Taboo (musical)

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Taboo
Logo
Music Boy George
Kevan Frost
Lyrics Boy George
Book Mark Davies
Charles Busch
Productions 2002 West End
2003 Broadway
2003 UK Tour

Taboo is a musical with a book by Mark Davies, (extensively re-written for the Broadway production by Charles Busch), lyrics by Boy George, and music by George and Kevan Frost.

Set in an abandoned London warehouse, the partly imagined story of a group of club 'names' set in the location of what was the city's most fashionable club night, the now legendary 'Taboo' (1985- 87) of the title, which was the creation of Leigh Bowery, however George rarely attended the club night himself.

The show is based partly on the New Romantic scene of the 1980s; and at its core the life and career of colourful pop singing sensation Boy George, who rose to global prominence in the '80s with his band Culture Club with such tunes as "Karma Chameleon" and "Do You Really Want to Hurt Me?"; the performance artist Leigh Bowery, Boy George's friend Marilyn and club host Steve Strange from Visage. Although George was intimate with the central figures, there has been some artistic licence around relationships and timeframes for continuity, for example Bowery never attended 'The Blitz' nightclub as he was in Australia at the time.

The show premiered in London's West End at the newly opened Venue Theatre on January 29, 2002. Comedian/talk show host Rosie O'Donnell was so enamoured with it that she decided to finance a Broadway production. After 16 previews, it opened on November 13, 2003 at the Plymouth Theatre where, hampered by mostly scathing reviews[1], it closed after 100 performances. The cast, directed by Christopher Renshaw, included Boy George (credited under his real name, George O'Dowd), Euan Morton, Raúl Esparza, Sarah Uriarte Berry, and Jeffrey Carlson. O'Donnell reportedly lost her entire $10 million investment in the project[2].

Contents

[edit] Songs - Original London Production & UK tour

Act I
  • Ode To Attention Seekers (Philip Sallon and ensemble)
  • Safe In The City (Billy)
  • Freak (Philip Sallon)
  • Stranger In This World (George)
  • Genocide Peroxide (Marilyn)
  • I'll Have You All (Leigh Bowery)
  • Love Is A Question Mark (Billy and Kim)
  • Shelter (Petal)
  • Pretty Lies (Kim and George)
  • Guttersnipe (George and Marilyn)
  • Talk Amongst Yourselves (Josie)
  • Do You Really Want To Hurt Me (George)
  • Touched By The Hand Of Cool (Leigh Bowery and ensemble)
Act II
  • Everything Taboo (Leigh Bowery and ensemble)
  • Petrified (Philip Sallon)
  • I See Through You (Billy)
  • Independent Woman (Josie, Kim and Philip Sallon)
  • Ich Bin Kunst (Leigh Bowery)
  • Out Of Fashion (Steve Strange, Marilyn, Billy, Philip Sallon)
  • Il Adore (Big Sue)
  • Pie In The Sky (George, Billy)
  • Bow Down Mister (George and ensemble)

Encore:

  • Karma Chameleon (ensemble)

[edit] Songs - Broadway version

Act I
  • Freak/Ode to Attention Seekers
  • Stranger in This World
  • Safe in the City
  • Dress to Kill
  • Genocide Peroxide
  • I'll Have You All
  • Sexual Confusion
  • Pretty Lies
  • Guttersnipe
  • Love Is a Question Mark
  • Do You Really Want to Hurt Me?
  • Church of the Poison Mind/Karma Chameleon
Act II
  • Everything Taboo
  • Talk Amongst Yourselves
  • The Fame Game
  • I See Through You
  • Ich Bin Kunst
  • Petrified
  • Out of Fashion
  • Il Adore
  • Come on in From the Outside

[edit] Characters, Original London Production & UK tour

  • Billy - the protagonist, Billy is an aspiring photographer. Frustrated with suburban life in Bromley, he runs to London('Safe in the city') to make his fortune. There he meets Philip Sallon, who introduces him to Kim and George. He soon falls in love with Kim, and attaches himself to George's rising star. Not based on any one real life person.
  • Kim - an aspiring punk fashion designer and George's squat-mate. Kim is fiery but insecure, rarely emerging from behind her makeup. She ran away from home at 15, and her mother was too drunk to come looking for her. Not based on any one real life person.
  • George - Artist, poet, singer/songwriter George O'Dowd is shown before and during his initial success, as a supporting role. He takes an immediate shine to Billy. Thrives on attention and shocking others, never appears dressed conventionally. Originally played by Euan Morton, who Boy George said was 'more Boy George than I am'.
  • Leigh Bowery - flamboyant Australian designer and performance artist. He delights in antagonising Kim, and is constantly surrounded by a gaggle of admirers/slaves. Absorbs Billy into his flock.
  • Philip Sallon - the second person Billy meets in London, who takes him to Kim and George's squat. Opens the show. Character based on a real person.
  • Josie - Billy's mother, who later becomes Kim's best friend and business partner. Not based on any one real life person.
  • Marilyn - another of the Blitz Kids, Marilyn is first George's rival, then best friend.
  • Janey - a reporter for the Sun newspaper, who has a connection to George.
  • Steve Strange - doorman at the Blitz club, and singer with the group Visage who achieved success with 'Fade to Grey'. Good natured rival of George.
  • Derek - Billy's father. Violent, drunk and homophobic, he beats up Philip for verbally teasing him. Not based on any one real life person.
  • Petal - scary cross-dressing drug pusher. Not a convincing woman, just a violent man in a miniskirt. In previews Petal killed Billy near the end of the show. Based on a very real person.
  • Big Sue - Leigh's main assistant and confidante. Character based on Sue Tilley.[3]
  • Gary/Guru Dazzle - the bouncer at the Blitz club, who becomes a Krishna devotee.

[edit] Awards and nominations

  • Tony Award for Best Original Score (nominee)
  • Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical (Morton, nominee)
  • Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Musical (Esparza, nominee)
  • Tony Award for Best Costume Design (nominee)
  • Theatre World Award (Morton, winner)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actor in a Musical (Morton, nominee)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical (Esparza, winner; Carlson, nominee)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Lyrics (nominee)
  • Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Music (nominee)

[edit] References

  1. ^ Rosie’s Bum Rap: In Defense of Taboo. Time Magazine. Retrieved on 2008-05-23.
  2. ^ Taboo closing. www. cnn. com. Retrieved on 2008-05-23.
  3. ^ The Ballad of Big Sue. guardian. Retrieved on 2008-05-23.

[edit] External links

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