Priscilla, Queen of
the Desert
Stephen Elliott & Allan Scott
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| Diogo Zavadzki, Charles Peoples III & Derek Miller |
It’s Pride 2017 in San Francisco; and what better way to
celebrate than with fabulously attired drag queens, shirtless twinks, singing
divas in sparkly wigs, and a garishly decorated school bus named Priscilla? Oh, and there are kangaroos, the Village
People, disco-dancing dandies, and pop music made famous by everyone from Cyndi
Lauper and Burt Bacharach to John Denver, Diana Ross, Petula Clark, and Donna
Summer. The juke-box musical Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, The Musical
-- originating from Sydney in 2006 before making its way around the world with
successful, award-winning stops in London and New York – plops its high heels in
grand style onto the tiny stage at Eureka Theatre sporting reams of glitter,
chiffon, and spangles in a production big in heart and galactic in campy fun by
the oldest LGBT theatre in San Francisco, Theatre Rhinoceros.
The book by Stephen Elliot and Allan Scott (adapted from
Elliot’s cult-and-gay-favorite, 1994 film The
Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert) is a story about search for
family and companionship. But this tale
is told through the eyes of three stage performers like the hinterlands of
Australia (where they are heading) has never seen -- an aging transgender woman
named Bernadette and once known as Ralph; a young, show-off drag queen named
Felicia but rarely addressed as Adam; and Tick, a married (to a woman) drag
star Mitzi Mitosis with an eight-year-old son he has never met (yet).
The three set out on a long, hot trip through the outback on
their broken-down, but fantastically decorated bus with its pink slipper on the
roof – all to help out Tick’s wife and her struggling nightclub in the middle
of the Aussie desert. Along the way, the
queens – who do not exactly start out as best friends all -- encounter the
likes of wide-eyed townsfolk in country bars who leave hateful calling cards
painted on Priscilla and a life-saving mechanic named Bob whose attention soon
shifts from his current mail-order bride to a certain transgender lady with glued-on
eyelashes winking his way.
As director of this Theatre Rhino extravaganza-gone-bonkers,
John Fisher has left no corn un-shucked to ensure that gaudy glamour,
high-stepping hilarity, and pun-packed playfulness rule the stage. Yet at the same time, he has guaranteed that
the tongue-in-cheek campiness never takes over to the degree that the heart and
soul of the real story of Priscilla is
over-shadowed. Under his orchestration
of this script and this cast, these three queens face head-on their nagging,
life-long self-doubts as two gays and a transgender, confront unabashedly the
homophobia and hate thrust upon them, and find routes to love where no map
exists to show them the way. In 2017
America, their justified fear and their needed courage are stories more relevant
than ever; and Mr. Fisher does not short-change those messages in order just to
get a few more laughs.
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| Derek Miller, Rudy Guerrero & Charles Peoples III |
In this Rhino production, the flashing-lights headliner as
‘the stars’ must go to Costumier Robert Horek and Headdress Designer Glenn
Krumbholz (with further costume designs by Larry Jean, Daisy Neske, and Cindy
Preiado). Words cannot begin to describe
the eye-popping, guffaw-producing array of costumes that parade by the scores
across the stage, with changes occurring so quickly at times that the mind
boggles what the show on the tiny backstage of the Eureka must be as this cast
of seventeen goes from Vegas-dressed divas to scantily clad boys in cutoffs
(and little else) to elaborate gowns of every hue and dresses made of
flip-flops (with cowboys/girls and funeral-attired mourners thrown in for
variety). Wigs rise high that are full
of swans, Easter eggs, flower bouquets worthy of a benefit dinner table, paint
buckets, and who-knows-what-else. Any
one who has ever seen a screen or stage version of Priscilla would hope for nothing less, but for The Rhino to pull off
this kaleidoscope of kitsch is truly magnificent.
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| Rudy Guerrero, Charles Peoples III & Darryl V. Jones |
And then there is the other star of the show, the bus named
Priscilla. Gilbert Johnson’s
crème-de-la-crème of a set design is boxy and pink on the outside but rotates
to reveal an interior that bustles to the brim with boas, bows, beads, and
bangles along with everything from seahorses to Christmas garland and, of
course, plenty of martini glasses.
While the almost thirty hits of the ‘70s and ‘80s are not
all delivered with the solo power and finesse one might hope, they are all
certainly delivered with much enthusiasm, flair, fun, and often heart. When in full ensemble, the cast is
particularly strong in voice and harmony under the able musical direction of
Daniel Feyer. With clever and
well-coordinated choreography by AeJay Mitchell that ranges from disco to Vegas
to hoedown and employs every possible hand movement, hip thrust, and body twist
possible, this ensemble struts its stuff to wow an adoring audience in numbers
like “It’s Raining Men,” “Color My World,” and “I Will Survive.”
Some of the best singing consistently comes from three Divas
(Anna L. Joham, Mary Kalita, and Niclole Thordsen) who blend beautifully in
their platinum-metallic wigs as they often provide the background music for
lip-synching drag queens. Time and again
they ferociously sell a number with spunk and spit while also doing what all
good back-ups do – look glamorous and move in parallel sway.
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| Rudy Guerrero |
As Tick, Rudy Guerrero sounds so down-under in accent that
it is hard to believe he is not Aussie-born.
He brings genuine authenticity to Tick and wonderful swish and swagger
to Mitzi. To portray Adam/Felicia, Charles
Peoples III uses a slender body that seems to have no skeleton within it -- so
rubbery flexible does he move -- and a face full of sparkly, black eyebrows
that gives way to a thousand, fantastic expressions. And with a face whose cheeks and deep-set
eyes broadcast Bernadette’s absolute lust for life, Darryl V. Jones
particularly sets the bar high in a performance where Bernadette deadpan
delivers some of the night’s best lines (“I don’t need to pack ... All my bags
are under my eyes”) and sings with a voice that resonates in a deep, still
manner to reveal depth of soul and life-experience. When these three queens and traveling
companions join together as a trio (as in “The Journey” and “True Colors”), they lack the combined
vocal excellence of the three Divas; but they tend to make it up in a style
that makes them a unit fun to watch.
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| Stephen Kanaski |
Other, more silhouetted performances certainly have their
moments of whiz-bang. In a sleek,
black-sequined dress, Stephen Kanaski uses his Tina-Turner-rough, seductive
voice to sell the sex and raise the roof in “What’s Love Got to Do with
It?” As in most productions of this
musical, Crystal Liu as Cynthia stops the show when she performs a feat with
Ping-Pong balls that sends the audience into a tizzy (while also singing in
electronic voice and robotic manner M’s “Pop Muzik”). And returning our attention to Felicia (now in
a beaded turban and silver gown), Charles Peoples draws the night’s most
sustained applause for an outrageously performed lip-synch astride Priscilla’s
roof-situated, pink slipper of a recorded “Sempre Libera” (La traviata).
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| Darryl V. Jones & Cameron Weston |
Not to be over-looked in the kudos department is Cameron
Weston as the moon-struck mechanic Bob who finds himself finding a long-lost
love from his youth amongst these traveling, three queens. Mr. Weston’s Bob is so likeable it almost
hurts. There is a genuineness that
exudes his portrayal; and while his singing voice is also not the strongest, it
is true in its message in numbers like the reprise of “A Fine Romance.” A shout-out also goes to young Kyle Vetter
whose eight-year-old Benji has a lot to teach some of the adult bigots in his
and our worlds.
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| The Cast of The Rhino's Priscilla, Queen of the Desert |
From the exiting smiles on every face and the volume of
collective chatter, there is no doubt that virtually every person seeing Theatre
Rhino’s Priscilla, Queen of the Desert
is going to be the best marketing tool possible for this month-long run. There is nothing better than a show exceeding
on its small stage an audience’s incoming expectations that it will tough to
match the fun, camp, and sheer fabulousness of its much-larger predecessors on
other world stages; but far exceed expectations is exactly what Theatre Rhino
did at least for this one, very satisfied member.
Rating: 4 E
Priscilla, Queen of
the Desert continues through July 1, 2017 in production by Theatre Rhinoceros
at the Eureka Theatre, 215 Jackson Street, San Francisco. Tickets are available at http://therhino.org.
Photo Credits: David Wilson







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