Pubdate: Sun, 07 Oct 2001
Source: New York Daily News (NY)
Copyright: 2001 Daily News, L.P.
Contact:  http://www.nydailynews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/295
Author: Henry Cabot Beck

HIGH TIMES FOR HARD TIMES

All The Dope On The Musical Satire 'Reefer Madness'

Despite the Great Depression and distant rumbles of war, it seemed as 
though the 1930s were a simpler time than ours - a time of singing cowboys 
and the Sunday funnies, when people wore hats, listened to radio shows and 
traveled primarily by rail. And yet, when one watches the new stage musical 
"Reefer Madness," it's clear that there was danger lurking in the shadows, 
like a wolf at the gate.

That wolf was marijuana!

John Kassir and Kristen Bell freak out on devil weed in the stage 
adaptation of 'Reefer Madness.'

At least, that's what some people thought. The members of a church- funded 
production company were determined to show how deadly pot- smoking could be 
to the average American community, so in 1936 they made a movie called 
"Tell Your Children." It revealed how easily the average teenager could be 
led astray, driven down an unholy path to insanity, murder, sexual 
rapaciousness and utter degradation.

How? Simply by inhaling the smoke of a weed that grew wild throughout much 
of the United States, and that was legal at the time (the Marijuana Tax Act 
of 1937 changed all that).

The movie was picked up by others, re-edited to make it even more lurid and 
rereleased in the exploitation market at different times as "The Burning 
Question," "Doped Youth" and "Reefer Madness."

Robert Torti, who plays both the neighborhood dope peddler and Jesus 
Christ, says, "According to what some people believed, it only took 30 days 
to turn a good, clean kid into a dope-crazed fiend - it's like the reverse 
version of the old Charles Atlas advertisements."

"Nearly everything that's said in the show, despite how outrageous it 
seems, was taken almost verbatim from either the film or the literature of 
the time," says Christian Campbell, who plays young Jimmy, the clean-cut 
victim of dope-pushing fiends and their foul- smelling cigarettes, also 
known as muggles, joints or reefers.

By any name, the original movie was bad beyond belief; it was cheaply 
produced, the acting was wretched and the story was absurd. In other words, 
it was instant kitsch. Hip audiences rediscovered "Reefer Madness" in the 
early '70s when some viewers found that the movie was hysterically funny 
when viewed in the right frame of mind.

It became one of the first examples of what came to be known as "cult" or 
"midnight" movies. Others included "The Night of The Living Dead," "El 
Topo," "King of Hearts" and Andy Warhol-produced movies like "Flesh" and 
"Trash." Eventually, those gave way to audience- participation screenings 
of "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" and, most recently, "The Sound of Music."

Bringing "Reefer Madness" to the stage was the brainchild of author- 
composer Dan Studney and author-lyricist Kevin Murphy, who joined forces 
with director Andy Fickman and choreographer Paula Abdul to reconfigure it 
as a flamboyant musical satire. It played for a year at Los Angeles' Hudson 
Backstage Theater and won five Ovation and seven L.A. Drama Critics Circle 
awards.

It has now been transplanted, with much of the original cast, to New York's 
legendary Variety Arts Theater, where it opens today.

But how relevant can a play be that satirizes the demonization of 
marijuana, especially at a time when the public is far more focused on the 
harmful effects of Ecstasy and other designer drugs? According to cast 
member Chris Campbell (brother of Neve), "There's still a war on drugs and 
marijuana is still demonized. But this play is not really about pot as much 
as the hypocrisy of the propaganda."

Torti agrees: "Without sounding too serious, it's really a satire on 
middle-American values, how the public can be swayed and the fact that if 
something is repeated often enough, it's believed."

John Kassir, the voice of the Crypt Keeper in the TV series "Tales from the 
Crypt," plays Ralph, the worst-case example of what young Jimmy might 
eventually become.

"The show is kind of relevant right now, as we go to war," Kassir says, 
suggesting it is a kind of counterbalance to "the rhetoric of those kinds 
of reactionary headlines we're seeing. As a righteous furor grows, there's 
a tendency to oversimplify issues."

Touchy Timing

Erin Matthews, who plays Sally, the play's "reefer slut," says one of her 
favorite aspects of the show is that "while it pokes fun at the propaganda 
of the '30s, it recognizes the patterns that still exist today. The 
narrator, for example, who raves about sin and temptation, could easily be 
Jerry Falwell."

Still, is it inappropriate to satirize religion, patriotism and American 
values at a time when so many homes in American are flying the flag?

"The timing is a bit touchy," admits Torti, "but audiences seem to 
understand that the play isn't mocking patriotism, but more the 
exploitation of patriotism as a means of selling an agenda. There's a huge 
difference.

"The audience we're looking for is the audience that laughs and then goes, 
'I can't believe I'm laughing at this.'"
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