|
03.22.2004
Program notes for the first half
of this evening's performance at the Hutton Gibson Center for
the Performing Arts:
ACT 1, SCENE 1: a hill
outside of Jerusalem we will later come to know as Golgotha.
As the "Overture" plays, Jesus, smiling for the
only time during the performance, cavorts about in the background,
dispensing pearls of wisdom which we cannot quite here to his
many young, attractive Caucasian followers. Judas, who is played
by an actor of indeterminate race and dressed in a hip-hop style,
connives stage right, casting aspersions on the undefined but
surely good and holy teachings of our savior in the sinister
and foreboding "Hell on My Mind".
ACT1, SCENE 2: a cave,
near the above. Jesus returns from lecturing to the good
Christian folk of the region and is angered to find his shiftless
disciples sitting around watching television. Becoming angry
and filled with moral clarity, the Lord switches off the set
as the disciples sing "What the Fuck? (We Were Watching
'What's Happening!!')". Judas, who is a big fan of Rerun,
dares question messianic wisdom, ungratefully taking Jesus to
task in the grammatically questionable "Strange Thing, Mister,
Frying". The women, fulfilling their natural and subservient
roles as peacemakers, break up the subsequent fistfight, even
though Jesus is winning, with their mellow-rock ballad "Everything's
All Right (Please Stop Yelling)".
ACT 1, SCENE 3: the
Black Pits of the Death Chamber of Gentile Infants at the local
synagogue. Annas and Caiaphas, along with a number of other
vile, treacherous Jews with the dark hearts, corrupted souls
and hooked noses typical of their race, plot their horrible act
of deicide, loudly boasting that they are doing it for no reason
other than the fact that they are evil in the minor-chord-heavy
"This Jesus, and Everyone Like Him, Must Die". As the
sun rises, they slink back into their bloody crypts, fleeing
the purity of the light as Jesus enters Jerusalem with a defiant
look of grim determination. His followers rejoice triumphantly
in the untrammelled joy of being a Christian, singing "Oh
Hosanna (Don't You Cry for Me)".
ACT 1, SCENE 4: a Roman
coliseum constructed in the heart of the city, where Christ and
his followers nightly triumph over tigers, elephants, Chinese
kung fu masters, and gunslingers. The violent, insane Jewish
zealot Simon begs Jesus to take revenge on the Roman overlords
-- not because of oppression, but just because Simon is evil
and likes to see people suffer -- in his song "Simon the
Wicked Hebrew", delivered in an impenetrably thick Yiddish
accent. Jesus responds with "Poor Ol' Jerusalem", in
which he laments the fact that in order to facilitate the Biblical
prophecy of the Apocalypse, his followers will have to pay lip
service to supporting the state of Israel.
ACT 1, SCENE 5: the
chambers of Governor Pontius J. Pilate, Roman administrator of
Judea. Pilate, to be played by a natural blonde, worries
that history will judge him harshly for his role in the crucifixion
of Jesus, even though he is totally innocent and not at all greasy-looking
and besides, it's all the Jews' fault, them and their best buddy
Satan, in "Pilate's Nightmare".
ACT 1, SCENE 6: the
synagogue, during the day when the Pharisees are sealed in their
coffins. In "The Body is a Temple", Jesus becomes
infuriated for the sixth time in Act 1, running the 'moneychangers'
out of his father's house. You know what we mean? 'Moneychangers'?
Get me? I don't have to spell it out, do I? Okay then. He makes
it clear that just because he doesn't like 'moneychangers', he's
not some kind of crazy hippie, and that capitalism is okay by
him, as long as you don't get all greedy like some kind of filthy
hook-nosed 'moneychanger'. Mary Magdalene, watching Jesus' righteoush
outrage, clarifies her relationship with our Savior regardless
of what some perverted revisionists might think in the tender
and beautiful but not at all sexual "I Don't Know How to
Love Him, Physically".
ACT 1, SCENE 7: Judas,
completing the treasonous betrayal of our Lord and Savior that
was really inevitable given his racial makeup and love of ghetto
music, meets with the vampiric parasite-men of the Pharisees
once they rise from their tombs and feast on the viscera of a
Christian baby. They offer him a hundred dollars and a vial of
crack cocaine in exchange for betraying the Messiah. Meeting
up with some local 'moneychangers', Ethiopian prostitutes, and
an agent of Satan who is in town for an educator's convention,
they sing the number that closes Act 1, the demonically celebratory
"Damn! For All Time/Blood Monkey".
Permanent Link.
|