"Split Personality"
The Advocate, March 31, 1998
By Don Shewey
Hedwig and the Angry Inch starts off as a kind of trashy joke. Waltzing up the aisle of the
fabulously funky ballroom theater of a waterfront hotel that once housed the surviving crew
members of the Titanic, John Cameron Mitchell sports a Barbara Mandrell cotton candy wig, a
fringed denim cowgirl camisole, and a flag-striped cape, the inside of which is spray-painted
YANKEE GO HOME....WITH ME!
As Hedwig, "a mere slip of a girly boy from Communist East Germany," Mitchell parlays a
brand of hoary stage patter that Bette Midler's lounge persona, Vicki Eydie, might admire: "I
always like a warm hand on my entrance." Ba-da-boom! Hedwig is backed by a four piece
rock band dressed like Def Leppard circa 1987 and attended by her current "husband," Yitzak
(Miriam Shor, disguised behind a greasepaint goatee), whom Hedwig says she rescued from a
drag club in East Berlin, where he was lip-synching to songs from Yentl under the drag
name Crystal Nacht.
So, Ok, you think you know what you're watching: a rock and roll parody of your typical
drag act. Have another drink. The show consists of ten songs performed by Hedwig and her band, the Angry Inch, named after what remained from the botched sex-change operation she submitted to in order to marry a black GI, who later dumped her in a Kansas trailer park. Between songs hooking up with a geeky 16 year old named Tommy Speck who unaccountably turned her on. They started writing songs together, she gave him a new name, and he went on to become Tommy Gnosis, superstar, who now plays stadiums while Hedwig languishes as an "international unknown song stylist."
The corny yuks keep coming-- Hedwig opens the stage door and yells out, "Tommy, can you
hear me?" -- yet as the show goes on you start thinking: Hmm. Mitchell's not a bad singer, and
that band combo called Cheater, (led by the show's composer, Stephen Trask) really cranks.
Together they do a pretty creditable tribute to Iggy Pop/Lou Reed/Ziggy Stardust--era David
Bowie glam rock. Plus, underneath the tacky wigs, Mitchell is still the same fantastic young actor who distinguished himself in the Broadway musical The Secret Garden and Larry Kramer's
The Destiny of Me (the sequel to the Normal Heart). He performs both halves of a dialogue
between Hedwig and Tommy so nimbly that the characters seem to co-exist onstage.
Then something really trippy happens. During the strobe-light seque into the final number
"Midnight Radio," Hedwig strips off her top, smashes herself with the tomatoes that served as
her falsies, paints a silver cross on her forehead and becomes charismatic bare-chested skinny
boy rock star Tommy Gnosis. When the show's over you can't really be certain that the whole
thing wasn't entirely the garbage-band fantasy of little Tommy Speck. And what seemed like a
casual reference early on--to the Platonic myth that we're descended from round beings split by
lightning and doomed to wander around searching for our other half--turns out to be the theme
of the show. Only in Mitchell's queer version we become whole by reuniting the male and female
halves of ourselves--even if it takes Dynel wigs and pop-star fantasies. It's a sweet and
substantial thought that, like the show itself, sneaks up on you by surprise.
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