A live stage production of the musical, filmed at the Playhouse Theatre in London, commemorating the 40th anniversary of the release of The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975).A live stage production of the musical, filmed at the Playhouse Theatre in London, commemorating the 40th anniversary of the release of The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975).A live stage production of the musical, filmed at the Playhouse Theatre in London, commemorating the 40th anniversary of the release of The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975).
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I had only seen one other stage production of The Rocky Horror Show, and that was on Broadway in 2001. I didn't think any production could top that one, but this one did so exponentially. David Bedella is excellent as Frank. It's such an iconic role that holds such high expectations, and David's performance exceeds those expectations. The celebrity narrators really add to the feel that you're watching a special event rather than any typical performance of the show. I make sure to watch this every October along with my other favorite Halloween classics.
I have been a massive fan of the The Rocky Horror all my life and this absolutely did it justice! Brilliant casting. Well worth a watch.
As a life-long Rocky Horror fan I saved this to watch on Halloween as a double feature with the original.
I didn't expect much but was hoping for better than this.
If I saw it live I guess I'd rate it an 8 but to watch it on my TV? Well the answer is that I don't expect to ever watch it again.
But... I did watch the original again, for the umpteenth time, thoroughly enjoyed it and I expect to watch it over and over again.
If you are a fan, and haven't seen this, it is worth seeing once to make up your own mind.
IMHO: The BEST thing about it was I learned a few words from the songs that I didn't know before. For example: its "river of night's dreaming" - prior to this I thought it was streaming. :)
I didn't expect much but was hoping for better than this.
If I saw it live I guess I'd rate it an 8 but to watch it on my TV? Well the answer is that I don't expect to ever watch it again.
But... I did watch the original again, for the umpteenth time, thoroughly enjoyed it and I expect to watch it over and over again.
If you are a fan, and haven't seen this, it is worth seeing once to make up your own mind.
IMHO: The BEST thing about it was I learned a few words from the songs that I didn't know before. For example: its "river of night's dreaming" - prior to this I thought it was streaming. :)
as I was in the generation that saw the film in Toronto 200-300 times at the Roxy theater and never heard a word of it as we the audience began our responses as soon as the opening credits rolled. What an amazing time !. However with the limitations of the stage I don't think Richard O'Brien would have done this unless it was very high quality. And it is. But always try to see the Rocky Horror film in a crowded theater . I give it 10 sweet transvestites. The music is great. the story remains intact from the film. they allow audience participation. the guest stars are hilarious. Hats off ! As well as whatever else you might be wearing. The actors and vocalists are first class. on the web there is an old interview with Tim Curry explaining the genesis of Rocky Horror as Curry had a play in the downstairs of a London theater and O'Brien , who had this concept was playing upstairs in another play and one night the two got to talking about it. Thank You jeff in Toronto.
If you're reading this, you likely already know the movie so I'll skip rehashing the plot. This version was recorded at the West End in London on September 17, 2015, and broadcast live to movie theatres across Europe before airing on BBC America a month later. The play follows the movie almost scene-for-scene and word-for-word, with one notable exception: Rocky himself is not a grunting, blonde, over-tanned Frankenstein but an actual Charles Atlas type (Dominic Andersen looks like sort of a cross between Christopher Reeve and Jim Carrey) who speaks and has some character development. There's also sparse bits of additional dialogue, the lost verse from "Over at the Frankenstein Place," and Brad's song "Once in a While," which ended up on the cutting room floor.
What makes this so much fun is that it IS a live performance. The audience yelled their standard responses at the cast and sometimes caught them off-guard, though several actors seemed to be delighting in egging on the crowd. After the play concluded, all of the actors (except Stephen Fry, who had to leave for another engagement) took to the stage for a few encores. Although its roots are clear, if you go in expecting a carbon copy of the film, you'll be disappointed. The tone is lighter, the music's peppier, and the cast got to directly interact with the audience.
David Bedella really shines in the role of Frank -- a daunting task since Tim Curry left such large high-heels to fill, but he knew the character intimately having previously performed it on stage. Other standouts are Kristian Lavercombe as Riff-Raff and Sophie Linder-Lee as Columbia. Jayde Westaby tried to make the part of Magenta her own, which yielded mixed results. Similarly Ben Forster plays the part of Brad less like Barry Bostwick and more like Seymore Kelbourne from "Little Shop of Horrors" - though it was hilarious watching him trying not to break character. Dominic Andersen was awesome as Rocky when he was speaking, flexing his muscles and doing acrobatics, but he made the bizarre choice to sing with a nasaly New Jersey accent. Haley Flaherty is a weaker link as Janet - her performance was okay and she's got a great set of pipes but she seemed to take the part a bit too seriously. As for Richard Meek in the dual roles of Eddie and Dr. Scott... he certainly isn't Meatloaf and he portrayed the doctor sans accent.
In a weird publicity stunt, the part of the criminologist was performed by a revolving door of British celebrities: Stephen Fry, Emma Bunton (aka Baby Spice), Adrian Edmondson, Mel Giedroyc, Anthony Head, and creator Richard O'Brien. The standouts were Fry and Head, both of whom absolutely reveled in the audience participation. Edmondson was merely okay, Bunton added little to the proceedings (doing The Time Warp) and Giedroyc literally stopped the show for a gag that was too-inside for international viewers. Not surprisingly, the audience didn't have much to retort when O'Brien hit the stage... in part out of respect, but mostly because he'd rewritten the bulk of his dialogue for the scene.
All in all, this was a well-made, entertaining production of the show... and since there's never been a live version released on home video, I sincerely hope this one warps onto DVD and blu ray.
What makes this so much fun is that it IS a live performance. The audience yelled their standard responses at the cast and sometimes caught them off-guard, though several actors seemed to be delighting in egging on the crowd. After the play concluded, all of the actors (except Stephen Fry, who had to leave for another engagement) took to the stage for a few encores. Although its roots are clear, if you go in expecting a carbon copy of the film, you'll be disappointed. The tone is lighter, the music's peppier, and the cast got to directly interact with the audience.
David Bedella really shines in the role of Frank -- a daunting task since Tim Curry left such large high-heels to fill, but he knew the character intimately having previously performed it on stage. Other standouts are Kristian Lavercombe as Riff-Raff and Sophie Linder-Lee as Columbia. Jayde Westaby tried to make the part of Magenta her own, which yielded mixed results. Similarly Ben Forster plays the part of Brad less like Barry Bostwick and more like Seymore Kelbourne from "Little Shop of Horrors" - though it was hilarious watching him trying not to break character. Dominic Andersen was awesome as Rocky when he was speaking, flexing his muscles and doing acrobatics, but he made the bizarre choice to sing with a nasaly New Jersey accent. Haley Flaherty is a weaker link as Janet - her performance was okay and she's got a great set of pipes but she seemed to take the part a bit too seriously. As for Richard Meek in the dual roles of Eddie and Dr. Scott... he certainly isn't Meatloaf and he portrayed the doctor sans accent.
In a weird publicity stunt, the part of the criminologist was performed by a revolving door of British celebrities: Stephen Fry, Emma Bunton (aka Baby Spice), Adrian Edmondson, Mel Giedroyc, Anthony Head, and creator Richard O'Brien. The standouts were Fry and Head, both of whom absolutely reveled in the audience participation. Edmondson was merely okay, Bunton added little to the proceedings (doing The Time Warp) and Giedroyc literally stopped the show for a gag that was too-inside for international viewers. Not surprisingly, the audience didn't have much to retort when O'Brien hit the stage... in part out of respect, but mostly because he'd rewritten the bulk of his dialogue for the scene.
All in all, this was a well-made, entertaining production of the show... and since there's never been a live version released on home video, I sincerely hope this one warps onto DVD and blu ray.
Did you know
- TriviaKristian Lavercombe's first Rocky Horror Show experience was at New Zealand's Nelson Musical Theatre in 1998, playing Dr. Frank-N-Furter, and he later took over the role of Riff Raff for tours in Asia and Australia. At the time of this taping, Lavercombe had portrayed Riff Raff in over 900 performances, and by the end of the UK tour in 2017, he will have played the character more times than any other actor in history.
- Quotes
Stephen Fry: I would like, if I may...
Audience: You may!
Stephen Fry: ...to take you...
Man in audience: Take me!
Stephen Fry: Perhaps later... on a strange journey.
Audience: How strange?
Stephen Fry: You'd be surprised.
- Alternate versionsFor the one-time European live theatrical screening, Mel Giedroyc hosted and mingled with the crowd before the show, Adrian Edmondson interviewed Richard O'Brien, Ana Matronic filmed a plug for Amnesty International, and Giedroyc interviewed Emma Bunton during intermission. All of this footage was omitted from the broadcast on BBC America, except for the interview with Bunton.
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- Release date
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- Also known as
- Rocky Horror Picture Show Live
- Filming locations
- London, England, UK(Broadcast live to cinemas from the Playhouse Theatre, London)
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- Runtime
- 1h 46m(106 min)
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