The original 1988 bubble-gum musical comedy, starring Ricki Lake, satirises racism and body-conformism with left-field flair

Baltimore is the “Town Without Pity” of Gene Pitney’s song in John Waters’ classic 1988 high-camp bubble-gum musical comedy now on re-release, about a youth TV pop show of the early 60s whose executives are resisting integration and black music even as their teen fans demand it. It’s a film that satirises racism and body-conformism, and 35 years on, it looks more than ever like a left-field riposte – part critical, part supportive – to the extravagant nostalgia of Grease, American Graffiti and TV’s Happy Days.

Hairspray spawned a stage musical version and a remake, but neither had the flavour of this first film. Despite the high production values and relatively family-friendly script, Hairspray has the spirit of provocation in Waters’ early underground movies, a spirit which survives most obviously in the gross-out scene where a spot is burst in gruesome closeup.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

‘Canaries in the coalmine’: loss of birds signals changing planet

Billions of birds are disappearing because of humanity’s impact on Earth, global…

Johnson threatens to privatise Passport Office over backlog

As travel chaos looms, PM also reported to have warned DVLA over…