Book Description

50cm x 32cm. centrefold crease. Hair opened in London on September 27 1968, one day after the abolition of theatre censorship in Great Britain. A BBC report from opening day noted “Until yesterday, some of the scenes in the musical, written by out-of-work actors Gerome Ragni and James Rado, would have been considered too outrageous to be shown on a stage in Britain. The show, billed as an American tribal love-rock musical, first opened in New York on 2 December last year. Many were angered by scenes containing nudity and drug-taking as well as a strong anti-war message at the height of the Vietnam conflict and the desecration of the American flag on stage. The show’s transfer to London’s West End would not have been possible before the new Theatres Act which ended the Lord Chamberlain’s powers of censorship dating back to 1737.”
Dealer Notes
This is one of several similar theatre posters we will be exhibiting at the ILEC Fair
Author .
Date 1968

Price: £160.00

Offered by Hereward Books

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