's steroid scandal isn't limited to superstars.
By Michael J. Mooney -
Miami New Times
Picked On
Farm workers earn nada in America's green-bean capital.
By Janine Zeitlin -
Village Voice
"Why I'm No Longer a Brain-Dead Liberal"
An election-season essay from one of America's greatest playwrights.
By David Mamet
Stiff Hair
A movie musical of the musical of the movie is nowhere near divine.
By SCOTT FOUNDAS
Published: July 19, 2007Did John Waters sell out? Or did our metrosexual age merely render him irrelevant? Long before Hairspray took up residence on the Great White Way in 2002, Waters had abdicated his position as America's elder statesman of underground smut in favor of a more lucrative career as a neutered mainstream pop-culture icon. Yet Hairspray on Broadway seemed to seal the deal, with its further taming of Waters' already pretty tame 1988 movie. Like Mel Brooks before him, Waters is fully gentrified now and getting rich as a result.
In truth, the stage version of Hairspray was easily the best of the recent Broadway behemoths, even if it buried Waters' skewering of WASP panic in the face of black progress beneath thick layers of tongue-in-cheek nostalgia. You could easily walk away from the musical Hairspray thinking that racial segregation in the early '60s wasn't anything that a little blues-infused doo-wop couldn't cure, but the show was mercifully free of The Producers' labored slapstick and Wicked's ponderous self-seriousness. More important, the songs were pretty darn good — a dozen and a half clever, up-tempo numbers styled by composer-lyricist Marc Shaiman and co-lyricist Scott Wittman after the Top 40 hits of the era (the Angels, Jackie Wilson, et al.). And unlike the songs from Dreamgirls (which charts roughly the same period in American musical history from the other side of the race divide), Shaiman and Wittman's featured an abundance of good old-fashioned soul.
Hairspray the movie musical has been conceived and executed as a faithful record of the stage version, but that's all it is — a recording. Director Adam Shankman shows a lot of know-how when it comes to the placement and movement of bodies, but he hasn't rethought the material in cinematic terms (the way, for example, that Frank Oz did when adapting the similarly stylized Little Shop of Horrors). The result is an odd hybrid that lacks both the rambunctious energy of a live performance and the expressionistic pull of a great movie musical. That leaves the film to survive on its auditory pleasures and the novelty of its stunt casting, most notably John Travolta as Edna, plus-plus-sized mother of plus-sized teen Tracy Turnblad (Nikki Blonsky). That most dandyish of ostensibly straight contemporary screen performers, Travolta is oddly tamped-down in a part that calls for the grandiose. Meanwhile, as the movie's vampish villainess Velma Von Tussle, Michelle Pfeiffer plays all of her scenes with such shrill, white-rich-bitch intensity that her lengthy screen hiatus (this is her first live-action role since White Oleander in 2002) doesn't seem to have been quite long enough.








