Arts Express Theatre is turning the clock back to the late 1960s sex, drugs and rock βnβ roll counterculture with its production of the rock musical βHair.β
But folks in the audience might see a lot of 2024 in the play, which runs March 15-30.
βIt deals with issues that provoke and offend absolutely everyone,β said director Nancy Davis Booth. βThereβs issues of racism and church and social norms and nudity and all of those things that were so shocking back in 1968 and still shocking today.β
OK, so the audience will probably not be as shocked by the brief nudity at the end of the first act, which Booth said will not include full-on nudity; the theaterβs and mallβs liquor licenses prohibit that. The audience will only see performersβ bare backsides during a scene where the βtribeβ shows unity and solidarity with Claude as he debates whether to dodge the Vietnam War draft or sign up to serve.
Gerome Ragni and James Rado wrote βHairβ in 1967 based on their observations of the sexual revolution and counterculture movements in late 1960s New York City. Galt MacDermot wrote the music, which included the iconic hits βAge of Aquarius,β βLet the Sunshine In,β βGood Morning Sunshineβ and βHair.β
Set in the late 1960s as the Vietnam War raged, βHairβ follows a tribe of young counterculture hippies whose lives revolve around fighting the establishment. Claude has just received his draft notice, but the tribe tries to convince him to immerse himself instead in their fight for peace, love and community.
The play also deals with identity, politics, drugs and the sexual revolution.
Kinda sounds like today.
βThe issues are still the same and thatβs why I really wanted to do this production,β said Booth, who has directed 10 productions for Arts Express since her first one in 2018. βFifty years later we are still dealing with the same issues; nothingβs changed.β
Booth said the cast, most of whom are in their early 20s, βare just thrilled to be part of something that is different from anything they have done in musical theater.β
βHair,β the first musical to use rock music, delivered a defiant antiwar message at a time when America was deeply divided over the ongoing Vietnam War. The show rattled Americaβs conscience as it broke with Broadway norms with its frank depictions of drug use, nudity, sexuality and obscenity, all of which will be part of Arts Expressβs production.
As the play opens, Booth uses projections of a video loop that depicts 1960s America, from scenes of protestors to images of war, hippies, drug use and the assassinations of Robert F. Kennedy and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. The show closes with a video loop showing America today, from scenes of protesting, wars in Ukraine and Gaza and homelessness on Americaβs streets as the cast sings the finale, βLet the Sun Shine In.β The song becomes a plea for the audience to open their eyes to see that whatβs happening today mirrors what happened 50-plus years ago, she said.
βThatβs how I brought it back around to being relevant today,β Booth said. βThis show is rollicking and fun and full of energy. But on the other side of it there is these moments that just bring tears to your eyes because itβs so poignant. ... The message is uncomfortable and makes us ask questions and makes us have conversations. ... I think theater is a powerful tool for changing behavior and educating people.β
βHairβ is Arts Expressβs 12th fully-professional production, said community engagement director Jonathan Crider.
In addition to its professional productions, staged at the companyβs theater home at Park Place Mall, Arts Express offers introductory and advanced educational programs.
Contact reporter Cathalena E. Burch at cburch@tucson.com. On Twitter @Starburch