Hair (film)
Hair | |
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Theatrical release poster by Bill Gold
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Directed by | Miloš Forman |
Produced by | Michael Butler Lester Persky |
Screenplay by | Michael Weller |
Based on | Hair by Gerome Ragni and James Rado |
Starring | John Savage Treat Williams Beverly D'Angelo |
Music by | Galt MacDermot |
Cinematography | Miroslav Ondříček |
Edited by | Alan Heim Stanley Warnow |
Production
company |
CIP Filmproduktion GmbH
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Distributed by | United Artists (1979, original) MGM (1999, DVD, and 2011, Blu-Ray DVD) |
Release dates
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Running time
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121 minutes[1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $11 million |
Box office | $15,284,643 |
Hair is a 1979 musical war comedy-drama and film adaptation of the 1968 Broadway musical of the same name about a Vietnam War draftee who meets and befriends a tribe of long-haired hippies on his way to the army induction center. The hippies introduce him to their environment of marijuana, LSD, unorthodox relationships and draft dodging.
The film was directed by Miloš Forman, who was nominated for a César Award for his work on the film. Cast members include Treat Williams, John Savage, Beverly D'Angelo, Don Dacus, Annie Golden, Dorsey Wright, Nell Carter, Cheryl Barnes, Richard Bright, Ellen Foley and Charlotte Rae. Dance scenes were choreographed by Twyla Tharp and performed by the Twyla Tharp Dance Foundation. The film was nominated for Golden Globe Awards for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy and New Star of the Year in a Motion Picture (for Williams).
Contents
Plot
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Claude Hooper Bukowski, an Oklahoma farm boy, heads to New York City to enter the Army and serve in the Vietnam War. In Central Park, he meets a troupe of free-spirited hippies led by George Berger, a young man who introduces him to debutante Sheila Franklin when they crash a dinner party at her home. Inevitably, Claude is sent off to recruit training in Nevada, but Berger and his band of merry pranksters - including Woof Daschund, LaFayette "Hud" Johnson, and pregnant Jeannie Ryan - follow him to give a sendoff. They are met at the base's main gate by a surly MP, who doesn't like their looks and demands that they leave. Accordingly, Sheila flirts with an off-duty Sergeant in order to steal his uniform, which she gives to Berger. He uses it to extract Claude from the base for a last meeting with Sheila, taking his place. However, while Claude is away, the unit is suddenly rallied and flown out to Vietnam; Berger, whose ruse is somehow never detected, is taken with them. The film ends with the main cast singing at Berger's grave, followed by scenes of a large anti-war protest outside the White House in Washington, DC.
Cast
- John Savage as Claude Hooper Bukowski
- Treat Williams as George Berger
- Beverly D'Angelo as Sheila Franklin
- Annie Golden as Jeannie Ryan
- Dorsey Wright as LaFayette "Hud" Johnson
- Don Dacus as Woof Daschund
- Nell Carter as Central Park singer ("Ain't Got No" & "White Boys")
- Cheryl Barnes as Hud's fiancée
- Richard Bright as Fenton
- Ellen Foley as Black Boys
- Charlotte Rae as Lady in Pink
- Laurie Beechman as Black Boys
- Nicholas Ray as The General
- Michael Jeter as Woodrow Sheldon
Differences from original version
Both the film's plot and soundtracks were greatly changed from those of the musical stage play.
Plot changes
- In the musical, Claude is a member of a hippie "Tribe" sharing a New York City apartment, leading a bohemian lifestyle, enjoying "free love", and rebelling against his parents and the draft, but he eventually goes to Vietnam. In the film, Claude is rewritten as an innocent draftee from Oklahoma, newly arrived in New York City to join the military. In New York, he gets caught up with the group of hippies while awaiting deployment to Army training camp. They introduce him to their psychedelically inspired style of living and eventually drive to Nevada to visit him at training camp.
- In the musical, Sheila is an outspoken feminist leader of the Tribe who loves Berger as well as Claude. In the film, she is a high-society debutante who catches Claude's eye.
- In the film, Berger is not only at the heart of the hippie Tribe but is assigned some of Claude's conflict involving whether or not to obey the draft. A major plot change in the film involves a mistake that leads Berger to go to Vietnam in Claude's place, where he is killed.
- The musical focuses on the U.S. peace movement, as well as the love relationships among the Tribe members, while the film focuses on the carefree antics of the hippies.[2]
Soundtrack changes
- The film omits the songs "The Bed", "Dead End", "Oh Great God of Power", "I Believe in Love", "Going Down", "Air", "My Conviction", "Abie Baby", "Frank Mills", and "What a Piece of Work is Man" from the musical. The latter five songs were originally recorded for the film but were eventually cut, as they slowed the film's pace[citation needed] (they are included on the motion picture soundtrack album)
- A few verses from the songs "Manchester, England" and a small portion of "Walking in Space" have been removed
- While the songs "Don't Put It Down" and "Somebody to Love" are not sung by characters in the film, they are both used as background or instrumental music for scenes at the army base.
- A new song written by MacDermot for the film is "Somebody to Love".
- There are several other differences from songs in the movie; they appear on the soundtrack, mainly in omitted verses and different orchestrations. One notable difference is that the Broadway version used only a jazz combo while the movie soundtrack boasts orchestrations that make ample use of full horn and string sections.[3] Many of the songs have been shortened, sped up, rearranged, or assigned to different characters to allow for the differences in plot.
Reaction
Gerome Ragni and James Rado, who wrote the original musical along with composer Galt MacDermot, were unhappy with the film adaptation, saying it failed to capture the essence of Hair in that hippies were portrayed as "oddballs" and "some sort of aberration" without any connection to the peace movement.[2] They stated: "Any resemblance between the 1979 film and the original Biltmore version, other than some of the songs, the names of the characters, and a common title, eludes us."[2] In their view, the screen version of Hair has not yet been produced.[2]
Nevertheless, the film received generally favorable reviews from film critics at the time of its release; it currently holds a 93% "fresh" rating on review aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes.[4] Writing in The New York Times, Vincent Canby called it "a rollicking musical memoir.... [Michael] Weller's inventions make this Hair seem much funnier than I remember the show's having been. They also provide time and space for the development of characters who, on the stage, had to express themselves almost entirely in song.... The entire cast is superb.... Mostly... the film is a delight."[5] Frank Rich said; "if ever a project looked doomed, it was this one" (referring to the "largely plotless" and dated musical upon which it was based. Forman's and Tharp's lack of movie musical experience, the "largely unproven cast" and the film's "grand budget"); in spite of these obstacles, "Hair succeeds at all levels—as lowdown fun, as affecting drama, as exhilarating spectacle and as provocative social observation. It achieves its goals by rigorously obeying the rules of classic American musical comedy: dialogue, plot, song and dance blend seamlessly to create a juggernaut of excitement. Though every cut and camera angle in Hair appears to have been carefully conceived, the total effect is spontaneous. Like the best movie musicals of the '50s (Singin' in the Rain) and the '60s (A Hard Day's Night), Hair leaps from one number to the next. Soon the audience is leaping too."[6] According to Time Out, the film is a "smug, banal fairytale-with-a-message, redeemed only by the intermittently imaginative staging of the songs"; it "sound[s], and for the most part look[s], like a National Lampoon parody of some ghastly Swinging Sixties compendium."[7]
The film was shown out of competition at the 1979 Cannes Film Festival.[8]
Awards
At the 37th Golden Globe Awards, the film was nominated for a Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, and Williams was nominated for New Star of the Year in a Motion Picture - Male. The film was also nominated for Best Foreign Film at the 1980 César Awards, losing to Woody Allen's Manhattan.
Years later, Forman cited his loss of his moral rights to the film to the studio as eventually leading to his 1997 John Huston Award for Artists Rights[9] from the Film Foundation:[10]
- What was behind that [award] was that one day I had in my contract that when the studio wants to sell Hair ...to the network but they have to have my, you know, consent or how would they...what they do with it. But I didn't have this, so what they did, they didn't sell it to the network, they sold it to syndicated television where I didn't have that right. What happened: the film played on 115 syndicated stations practically all over the United States, and it's a musical. Out of 22 musical numbers, 11 musical numbers were cut out from the film, and yet it was still presented as a Milos Forman film, Hair. It was totally incomprehensible, jibberish, butchered beyond belief...
Soundtrack
All lyrics written by Gerome Ragni, James Rado, all music composed by Galt MacDermot.
Disc One | ||
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No. | Title | Length |
1. | "Aquarius" (Ren Woods) | 4:47 |
2. | "Sodomy" | 1:30 |
3. | "Donna/Hashish" | 4:19 |
4. | "Colored Spade" | 1:34 |
5. | "Manchester" (John Savage) | 1:58 |
6. | "Abie Baby/Fourscore" (Nell Carter) | 2:43 |
7. | "I'm Black/Ain't Got No" | 2:24 |
8. | "Air" | 1:27 |
9. | "Party Music" | 3:26 |
10. | "My Conviction" | 1:46 |
11. | "I Got Life" (Treat Williams) | 2:16 |
12. | "Frank Mills" | 2:39 |
13. | "Hair" | 2:43 |
14. | "L.B.J." | 1:09 |
15. | "Electric Blues/Old Fashioned Melody" | 3:50 |
16. | "Hare Krishna" | 3:20 |
Disc Two | ||
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No. | Title | Length |
1. | "Where Do I Go?" | 2:50 |
2. | "Black Boys" | 1:12 |
3. | "White Boys" (Nell Carter) | 2:36 |
4. | "Walking in Space (My Body)" | 6:12 |
5. | "Easy to Be Hard" (Cheryl Barnes) | 3:39 |
6. | "Three-Five-Zero-Zero" | 3:49 |
7. | "Good Morning Starshine" (Beverly D'Angelo) | 2:24 |
8. | "What a Piece of Work is Man" | 1:39 |
9. | "Somebody to Love" | 4:10 |
10. | "Don't Put It Down" | 2:25 |
11. | "The Flesh Failures/Let the Sunshine In" | 6:06 |
DVD
Hair was released to DVD by MGM Home Entertainment on April 27th, 1999 as a Region 1 widescreen DVD, and to Blu-Ray on June 7th, 2011 in the same configuration. Cropped from 1,37:1(4/3)(original United Artists) to 1,85:1 (widescreen by MGM)
See also
References
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Horn, pp. 117–18
- ↑ Ruhlmann, William. "Hair (Original Soundtrack)". Allmusic.com,
- ↑ "Hair (1979)"
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Hair (musical) |
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Hair at IMDb
- Hair at AllMovie
- Hair at Box Office Mojo
- Hair at Rotten Tomatoes
- Hair at Metacritic
- Trailer from trailerfan.com
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- 1979 films
- English-language films
- Film articles using image size parameter
- Articles using small message boxes
- Articles with unsourced statements from June 2015
- 1970s comedy-drama films
- 1970s musical films
- 1970s musical comedy films
- American films
- American musical comedy films
- American musical drama films
- American rock musicals
- Anti-war films about the Vietnam War
- Films based on musicals
- Films directed by Miloš Forman
- Films set in New York City
- Films set in Oklahoma
- Films set in the 1960s
- Hippie films
- United Artists films
- Vietnam War films
- American comedy-drama films