You are viewing the archive: john waters
Burning Questions || ||

Will 'Kinky Boots' Be The Next 'Hairspray'?

Will 'Kinky Boots' Be The Next 'Hairspray'?

I saw Kinky Boots at the Al Hirschfeld Theater on Broadway the other night, and by intermission, I was convinced that it could be another Hairspray: a movie that finds success as a Broadway musical and then returns to the big screen as a movie musical.

You may recall that Hairspray started out as a modestly budgeted 1988 film by John Waters that starred Ricki Lake as Tracy Turnblad, the late, great drag queen Divine, in his last movie performance, as Tracy's mother, and Blondie's Deborah Harry.  The film did okay at the box office but became a cult favorite when it was released to the home video market.

But that was just the beginning of its journey through American popular culture.

In 2002, producer Margo Lion, composer Marc Shaiman and writer Thomas Meehan adapted Hairspray for the stage. They cast Marissa Jane Winokur in the role of Tracy and Harvey Fierstein in the part that Divine played, Tracy's mother, and ended up with a Broadway hit. Re-enter New Line, which distributed the original film, and became involved in re-adapting the stage version as a movie musical. This time, John Travolta played Tracy's mother, and, once again, audiences bought tickets.

Like Hairspray, Kinky Boots began as a modest 2005 comedy film that was written by Tim Firth (Calendar Girls) and Geoff Deane, directed by Julian Jerrold and starred a baby-faced Joel Edgerton, who's about to look a whole lot more manly in The Great Gatsby.  The film has only grossed a little over $10 million worldwide, according to Box Office Mojo, but it enjoys cult status among the trendsetting fashion crowd — as does Waters, by the way — because it involves two favorite topics: shoes and drag queens.

The movie and the play are loosely based on a real story: At a time when staid Northampton, England shoe manufacturers were going out of business, the WJ Brooks Ltd. shoe manufacturer there reinvented itself by making racy boots and shoes for drag queens and the fetish trade. The company is now known as Divine Footwear (yet another odd tie to the original Hairspray.)

In the movie (and stage production), the factory's reluctant new proprietor Charlie — who takes over when his father dies — hires a drag queen named Lola as chief shoe designer, which causes much controversy among his conservative blue-collar workforce

When you check out the clip below, keep in the mind that the original movie was not a musical, but it did feature this musical performance by Lola (Chiwetel Ejiofor):

These Boots Are Made For Talkin'

Cut to April 4, when Kinky Boots, the musical opened on Broadway. Produced by Daryl Roth and Hal Luftig, the show's book was written by Harvey Fierstein — there's that Hairspray connection again — with songs and lyrics by Cyndi Lauper, who knows how to write upbeat, crowd-pleasing music. The night I saw the production,  the crowd loved it, and, last week, Kinky Boots enjoyed its first grosses over $1 million as well a berth among the five top-earning shows on Broadway. Here's a glimpse:

Sole Power

The show also seems to be drawing noteworthy producers who've worked in both theater and film, including David Geffen (Dreamgirls) and Paula Wagner (Jack Reacher, The Heiress). As you can see from the photo above, Waters and Barry Manilow also caught the play.

If Kinky Boots continues to pack in the out-of-town crowds, I could see it enjoying a second life as a movie musical. I bet most of the cast of Les Miserables would be interested.

Who would you cast?

Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter.

Follow Movieline on Twitter.

[Box Office Mojo]

Newswire || ||

John Waters at Outfest: 'Yell Out the Grosses of All Their Hetero-Flops'

John Waters arrives for New Line Cinema's 40th Anniversary Gala at Frederick P. Rose Hall at Time Warner Center in New York on October 5, 2007.  (UPI Photo/Laura Cavanaugh)  (Newscom TagID: upiphotos809796)     [Photo via Newscom]

Recalling his early years mixed with Sixties feminists and Black Panthers, filmmaker John Waters again charmed and amped an audience at the start of Outfest late last week where he received the Los Angeles LGBT film festival's 2012 Achievement Award. Never one to bore or to deliver a saccharine tale, he implored the audience to take a "Act Bad" and to use humor as a way of social dissent. He told a cheering audience to hail fashion insults outside the homes of anti-gay politicians and told budding filmmakers that if a studio says your story is "too gay," then to get your "gay screenplay friends and go back to the studios and yell out the grosses of all their hetero-flops." He talks about being a Yippie ('to get laid') in the '60s and a hilarious chant in London at a protest against the pope. The 30th edition of Outfest runs through July 22nd in L.A.
more »

Festival Coverage || ||

John Waters & Provincetown Film Festival Fete Roger Corman

John Waters & Provincetown Film Festival Fete Roger Corman

The Provincetown International Film Festival feted Roger Corman over the weekend with John Waters taking to the stage in a laugh-filled interview before a packed house in the eccentric enclave's town hall. The maverick producer/director/actor offered up highlights from his long career and offered up a litany of tales from his years the low budget B-movie throne. While distributors consistently have spats with the MPAA for getting a "harsh" rating, Roger Corman recalled a time when he went back to the MPAA to ask for a "harsher" rating. "Eight year-olds" don't want to see a G-rated film," John Waters observes…
more »

Newswire || ||

Hitchhiking John Waters Found in Kansas

Hitchhiking John Waters Found in Kansas

Last week we wondered if, as reported by the band Here We Go Magic during its ongoing tour, filmmaker John Waters was in fact hitchhiking his way across America. We had little reason to doubt that he was (who would lie about picking up John Waters in Ohio?), and now, with photographic evidence of Waters cropping up via Twitter, we have definitive answers at last. To wit, he's in... Kansas?
more »

Newswire || ||

Is John Waters Hitchhiking His Way Across America?

John Waters (getty images)

The members of indie rock outfit Here We Go Magic swear this isn't a publicity stunt, so let your disbelief ride on into the sunset: According to the Brooklyn-based band, they were traveling by van earlier this week in Ohio when a solo hitchhiker caught their eye -- a hitchhiker who turned out to be cult director John Waters.
more »

Awards || ||

The Winners Speak! Backstage at the 2012 Film Independent Spirit Awards

2012 Film Independent Spirit Awards (Getty Images)

"Nothing will come from this if you win!” joked Seth Rogen as he opened his hosting gig at the 2012 Film Independent Spirit Awards. “Absolutely nothing. This won't help you get paid anymore -- if anything, it proves you'll work for nothing.” That may be painfully true for many of the indie film nominees honored today at the annual Spirit Awards, held in a tent on the beach in balmy Santa Monica. But what does it mean that the night’s big winner was the Harvey Weinstein-backed awards season juggernaut The Artist?
more »

Awards || ||

VIDEO: Who Is Banksy? A Movieline Investigation

Movieline hit the red carpet at Saturday's Spirit Awards, where Exit Through the Gift Shop took home Best Documentary, with one guiding mission: Find out who Banksy really is! But just in case we couldn't get to the bottom of that enigma, we had a backup mission: Find out what he'd look like if he came to an awards show incognito! Hit the jump to watch the results of Movieline's investigation into The Banksy Identity, as aided by a few celebrity informants.

more »