Why ‘The Rocky Horror Picture Show’ Is Extra Related Than Ever – The Boston Courier

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By now, it’s cliché to name something a “cult classic,” however the time period may have been invented for “The Rocky Horror Picture Show.” Now, at 50 years previous, the 1975 film musical written by Richard O’Brien occupies a novel area in popular culture, because of an arch-camp aesthetic, killer songs and figuring out performances. An enormous motive why it nonetheless works is that it’s what too many films right now are scared to be: gloriously bizarre.

The plot follows newly engaged squares Brad and Janet (Barry Bostwick and Susan Sarandon) as they search refuge at a gothic citadel after their automotive breaks down. Unluckily for them, it’s the place transvestite alien mad scientist Dr. Frank-N-Furter, performed by the really mesmerizing Tim Curry, is creating Rocky, a muscly, blond, lab-grown boy toy, with the assistance of his begrudging servants. Over the subsequent 90 minutes, blood and mascara run as not everybody survives the following bisexual love quadrangle and swimming pool orgy.

That weirdness might be why it bombed when it first opened. However by means of phrase of mouth, “Rocky” — because the film is affectionately identified by followers — discovered its viewers at midnight showings that proceed to today, making “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” the longest-running theatrical launch in historical past.

From Left: Dr. Frank-N-Furter (Tim Curry) meets Brad and Janet (Barry Bostwick and Susan Sarandon) in “The Rocky Horror Picture Show.”

Michael Ochs Archives through Getty Pictures

I proudly depend myself as a member of Rocky’s hardcore fanbase — and it’s a good time to be a fan. Rocky’s birthday coincides with the theatrical launch of “A Strange Journey: The Story of Rocky Horror,” directed by O’Brien’s son, Linus, and incorporates a trove of behind-the-scenes footage and interviews with the solid and crew. Once I converse to Richard and Linus over Zoom to debate the cultural influence of “Rocky” at 50, Richard continues to be stunned by its success.

“The longevity of it is what always astounds me; the people keep returning to the theater to see the movie. You’d think it’d run out of steam, wouldn’t you? But it just doesn’t,” Richard stated.

It’s a sentiment shared by Tim Curry, who writes in his new autobiography “Vagabond” that Rocky’s continued success is “nothing short of amazing to me.”

Bostwick, in the meantime, is touring the nation with fellow unique solid members Nell Campbell and Patricia Quinn, screening the film and holding post-show Q&As with the viewers.

“‘Rocky Horror Picture Show,’ it just doesn’t let you go. And it certainly hasn’t let me go for 50 years, and I’m still talking about it and learning about it and learning from the people who are moved by it and entertained by it,” Bostwick advised me after we spoke on Zoom.

Once I share my very own “Rocky” origin story with Bostwick, I begin by saying that I used to be in all probability too younger to observe it. He gently scolds me.

“So many people have started out the conversation with, ‘I think I was way too young to see this movie.’ And I say, ‘No, I don’t think so,’” Bostwick stated. “It started a conversation in your life to either who you were living with, your parents or yourself, your own mind and body and soul.”

For me, that dialog with myself began within the late ’90s after I was leafing by means of the TV listings for late-night films and got here throughout the enduring close-up photograph of Curry together with his eyebrow raised. Instinctively, I knew that I simply needed to see no matter movie this picture was from. I positioned slightly sq. of painters’ tape, coloured black with a Sharpie, on the VCR to completely disguise the blinking crimson gentle. In any other case, it may need alerted my dad and mom that it had been set to document one thing they’d doubtless disapprove of.

From the second the opening credit rolled, with disembodied blood-red lips singing “Science Fiction Double Feature” towards a black background, I used to be enthralled. Did I develop up and grow to be a cross-dressing “Sweet Transvestite”? Is it in some way the explanation I turned out homosexual? No and no. However the impact it had on me was profound. The kaleidoscopic mixture of dayglo units, risque costumes, frenetic dancing, and campy sci-fi and B-movie tropes is downright hypnotic. And if the soundtrack — a heady mixture of ’50s rock ’ n roll, glam rock and even the occasional, genuinely honest ballad — doesn’t enchantment, then I don’t understand how that can assist you.

From Left: Little Nell, Patricia Quinn, Tim Curry & Richard O’Brien in “The Rocky Horror Picture Show.”
From Left: Little Nell, Patricia Quinn, Tim Curry & Richard O’Brien in “The Rocky Horror Picture Show.”

“The Rocky Horror Picture Show” / twentieth Century Studios

Whereas the wardrobes are undoubtedly attractive, I wasn’t sexually interested in the sight of a person in fishnets and make-up. Nevertheless it actually fucked with my 12-year-old preconceptions of gender and identification in one of the best ways. Like so many others, it opened my eyes to the concept individuals could possibly be totally different — and that totally different could possibly be enjoyable.

Considered one of Rocky’s most well-known refrains, “Don’t dream it, be it,” guarantees that not solely is being totally different enjoyable, however the enjoyable is potential. Regardless of your gender identification, who you’re keen on, or in case you are simply ultimately different, then that’s a strong message. And what enjoyable!

However evidently, there have been heaps of people that didn’t discover the film enjoyable when it was first launched. It flopped onerous on the field workplace, which is shocking provided that “Rocky” began life as a really profitable stage musical. Curry originated the position of Frank-N-Furter when it debuted in a small theater in London, earlier than the play rapidly transferred to the West Finish. After successful over London audiences, the present headed to Los Angeles, the place it met with comparable success. A-listers like Jack Nicholson, Cher and John Lennon attended the star-studded premiere. Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger even thought-about shopping for the film rights himself, so a display screen adaptation appeared like a certain factor.

Curry remembers being “devastated” when “Rocky” bombed. Possibly it was too on the market for the common cinema goer. One film poster hints that it was a tough promote, with the tagline: “He’s the hero – that’s right, the hero!!” It was, maybe, a much less direct means of claiming, “please don’t be put off by men in stockings and suspenders.”

A movie poster for "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" (Photo by LMPC via Getty Images)
A film poster for “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” (Picture by LMPC through Getty Pictures)

In 2025, because of the RuPaul Industrial Advanced, males in stockings and suspenders hardly appear stunning. Nevertheless it’s essential to do not forget that the movie was launched 5 years after the 1969 Stonewall Rebellion, during which gender-nonconforming individuals like Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera performed pivotal roles. Two years earlier than Stonewall in 1967, homosexuality in the UK was decriminalized. The movie additionally portrays the nascent ladies’s liberation motion, with Sarandon’s Janet throwing off the repressive shackles of conventional sexual mores, singing:

Toucha, toucha, toucha, contact me,
I wanna be soiled,
thrill me, chill me, fulfill me,
Creature of the evening!

It’s not a stretch to say {that a} musical that facilities unapologetically gender non-conforming characters and incorporates a younger lady embracing her sexuality was subversive and revolutionary. The detrimental critiques actually thought so. One standout critique is from the Mother and father Film Information column within the Cincinnati Enquirer. The reviewer — whose byline naturally touts a doctoral diploma in faith — bemoaned the film’s “totally degenerate, transvestite, transexual and blasphemous content,” warning readers that “I sincerely doubt that any youngster who see it will view traditional morality quite the same again.”

Don’t threaten me with a very good time, doc!

A collage of reviews of "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" and characters Brad (Barry Bostwick), Janet (Susan Sarandon), Rocky (Peter Hinwood) and Dr. Scott (Jonathan Adams).
A collage of critiques of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” and characters Brad (Barry Bostwick), Janet (Susan Sarandon), Rocky (Peter Hinwood) and Dr. Scott (Jonathan Adams).

The Cincinnati Enquirer / FilmPublicityArchive/United Archives through Getty Pictures

“We weren’t making a political piece of theater, or social statements, we weren’t into that. We were having fun.”

– Richard O’Brien, “Rocky Horror Picture Show” creator

“They’re hilarious because they seem so dated,” says Linus.

“My advice to anybody who gets bad reviews,” provides Richard with an impish grin, “outlive the bastards!” Whereas “Rocky” displays the problems of the day, Richard is fast to level out he wasn’t getting down to make a movie with a message.

“We weren’t making a political piece of theater, or social statements, we weren’t into that,” Richard stated. “We were having fun.”

That’s partly why it did ultimately discover its viewers. No matter prudish pearl-clutchers thought, the play — after which the film’s — precedence was to be a enjoyable, bizarre rock ‘n’ roll area opera.

As Linus places it, “The elements are there, but it’s not trying to send a message. It’s so joyful.”

From Left: Richard O’Brien right now and as Riff Raff in “The Rocky Horror Image Present."
From Left: Richard O’Brien today and as Riff Raff in “The Rocky Horror Picture Show.”

“A Strange Journey: The Story Of Rocky Horror” / Getty Images

But “Rocky” doesn’t only reflect the shifting attitudes about gender and the emergent fight for gay rights in the ’60s and ’70s. There is an unknowing nod to the future, with a depiction of gay marriage. As Rocky carries Frank to a candlelit, gothic bridal suite, an organ plays Mendelsohn’s “Wedding March.” At the time, this was the same as space lasers or intergalactic travel: fun to think about, but firmly fantasy.

And it would stay fantasy for decades. It took nearly 40 years for society to catch up: the first gay marriages didn’t take place in the U.K. until 2014, and full marriage equality wasn’t achieved in the U.S. until 2015, when the Supreme Court ruled the Defense of Marriage Act was unconstitutional. That same year, when the movie celebrated its 40th anniversary, the issues that made it radical upon its release seemed, if not distant history, then certainly less pressing. Society, it seemed, was headed in the right direction. Don’t dream it, be it, indeed.

So, to newcomers, when “Rocky” turned 40, it was perhaps easier to view it as just a retro slice of camp, queer, silly fun (not that there is anything wrong with that). The following year, in 2016, Fox broadcast a Ryan Murphy-produced remake, “The Rocky Horror Picture Show: Let’s Do the Time Warp Again,” starring Laverne Cox as Frank-N-Furter. If it were a gateway for newbies to find the original, that would only be a good thing. But other than that, it’s hard to say anything nice about it.

Any of the edgy, cheap B-movie charm from 1975 was “Glee”-ified almost beyond all recognition. With a reported budget of around $18 million, it cost about 18 times more than the original, proof that more isn’t always more. To be fair to Cox, Curry’s high heels are almost impossible to fill, but her interpretation was flat, lacking the menacing magnetism that made his Frank-N-Furter so entrancing. Bostwick agrees that Murphy’s glitzy yet sterile reimagining didn’t understand that it is supposed to be “a grimy, dark little tale.” He thinks that productions since the original “have tried to brighten it up too much and have taken away that layer of danger.”

Laverne Cox in the lackluster 2016 revival of "Rocky."
Laverne Cox in the lackluster 2016 revival of “Rocky.”

Less than two weeks after that lackluster remake was broadcast, Donald Trump was elected president. And so began the Trump era, and the erosion of hard-won rights. The political backdrop to Rocky’s 50th birthday is grim. The Trump administration is hell bent on not just rolling back protections for trans people, but, in denying them access to vital health care, erasing them entirely. Conservative pundits and lawmakers regularly spew transphobic hate. After Charlie Kirk’s murder, Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) theorized that the suspected shooter was a “tranny” (he was not), and The Wall Street Journal erroneously reported that “pro trans messages” were engraved on the bullet cases (there were not).

As for the gay rights that seemed secure at the end of the Obama presidency, they too are at serious risk. The Supreme Court looks set to overturn bans on conversion therapy, which would have disastrous, potentially fatal consequences for LGBTQ+ youth. While support for gay marriage in America remains high, evangelical activists are nevertheless calling on SCOTUS to reverse its ruling that recognized same-sex marriage in all 50 states, emboldened by the overturning of Roe v. Wade.

“Politically and socially, [‘Rocky’] is as apropos today and in some ways more,” Bostwick says. “I just wish we could show this movie in every town and village and maybe change some minds.”

It is profoundly sad that half a century after its release, we have circled back to a political landscape that is all too similar to the original context of the film. These steps backward have undoubtedly re-honed the movie’s radical edge. But what “Rocky” offers is more than just an unfortunate relevance. Gay activist and politician Harvey Milk famously said, “You gotta give them hope,” less than two years before he was assassinated in 1978. Just as important as hope, you gotta give them joy.

“Simply because of the state of the world and state of affairs, people need a place to gather together, a rainbow event that they can enjoy and be safe and have fun,” Richard O’Brien told HuffPost.

And the enjoyment you get from watching (and rewatching) “Rocky” is an act of resistance in and of itself.

“New York City Rocky Horror Picture Show” cast members march at 2016 New York Pride.

“I can’t even imagine what my life would look like if it hadn’t come to me when it did.”

– Meg Fierro, New York City Rocky Horror Picture Show managing director

Crucially, that act of resistance is communal. Merely watching “Rocky” is just one way to enjoy it. In New York in the late ’70s, the midnight showings that cemented “Rocky’s” cult status evolved into something different entirely: shadow performances. Actors in full costume perform in sync with the on-screen antics, miming the songs and dialogue.

“It’s not quite drag; it’s not quite a pantomime. It’s like a secret third thing,” Meg Fierro, managing director of the “New York City Rocky Horror Picture Show” shadow cast, tells me.

Normally, they perform about every two weeks, but when we speak, she is gearing up for spooky season. October is the busiest month for “NYCRHPS,” with multiple performances at larger venues in the run-up to Halloween. What makes the shadow cast shows so unique is the audience participation, including traditional props and call-and-response.

This is not a passive viewing experience. Some audience rituals include holding newspapers over your head, just like Brad and Janet do when they are caught in the rain. Participants bring rubber gloves to the theater, so when Frank snaps on his gloves with relish in the lab, they can snap along with him. When he sings the line “Cards for sorrow, cards for pain” in the ballad “I’m Going Home,” yep, you guessed it, playing cards are strewn about the theater. Just as Rocky blurs gender stereotypes, the shadows cast blur the boundary between screen and stage with silly, riotous fun. For Fierro, that’s the whole point.

“People don’t expect to go to a movie theater and talk, let alone shout or throw anything like that’s a place you’re supposed to be quiet. And not knowing exactly what to expect, it adds to the subversiveness,” Fierro told me.

And that subversive fun sells. Coming out of the pandemic, Fierro says ticket sales grew. The shows regularly sell out, and the once-voluntary cast and crew are now paid. As important as putting on the show is, so is the camaraderie. Fierro first got involved 15 years ago on the lighting team when she was still in college. Since then, she has performed as several characters before managing the whole production.

“It’s my whole life. Not the movie itself, obviously, but the community of people,” she said. “We all sort of build our lives around each other, and we all found each other this way. I can’t even imagine what my life would look like if it hadn’t come to me when it did.”

"Rocky Horror Image Present" shadow cast performers in costume in New York City.
“Rocky Horror Picture Show” shadow cast performers in costume in New York City.

“I’ve had so many people say, ‘It saved my life.’”

– Barry Bostwick, “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” actor

If one of the movie’s messages is that weirdos, queerdos and misfits of all stripes can be different and have fun, then the shadow performances are the real catalyst for inclusion because they allow cast, crew and audience to have fun being different together. The power of that shouldn’t be underestimated. WatchingA Strange Journey,” it is clear that everyone involved with “Rocky” is so proud and surprised that it became a beacon for people to find each other for generations.

“I’ve had so many people say, ‘It saved my life,’ that they didn’t think that there was anybody else in the world like them,” Bostwick said. “They had no community; they had no friends. They thought their reality was wrong or crazy.”

Similarly, Curry writes in his autobiography, “I love the notion that Frank has helped release people’s inner freaks or given them permission and passports to emerge and be celebrated. I’ve been told as much many times, and I hope that legacy continues.”

Richard O’Brien is particularly animated on our Zoom call discussing this.

“It has become a rallying point for the rainbow nation, and that’s exceptionally pleasing,” he said. “It gained this power and allowed people to rally around it in a kind of way that was never intended.”

Costumed fans attend a "Rocky" Halloween screening in New York City in 1985.
Costumed fans attend a “Rocky” Halloween screening in New York City in 1985.

While the New York shadow performances of “Rocky” are nearly as old as the movie itself, the original stage musical has a less-than-auspicious history in New York. The stage show’s transfer to Los Angeles was a hit, but when O’Brien took the show to Broadway in March 1975 ― after shooting the movie, but before it was released ― the reception was anything but welcoming. Critics’ pens dripped with poison, dooming the production to an early close after just 45 shows.

“Wearying after the first fifteen minutes,” said the New York Daily News. “Beneath contempt,” wrote another joyless review. Recalling the play’s failure, O’Brien puts the harsh reaction down to snobby New York critics and audiences, and it’s hard not to agree. When the show returned to Broadway in 2000, the notices were better, if only lukewarm.

“The menace has gone out of Frank ‘N’ Furter,” wrote Ben Brantley in The New York Times, echoing Bostwick’s critiques of more recent productions. “He now seems less like a guide to forbidden sexual fruit than a colorful shopping consultant.”

“Every morning I look in the mirror and I’m like, ‘Don’t fuck it up!’”

– Sam Pinkleton, Tony-winning director

Nail-polished fingers crossed that third time’s a charm when “Rocky” returns to Broadway in Spring 2026. It’ll be helmed by Sam Pinkleton, fresh off his Tony Award win for directing the runaway hit “Oh, Mary!” Over Zoom, he tells me that reviving “Rocky” has been on his mind for years.

“There’s no greater party than ‘Rocky Horror.’ It’s everything that I love in one place,” Pinkleton said. “It has real heart, it has real depth, it has an absolutely absurd sense of humor and reality, and it knows that the audience is there.”

Director Sam Pinkleton is bringing "Rocky" back to Broadway in 2026.
Director Sam Pinkleton is bringing “Rocky” back to Broadway in 2026.

Dia Dipasupil via Getty Images

Whereas New York theater audiences and reviewers didn’t know — or perhaps didn’t want to know — Rocky in the ’70s, they certainly do now. Half a century on the pop-culture scene, the enduring popularity of the shadow performances, the mainstreaming of drag, gifs of Tim Curry vamping down the camera lens and, sure, Ryan Murphy’s dull reimagining, all mean that most theater goers have a fairly solid idea about what the show is. I wondered if those preconceptions make bringing a “new” production to the stage harder. But Pinkleton says that’s what makes it so fun.

“It is this sneaky, sneaky little thing that is both absolutely subversive and absolutely, unquestionably broad,” he said. By virtue of its vintage, the 2026 Broadway production will also have what its 1975 predecessor did not have: a fanbase that spans generations.

“I think it is this incredibly special thing that the people who saw ‘Rocky’ when it came out and lost their minds for it, and maybe wore high heels for the first time, are now in their 70s,” Pinkleton said. “It’s so popular on college campuses right now; it’s crazy to me. So I think that it is this insane opportunity of intergenerational fuckery that no other title has.”

Still, Pinkleton admits there is pressure that comes with reviving such a beloved piece. “Every morning I look in the mirror and I’m like, ‘Don’t fuck it up!’”

After 50 years, it is impossible to discuss “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” without using the L-word: legacy. When any movie is deemed a cult classic, by definition, it is an acknowledgment that it’s niche. Even though “Rocky” occupies the middle of the Venn diagram between mainstream and subversive, it certainly isn’t for everyone. But what piece of art is? For the people it is for —those who have found it on the stage, through covert VCR recordings or riotous midnight shows — the impact is astonishing. In finding “Rocky,” many have found themselves. Bringing respite and resistance through joy and community is no small feat. Arguably, through the shadow cast, a new kind of performance art was created along the way.

Toward the end of “A Strange Journey,” Linus O’Brien asks his dad to reflect on the legacy of “Rocky.” Richard recalls an interaction with a fan who told him that the movie doesn’t belong to him anymore; it belongs to the fans. And that’s inevitable, given that the story “Rocky” tells and its own history are both all about blurred boundaries. The traditional ideas of gender and sexuality, the difference between movies and plays, the mainstream and the niche, now even the creator and the audience.

Over the last 50 years, “Rocky” has had fun subverting them all.

The Rocky Horror Picture Show” is available to stream in the U.S. on Hulu. “A Strange Journey: The Story of Rocky Horror” is in theaters now. “Vagabond” by Tim Curry, which is published by Hachette, is on sale now.

Well how about that...
Well how about that…

“The Rocky Horror Picture Show” / twentieth Century Studios

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