Once Again On The Cultural Front of
The 1960s Uprising-The 50th Anniversary Of The Musical “Hair” On
Broadway-A Few Thoughts
A link to an National
Public Radio On Point program
featuring the 50th anniversary of the musical and it meaning then,
and now:
http://www.wbur.org/onpoint/2018/05/04/fifty-years-of-hair
By Si Lannon
The first time I heard
that Seth Garth was going to preempt political aficionado Frank Jackman and do
the 200th anniversary of the birth of Communist Manifesto writer Karl Marx was upon publication under the
former’s name. Which pisses me off since I have been squeezed out apparently of
getting any assignments around the incredible number of 1968 events which are
having their 50th anniversary commemorations. (The Marx 200th
birthday anniversary thing intersects 1968 via a then growing interest in his
theories among students and young radicals once the old tactics and strategy around
Democratic Party takeover politics went asunder.) Upon privately complaining to
site manager Greg Green he gave me this assignment to make a few comments of
the 50th anniversary of the musical Hair, on Broadway at least although it had been off-Broadway the
year before, one of the few musicals that could have possibly captured some of
the pathos, bathos and essence of what was going on in all its messy splendor
in that year.
Hair represented
that trend away from goodie two shoes formula entertainment like song and dance
musicals and thinly pitched family dramatic productions. That represented what
the audiences of the 1950s were interested in and still had, have a place in
the Great White Way scheme of things. But the unacknowledged (at the time not
so now once the cultural critics took their long look at the subject) effect of
the vanguard work that was being done in little theaters for little money for
little audiences finally took root. Artaud’s Theater of the Absurd, Brecht’s
didactic efforts and the like finally found a more receptive general audience.
So Hair in 1967-68 did not raise as
many hairs (no pun intended among the theater going public as it might have
earlier in the decade when it would have been treated as an end of run “beat”
saga. That is no to say the subject of intense profanity, vivid sexual
reference, an interracial cast and endless paeans to drugs of all sorts didn’t
raise hackles, didn’t have members of the audience walking out shaking their
heads but as word got out that this was a generational sage for the agents of the
Age of Aquarius the thing couldn’t be stopped. And as one voice in the above-mentioned
link noted she was still playing in, albeit in Vermont one of the last real
refuses of the survivors of the Generation of ’68 along with the Oregon woods
and maybe Seattle now that nobody with any left-over hippie aspiration could
afford to live in any part of San Francisco except maybe the streets, is still
being produced someplace in this wild wicked old land.
In a funny sort of way
the saga of Hair almost accidently
traced the line of the 1960s explosion but more importantly in one place stamped
“youth nation” as a tribal village like it had never been before, although you
could have seen around the edges of it all the way back to the wild boys of the
West Coast in their souped up jalopies and hot rods with a “don’t give fuck”
about the golden age of American prosperity aborning, the bad boys offspring of
the Okie migration that said the more menacing “fuck you up” of the outlaw
bikers with their big “hogs” and larcenous hearts, the alienated teen angst
misunderstood “please don’t fuck with my head” rebel without a cause types who
cooled on James Dean, and the “fuck, fuck, fuck” beat boys talking a blue
streak about junkies, negro streets and jailbreaks. And you wonder why youth
nation jumped right in the middle of all this when the social situation ran up
against racial segregation, sexual uptightness, the fucking war in Vietnam
which formed on the corners that Hair hung
its hat on since every single guy, and it was all guys then, from the most gung
ho Green Beret film watcher to the
most ardent draft resister had to deal with the draft and the generational
question-go or resist-and the weird queer drag queen fag baiting and women’s
liberation.
That draft issue, that
each and every guy and by extension their lovers, caught between a rock and a
hard place was no joke. Was centrally why Hair
spoke to a generation struggling with that very issue-to go or resist- a
question that the parents’ generation had almost no conception of since they
had fought, or waited anxiously at the door, in their “good war” and could not
understand their kids and their idea that maybe going off to kill people, poor
people, who they had no quarrel had to be thought about. Claude, a lead
character had plenty to think about doped up to the gills or not. The other
stuff about race, sex, dope, the signs of the Zodiac, karma, mediation, oneness
with the world flow from that central concern.
It wasn’t all beautiful
by any means and the threads that hung “youth nation” together came asunder
readily enough once the counter-offensive by the night-takers began in earnest
(and as Seth Garth and Frank Jackman have said we have been fighting a forty
plus year cultural rearguard action against the bastards ever since with no
letup in sight). Even in the halcyon days of the Summer of Love in 1967 which
is the framework a lot of us had from my town under the guidance of the one and
only Scribe, the late Peter Paul Markin who in the end fell under the bus
himself, there was plenty of bad stuff going with people ripping people off for
drugs, food, anything that was not nailed down. But that was a side issue like
many things when something new is trying to breakout and not everybody is as
pure as the driven snow and who knows who will show up.
The Captain Crunch-led
converted yellow brick road bus we ran up and down the Pacific Coast Highway on
picking up vagrant travelers and the wanderers of the youth nation world mostly
were seekers, ranters, good people to have on your side when you are trying
create a newer world out of what late capitalism and its social norms had left
us to pick up the pieces with.
Like I said not
everybody, not the Scribe in the end, could go the distance and once that
critical mass which sustained the youth nation lost it love of plainsong, of
seeking for the mysteries of the universe in a million different ways from
tarot cards to LSD and everything in between, and the sense that we could win
the drift went against us as people headed back to the confines of late
capitalist bourgeois society. Headed back from that youthful detour, except of
course those small enclaves mentioned earlier still existing in places like
Vermont and Oregon if you ever get up that way. Everybody has some timeline for
when the whole thing ebbed, after the hellish 1968 year of events being the
prime candidate but that was/is for academics to ferret out. As Frank Jackman has
said repeating what the Scribe said before he fell off the world-Wasn’t that a
time, yeah, wasn’t that a time.
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