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Rocky Horror 'Glee' Episode a Time Warp for Original Floor-Show Frank
Filed under: Celeb Parents, Opinions, Movies, Celeb News & Interviews
The author, in 1979, as Frank-N-Furter and now, as a mom. Photo by Mort Swinksy
"They're calling for you," he says warmly. It feels like he's passing the baton in a way. With my hand in his, it's as if he's imbuing me with everything I'll ever need to know about this amazing, flamboyant character. He releases my hand, I walk out on to the stage and for the first time in my life, I know what it's like to be a star.
Flash forward 2007: My 9-year-old daughter comes home from dance camp, eager to show me her new moves. Happy to oblige, I kick back and settle into my well-worn parental role as supportive audience member. It's a real production number and she tells me she's going to sing it while performing. I can't wait.
"It's just a jump to the left," she belts out.
I couldn't believe it. I was expecting a rendition of "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun," or something similarly camp-friendly. But instead, here I was, watching my daughter reenact a number from Rocky Horror that I had performed on stage three decades earlier.
Her body lifts off the floor, her hands reach up and gently come down in time for the second line.
"And then a step to the ri-i-i-i-i-ight."
Right leg extends three times, coordinated with crossing hand movements: check.
Tim Curry, the film Frank, hugs his protégé when she came off the stage in 1979.
And as I watch her put her hands on her hips and bring her knees in tight, I realize that I'm no longer simply enjoying her performance -- I'm monitoring it for accuracy.
Pelvic thrust: check. Good hip action.
"... really drives you in-sa-a-a-a-a-ane." Nice swivel. She's on her game with that one.
Instinctively, I know the chorus is coming ... and I want in. This is no mere compulsion. My enthusiastic desire to participate comes from a program that was written on my psyche 32 years ago. In unison, and much to my daughter's surprise, I join in on a song that represents one of the greatest experiences of my entire life.
"Let's do the Time Warp again!"
"Wait, you know this?" she asks, stopping the dance in her tracks.
I let out a semi-snooty laugh. "Let's just say, if it weren't for me, you wouldn't be doing this dance today."
My take was that she thought I somehow influenced the camp's summer dance selections. I, on the other hand, felt the kind of thespian pride that only someone who'd paraded around Greenwich Village wearing nothing but a corset, a black cape, fishnet stockings and a pair of badass six-inch platforms could feel.
Now was the perfect time to tell my kid who I'd been back in the olden days and what I'd contributed to this world.
"Oh, your mother was quite the pioneer," I gloat. "I was the first Frank. I was the first person to dress up as a character. Because of me, the Rocky Horror Picture Show was launched into fame, and back then, I was the hottest thing in New York City. People lined up for my autograph."
My 9-year-old looked at me with a mildly annoyed, somewhat bored expression. She had no idea what I was talking about. She had no idea who Frank was.
"OK. So, um, can I finish the dance now?"
Humbling to say the least. Clearly, she had no interest in my autograph.
But eventually, I told her the details of my glory days and over the years, my daughter has come to witness how this weird phenomenon called Rocky Horror seems to follow me wherever I go. She's seen the hundreds of photos of me as Frank, which she equates with old-fashioned goth and glam. And for a kid who's as into rap and hip-hop as she is, goth and glam ain't cool.
I was one of New York's original art-goths. First edition "Interview With a Vampire" in hand, black lipstick, blue hair. Debbie Harry was my neighbor, I hung with Sid Vicious at the Palladium and Joey Ramone dug my artwork. Cool, huh? If you're of a certain age, absolutely. But to a 12-year-old, my past is about as cool as someone like, um, Pat Boone might be to me. Some time warp.
Oddly, even with all the exposure, my daughter has never expressed an interest in seeing the film, and I've never really felt the overwhelming desire to show it to her. I've always been of the mindset to encourage her to find her own path. I don't force her to see things my way, and I really do try to open my mind to see things her way, for her sake. I figure that she'll appreciate my *cough* greatness someday, when she's feeling sentimental.
Dori, center, and her fellow floor show cast members, circa 1980.
But for now, her disinterest in my Rocky Horror experience is still intact. When I heard that "Glee" was doing a Rocky Horror episode, I half jokingly blurted, "I can't believe they didn't ask me to do a cameo. I mean, come ON. They could have had me pitted against Sue Sylvester. I could have been her dark nemesis." (Which, by the way, would have been fabulous.)
Well, you don't know what terror looks like on a child's face until you tell her that you'd like to appear on a major network series.
"No! Mom, no! You can't! Please, Mom, if they call, please don't go on "Glee." All my friends watch it."
Wow. OK. The kid does not want me to be on TV. And it's all about what her classmates would think. What I came to accept was that my kid wants her life to herself. She wants to go her own way, and she doesn't want me inserting myself into her world. Sounds familiar.
I was only a teenager when it all started happening for me. Only a few short years older than my daughter right now. I was a kid on the cover of magazines, interviewed by the top television hosts of the day and I was endlessly photographed. I met dozens of celebrities and I performed for them all. I knew no such thing as competition, nor did I feel the need to climb to the top, simply because I created the precedent. I was the top. And, for a few years, I was the reigning Queen of the Misfits. I ruled a part of New York City with a goth-punk flare and a glam touch. Suffice it to say, I went my own way.
And so, my feeling is that my daughter will get around to it eventually. Until then, it's just a jump to the left side of the kitchen, where the big show tonight is all about macaroni and cheese. No meatloaf.











ReaderComments (Page 5 of 7)
10-20-2010 @ 10:48PM
roadwarriors44 said...Gee...I think I need another midnight trip to the movies.. armed with toast
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10-20-2010 @ 10:57PM
soursweetie2098 said...Great article... i know that RHPS is one of my favorite movies, the music is great and the storyline is very.. original... I cant wait for the glee episode to come out!
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10-20-2010 @ 11:44PM
Robert L said...Just read other comments. The original London cast and film were just that. Yes, Tim Curry rocks it unequivocally. But NYC has been the epicenter for countless beginnings and trends the world would never know without them. Give some credit where credit is due. It's quite possible the folks in Nebraska, Montana and California wouldn't have ever known the fun in acting out the show on the theater floor without Dori and NYC. You're a hot dog, Frankenfurter!
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10-20-2010 @ 11:10PM
Bill said...My wife passed away this past year and we went to the 12:00am showing of the Rocky Horror Picture Show all the time when we were dating 27 years ago. It was the BEST! My parents and friends thought we were crazy but it was a sliver of time in my life that I will always remember.
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10-20-2010 @ 11:17PM
MNM said...This was one of my fav. musicals....But I agree that since it's about being bisexual and gay it's really not for kids. Especially a 9 yr old. I have 3 nieces and when I got this movie I wouldn't let them watch it until they were at least 13 when they knew what being gay even was about.
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10-20-2010 @ 11:44PM
iilpinkpanda said...how is being gay or bisexual not for kids? I understand the whole sexuality aspect as a whole not being for kids but not because there are gay characters
10-20-2010 @ 11:28PM
christal said...i have watched the RHPS over 30 times live in the east village i am 27 ... mom introduced me to it and i absolutly love it .. i own the dvd and have dressed up.. my friends and i go all the time to see it
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10-20-2010 @ 11:31PM
shimapaint said...You're still rocking girl!
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10-20-2010 @ 11:38PM
Chris said...I think it is great for you to let her go her own way. Love that spirit. bet she will also be great someday. just the way you are at being at MOM.
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10-21-2010 @ 12:18PM
vance said...I was 16 or 17 when I saw this movie in the theater in Gainesville,Fl with my best friend friend Dale and after about 15 minutes we realized we were most defiantly in the wrong place as we fought our way out of the theater that night.It was then that we realized this country was going the wrong way for sure.But it was so cool for two kids to whip so many of them much older so called mens asses that night. We have told that story many times and it is something two ole country boys will never forget as we will never vfigure out how someone could actually sit there through the whole movie and watch such trash.
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10-20-2010 @ 11:42PM
iilpinkpanda said...I was very young (I'm not going to say what age for fear of people thinking it's obscene) when I first saw Rocky Horror and I loved it, it was one of my favorite movies. Though I definitely didn't understand everything 100% I loved the music and dancing..I wouldn't mind showing a child younger then 16 the movie.
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10-20-2010 @ 11:51PM
ChrisV said...I remember you, Dori! I still have newspaper clippings of you, in my RHPS collection! LOL So wonderful to see you now!
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10-21-2010 @ 12:03AM
darthcdrx said...anyone who went to the 8th street playhouse and the waverly theatre in the village in the late 70s early 80s remembers dori and sal and the entire rhps fan club and floor show and all the drama that surrounded the massive event that was the cult that went along with all that was tim curry and company and that movie. thank god for richard o'brien and his vision. i dont know what id have done to get thru that time in my life. my friday and saturday nites from 77 thru at least 83 or 4 will provide memories forever. thanks dori--u are a huge part of those times. hard to believe its nearly 30 yrs ago that it all ended for me. sure wish curry would tour again. imagine if he did and sang im going home at the end of the set again? sigh.
do the rock dori!!
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10-21-2010 @ 12:07AM
Kevin said...I first saw the movie in Fullerton, Calif. in 1975. It was so new that there were not even any people role playing at the theatre and it was just run at regular theatre times like a regular movie. The "critics" totally panned it and it was gone within a couple of weeks. The real midnight type roll playing shows did not really get going for another two years or so.
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10-21-2010 @ 12:15AM
Ally said...I think it's perfectly fine for a 12 years old to start watching it. I remember the first time I saw it, I was 12 going on 13 and I had to wait for my Mom to get home from work so she could watch it with me and see my reaction, haha. Whoever said that Rocky Horror is tame compared to what goes on in kids life now, is right. There was a girl in my classes who had an abortion at the age of 12. When I have kids I would rather them see a movie about Transsexuals from Transsexual, Transylvania and doing the time warp than have deal with the crap that goes on nowadays.
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10-21-2010 @ 12:16AM
trent said...I saw Rocky Horror back in 1978 when I was 15. I loved it. It was and still is a one of a kind experience. Whenever I see the movie it
reminds me of my High School years which were the best times of my life. My friends and I would go to see it once a week. Most kids and adults that see RHPS see it multiple times. When it comes to a theatre near you it's the best experience. Totally different from watching it on TV, or on DVD. And when you go to the theatre don't forget to wear black!
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10-21-2010 @ 12:19AM
RockyHorrorfan said...The Rocky Horror experience I had in the late 80's was awesome. The cast in Cumberland R.I. was amazing and the theater allowed up to 5lbs of rice! I played the part as a winshield wiper blade many times....;p We once all went in togas for no reason at all.
So much fun. Thanks to Dori Hartley for taking that first live.....jump to the left.
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10-23-2010 @ 12:13AM
peg said...I have to agree with Mike. And you wonder why we have so many issues with children and society today. Thinking it is cute for a 6 year old to sing "Sweet Transvestite?" Yes, we have sunk to a new low in parenting skills.
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10-24-2010 @ 4:11AM
Cindy said...This was a great article, well written and fun. I also understand what it's like to be a parent to pre-teen daughters.
Love this.
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10-21-2010 @ 12:29AM
chris said...Good article. How sad our "coolness fades", and comforting to know no matter how famous someone may have been they still manage to be an embarassment to their teens.So, us never been famous are in good company when it comes to our kids.
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