Category Archives: Interviews

Really Big Santa brings a larger-than-life holiday spectacular to the Plaza Theatre

Santa and his helpers are everywhere this time of year. But if those department store bell ringers and shopping mall offshoots just don’t live up to the holiday hype, there’s one Santa that will have you believing in a big way. A really big way. Continuing the tradition he started last year, Really Big Santa returns to the Plaza Theatre on Dec. 8 for Santa’s Super Saturday Show. As his name implies, Really Big Santa is a very large version of the big guy from the North Pole. But don’t let his towering frame intimidate you. Really Big Santa is a jolly fellow who will sing and dance with you, offer up his homemade hot cider, take pictures with you and host a screening of Jim Henson‘s 1977 TV movie Emmet Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas. As he prepares for this big event, he takes a moment to have this fireside chat with Wrestling with Pop Culture.

Santa’s Saturday Super Show features singing, dancing, cider and other holiday fun. For those who weren’t there last year, what else can people expect?

Photo by Evan Bartelston.

We’ll have prizes, Santa’s own special hot cider, a floor show with the folks from Blast-Off Burlesque and wrap it all up with a sing-along and Santa’s dance party! We also will start pictures with Santa at 11 a.m. and at 8 p.m. for the night show. For $15 you get a digital copy emailed to you and a print mailed to your home!

Who else will be joining you at this event?

My helper Max, who is a real elf. We’ll have classical Christmas guitar music provided by “Evil” Jim Wright from the band Bigfoot. Blast-Off Burlesque will be performing with me and our pictures will be taken by Knotty Pictures this year. We are excited! The night show will have a very special surprise crew showing up!

How does the matinee show differ from the night-time show?

The matinee show is not as loud, has longer sitting times for pictures with Santa and has fewer German Christmas characters in the show.

Speaking of German Christmas characters, rumor has it another lesser known (at least to most Americans) Christmas creature will be making an appearance at the night show. What do you know about the Krampus and the bar crawl he has planned in conjunction with your event?

We will be staging the annual Little Five Points Krampus Krawl in conjunction with 7 Stages Theatre, Java Lords and the Euclid Ave. Yacht Club right after the movies wrap. We’ll be hitting The Righteous Room, Manuel’s Tavern, the Five Spot, the Little 5 Corner Tavern, the EAYC, Elmyr and some others over the course of the night. The Euclid Ave. Yacht Club will have Bavarian food specials all night, too!

You don’t claim to be the real Santa, but you’re just as jolly as the big guy at the North Pole. Is there some sort of criteria Saint Nick looks for when choosing his helpers? Was any sort of training involved?

Photo by Evan Bartelston.

I am an official Santa Claus which is different than the Santa Claus. I have a 24/365 hotline to the big guy, and I have a territory I cover as his ambassador. I handle requests, manufacturing, livestock and distribution for my territory as if I were the old man. He picks us personally, trains us rigorously and trusts us implicitly. I am proud to be one of the few.

Kids are often afraid of Santa even when he’s not Really Big. Do you find that you’re more intimidating than the average Santa? If so, what do you do to appease frightened girls and boys?

No. I actually seem to have an easier time with them as I’m willing to work with them if they are scared. It’s not my size, it’s my demeanor. That and the parents that bring their kids to Really Big Santa aren’t pushing their kids to do something they don’t want. I rarely have a kid that doesn’t end up getting a picture of some sort out of the visit.

I’m sure you’re very busy this time of year. Where else might we see Really Big Santa this holiday season?

The best place to keep up with me this year is www.facebook.com/reallybigsanta. I also will be appearing on Public Broadcasting Atlanta in my new TV special, Christmas Around Atlanta. It will be airing all month on Atlanta’s PBA30.

www.reallybigsanta.com

Deathblade fights zombies in a cage during the Atlanta Zombie Apocalypse

For the third year in a row, the living dead have taken over part of Atlanta with the Atlanta Zombie Apocalypse. And this year there’s even more zombie-killing enjoyment to be had for those with the will to survive. A ZWar has been waged on the Center for Disease Development, the agency responsible for this zombie outbreak and rumored to have something to do with Monstrosity Championship Wrestling, which debuted at AZA last October. (Read more about MCW here and here.) As has been established in previous years, the CDD has been experimenting on the living to create mindless zombies and other creatures. But now these mad scientists are attempting to completely eradicate humanity by weaponizing the living dead. But the remaining survivors are raiding the CDD’s facilities to try and regain their freedom.

A victim flees for her life during the Curse of the Undead.

If you survive the CDD’s threat, you’ll face the Curse of the Undead, which has caused the dead to rise from their graves yet again. But instead of laboratory experiments, it’s satanic-looking druids responsible for this zombie outbreak, which has resulted in the local police department being stretched to its limits with missing persons reports and other chaos. The cops that haven’t buckled under the pressure are still trying to help, but there’s little they can do when there are strange things happening (and even stranger people harboring their zombie kin) in the woods. Thankfully, there is a hero named Bruce out there who is maintaining a cheesy sense of humor while fighting off zombies with his chainsaw.

But even your protectors have a scam of their own going, and it’s called the Zombie Shoot. Unlike in previous years, where zombies aimlessly roamed an outdoor firing range, now you can be armed and chase zombies through the abandoned motel for some brain-splattering fun (for an additional fee). And if you think killing zombies is fun, you’re really going to like the Ultimate Fighting Zombies matches found in the lawless outdoor area of ZWar. And you might recognize a guy named Deathblade, who helped protect the uninfected last year, but has since taken his fighting skills to the UFZ cage for our entertainment. Fighting zombies every night is hard work, which is why Wrestling with Pop Culture appreciates the fact that Deathblade took a moment to tell us about his involvement with AZA.

What is your role at the AZA and how did they discover your talents?

Basically, they needed somebody crazy enough to keep the zombies in line and dangerous enough to put them down. And that was me. Last year I kept the town safe; this year I’m providing entertainment as a part of the UFZ: Ultimate Fighting Zombies.

What is your UFZ fighting record?

I actually retired undefeated. Now I’m in there coaching my protege Ripper right now. She, of course, is currently undefeated as well. One defeat and you’re pretty much dead, so…

I’ve noticed that you wear the face paint of various different professional wrestlers such as the Road Warriors and Demolition. Is there any meaning behind that, other than the obvious?

Deathblade prepares to fight zombies while donning the warpaint of Road Warrior Hawk. Photo by Divine Danger.

I was a wrestler myself until I got banned from every known organization for my brutal tactics. I just want to pay tribute to some of the guys that came before me and set the bar for insanity that I try to raise every night.

It’s weird that you used to be a professional wrestler because you bear a striking resemblance to a guy I’ve seen at Platinum Championship Wrestling named Johnny Danger. Do you know anything about him?

Yeah. Actually, I’m a big fan of Johnny Danger. I’d like to see how he does against some of these zombies one day, perhaps as part of Monstrosity Championship Wrestling in the future.

He’s no stranger to MCW as he grappled with monsters in the ring at this year’s Rock ‘n’ Roll Monster Bash.

Yeah, I remember that. I think he’d be a great addition to the UFZ, and Deathblade would be happy to train him.

www.atlantazombie.com

“From Prison to Promise” reveals the struggles of a young Booker T

Before he was the general manager of SmackDown, a delusional King of the Ring winner or five time (five time, five time!) World Championship Wrestling World Champion, Booker T was a kid finding his way on the heated streets of Houston. One of eight siblings, things got rough for Booker after the death of his mother, when he was left to fend for himself while his closest relatives exposed him to drugs, prostitution and other criminal activities. But even in his darkest moments, Booker was able to find ways to enjoy himself as is chronicled in From Prison to Promise: Life Before the Squared Circle. Co-written by Andrew William Wright, From Prison to Promise follows Booker’s life of breakdancing (and the first time he did the spinaroonie), dealing drugs and other hardships up to the point that he and his brother Lash first tasted success in the wrestling ring. With the book recently on store shelves, Booker T talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about the hardships he faced and his hopes that From Prison to Promise might help others avoid the setbacks he had to overcome.

This book reveals some pretty funny things about a young Booker T, such as your love of country music and Richard Petty. I think a lot of people will be surprised by some of the things you were into.

Yeah, I grew up on that kind of stuff. The Doobie Brothers, Crosby, Stills and Nash, James Taylor – you never would have imagined some of the stuff I listened to. Still today I’m a music connoisseur. I love music, but today’s music is a little bit hard to grasp.

Throughout the early part of your life, you make references to wrestling here and there and emulate its stylings in various ways. But the book doesn’t talk much about how influential wrestling was on you until the point where you actually started training to wrestle. Did you follow wrestling very closely when you were younger or was it something you got into more as you got older?

I was always a fan of wrestling, but I never looked at wrestling the way most kids do, I guess because of the way I grew up. So when I watched wrestling, I always watched it from a purely entertainment perspective – I always knew the guys were out there performing and entertaining for us. So I watched it and liked it, but I also watched All My Children, General Hospital and The Three Stooges. I watched everything when I should have been studying my books. It’s all just part of my makeup of who I am.

Even when you were doing things like robbing Wendy’s, selling drugs and going to prison, the book still portrays you with a sense of humbleness and uncertainty. How hard was that struggle for you to decide what was right and wrong, especially considering the influence of those around you?

I wasn’t a bad kid. There are a lot of kids out there that aren’t bad, but there’s a lot of bad kids out there, too. So it’s hard for the system to decide who should get a break and who shouldn’t. But I think they should be able to see some stuff like that because I was a first-time offender and that was the first time I had ever been in trouble. But kids from better neighborhoods perhaps would have gotten probation or would have gotten out of it with a slap on the wrist. Where I was from may have played a role in it, but one thing I always try to tell young people is that life isn’t fair. So you can’t blame yourself for what happens after you get in a situation. You’ve just got to try and steer yourself away from getting into those situations, first and foremost, and you won’t have to figure out whether the system is being fair to you or not. It was my choice to get in that position. There’s no gray area between right and wrong and I knew I was part of something that was wrong. I knew I had to pay for it somehow and if it was going to prison, then I had to go through that. And I went through it and after I came out of it I put it behind me and never went that route again.

Between going to prison and your brother’s influence after prison, that’s oddly what got you into shape and interested in pursuing wrestling.

I always followed my brother around and wanted to be like my brother, even before we got into the wrestling business. When we lived together, he worked out and had all the girls while I was a skinny guy and had no girls. So my brother has always been an inspiration in some form of my life. He’s always been the guy I looked up to and wanted to emulate. So he definitely helped me follow my passions and I think it helped out a lot.

You started training to wrestle in 1991 and it wasn’t long after that that you were already on WCW television. What do you attribute that rapid progression to?

Wrestling, for me, was like déjà vu: it seemed like I had been there before even though I hadn’t. It came very, very easy for me, but I had some great teachers as well. I watched a lot of Bruce Lee movies as a kid, so I tried to create my own style and put something different out there. But it was all pretty easy for me.

I don’t know if it was your doing or that of your coauthor, but I loved the King Arthur reference, which sort of foreshadowed the King Booker persona we’d see you take on years after the events in the book.

I gave him a little bit of creative levity, but that’s what’s good about working with a team. I put all my thoughts down, so everything in the book is my thoughts. And towards the beginning, before I was getting in trouble, it almost feels like a feel-good story. But it was actually the beginning of my demise before I saw the light at the end of the tunnel. But it’s very in-depth and tells my whole upbringing. I didn’t have a lot of education, but I have a lot of street knowledge. That’s what enabled me to figure my way out in this life.

How much of what you learned during that time would you say you still use today in your role as SmackDown general manager and other roles you play in life?

Well, you always got to have street knowledge. One thing I’ve always been willing to do is handle things diplomatically, but sometimes you’ve just got to take the gloves off and fight. That’s one thing I’ve always been pretty good at because I’ve been fighting my whole life. A lot of people didn’t know my background until now and it’s really hard to judge a book by its cover, no pun intended, when you don’t know a guy’s background.

What kind of reactions have you gotten from the people you talk about in the book?

Everybody’s given me positive insight on the book. It’s real, and my family didn’t even know a lot of the stuff that happened in the book with myself, with my sister’s struggles and how things really were when we were young kids. For those who’ve had a chance to read it, they may have a better understanding of the person I am today and why I don’t back down from nothing or take no for an answer. I just don’t do that as a man due to what I’ve gone through. I accept no excuses from the young kids at my wrestling school because of what I went through as a young man, having to go out there and not be on welfare, not take government assistance and still struggle and find my way through. I always say, “If I can make it, anybody can.” I give breaks here and there, but not very many.

From Prison to Promise follows your life up to the point that you started to get big opportunities in wrestling. Do you plan on writing another book that picks up where this one ends or that gets more into your wrestling career?

Everybody’s asking for it and the publisher is already talking about it. But I want to make this book special, get it into the right hands and focus on it first. This is the beginning of something for my life and career after wrestling. Now it’s time for me to roll my sleeves up, put my hard hat on and go to work to start really helping some people in this life. So I want to make this thing special and reach out to the prison systems, the schools and everybody that might be in a similar position I was in.

Before I started recording, you joked about seeing this story on the big screen, but with all the movies WWE Studios has been cranking out, do you think a film adaptation might be a possibility?

It’s definitely a possibility, but I don’t know if WWE could handle that kind of a movie. It might have to be somewhere else, to be honest, because I don’t know if the WWE audience is ready to see Booker T from that perspective. It needs to be real, it can’t be sugar coated. There was this movie back in the day that I watched when I was a kid called The Mack. It was a blaxploitation movie, but it was my life as a young man getting his education. Life is life and we move on and I’m in a better place now.

www.medallionmediagroup.com

“Dracula: The Rock Opera” gives rock ‘n’ roll life to the undead

When the Little 5 Points Rockstar Orchestra first gathered for its low budget interpretation of Andrew Lloyd Webber‘s Jesus Christ Superstar a few years ago, it seemed like a self-indulgent undertaking by a bunch of Atlanta rockers who had little, if any, knowledge of how to properly stage a theatrical production. Sure, they had seen their share of stage theatrics, but the spontaneous energy of a live rock performance is very different from a well-rehearsed stage production, even when music is involved.

Over the years, the Orchestra became more ambitious, staging theatrical interpretations of Iron Maiden‘s The Number of the Beast and Rush‘s 2112, as well as absurdly sacreligious holiday productions such as Christmas with the Devil and the Krampus Xmas Spectacular. The group graduated from the tiny stage of the Five Spot to the legitimate theater space at 7 Stages. And in February of last year, the Orchestra staged its most impressive production yet: Haus Von Dracul, a rock opera interpretation of Bram Stoker’s Dracula.

Rob Thompson as Dracula (photo by Yvonne Boyd)

Haus Von Dracul, the first act of a work-in-progress, revealed a more sophisticated side to the Orchestra. With Orchestra leader Rob Thompson now working with theatre veteran Del Hamilton and the rest of the 7 Stages staff, the marriage of rock and theatre he originally envisioned was finally complete. And last weekend, the Orchestra staged the world premiere of Dracula: The Rock Opera, which builds upon Haus Von Dracul‘s foundation to bare theatrical fangs worthy of it’s namesake vampire.

Directed by Hamilton and accomplished actor Justin Welborn (The Final Destination, The Signal), Dracula is perhaps the most accurate depiction of Stoker’s novel to ever have been conceived theatrically. Rather than the dark lover Hollywood would tell us is Dracula, this production retains the demonic fashion sense established by Bela Lugosi and Gary Oldman with the monstrous demeanor of Max Shreck’s Nosferatu.

“You get Max Shreck as Nosferatu, then he starts to morph into Lugosi a little bit, then he turns into Christopher Lee,” says Shane Morton, who plays Texan Quincy Morris (and also runs attractions such as the Silver Scream SpookShow and Atlanta Zombie Apocalypse). “You see him do the whole gamut and you can tell he’s been working hard on it and studying a lot. Rob’s jump in acting has been insane. I snuck out and watched the first act and I couldn’t believe it. I know Dracula, and this is the best Dracula I’ve ever seen. I know I’m too close to the project to say anything unbiased, but I really feel that way watching his performance. And that’s all because of Justin and Del really getting on everybody and making actors out of a bunch of musicians and stuff.”

“We’re working towards a more professional atmosphere,” adds Welborn, who has been largely responsible for the Orchestra’s evolution over the past few years. “We told them we could make it bigger if we rehearsed a little bit longer, if everyone showed up on time, and this time it was very much about being as professional as we could be and not getting drunk during rehearsals. There are just certain things you do if you’re going to take something as serious and invest as much money, time and effort as we have in this. For everybody to actually come to that mutual agreement makes Del and my job so much easier because that’s what you have to do. Everybody’s performances came up – our ensemble had a chance to really gel together and work on what they were going to do, and the innkeeper woman (played by Naomi Lavender, who also plays Mina Harker and one of Dracula’s brides) didn’t look like something out of Disney, she looked like something out of a horror movie. I agree that Rob’s Dracula is one of the spookiest, weirdest, craziest that I’ve gotten to see. He’s taken his natural moves and put those natural moves into something very streamlined and knows what he’s doing the whole time. That’s the thing that takes it from out-of-control rock ‘n’ roll to a focused and true artistic performance.”

Dracula (Rob Thompson) and his brides Naomi Lavender (left), Madeline Brumby (center) and Jessika Cutts (right) (photo by Yvonne Boyd)

Though last year’s production was essentially the first act of Dracula, a lot of changes have been made between that show and the current one (running through Oct. 14). The stylized stage itself has been completely reconfigured to help the show (and blood) flow a little better, the costumes are a little more flamboyant, and some fresh blood has been added to the cast. One of the standouts of this new cast is Jeff Langston, whose Van Helsing is just as eccentric as Thompson’s Dracula. In fact, between the costumes and makeup, the two characters almost look as if they could be related. And like Thompson, Langston, whose only prior stage time was as singer for Ledfoot Messiah, is the latest example of a musician previously unfamiliar with the acting discipline.

“The directors had never met him at all until the first day or rehearsal,” says Welborn. “And he began by saying, ‘I just want you to know I’ll accept any help because I’ve never acted in any play ever in my life.’ Then he began to sing and it was like, ‘OK, we can work something out here.’ He probably worked harder and came farther than anyone else because he’s never worn a costume or gone onstage without a guitar. He told me the other day that he used to think he was born to play music, but now he thinks maybe he was born to perform.”

There’s no shortage of great performances in Dracula, and most everyone involved has to perform in both musical and theatrical capacities. But it’s the music that helps convey the drama and emotions, whether it be through seriously psychedelic scenes or funk-laden numbers with a sense of humor.

“My inspiration grew out of my love for Jesus Christ Superstar and putting this group together to do that,” says Thompson. “I pretty much hate most modern music that comes out and the ’70s are definitely my favorite, so I was thinking of Alice Cooper, Rainbow, Deep Purple, Thin Lizzy. I just wanted a classic rock opera and this has turned out to be better than I imagined.”

And while the first act is dominated by the ominous sense of Jonathan Harker’s impending doom after arriving at Dracula’s castle, the second act, with it’s Gwar-like gore and lighthearted songs, really delves into the comedic value of it all.

“If you don’t give them a release valve and give them something to laugh at, they’re going to start laughing at stuff they’re not supposed to laugh at,” says Morton. “So these songs that, when I originally heard them I was like, ‘What the fuck is this?’, they have to happen because it helps the flow of everything. Between all the horror, you’ve got to give them some comic relief.”

Ledfoot Messiah’s Jeff Langston as Van Helsing (photo by Yvonne Boyd)

“I’ve never seen Dracula done without all this serious stuff,” says Welborn. “It’s almost never funny, and that’s why I don’t think I’ve ever seen one that I loved. I love the [Francis Ford] Coppola movie in it’s own way and I love Lugosi’s movie and some of the old ones, but you begin to laugh at things because it’s just kind of absurd. Every Dracula I’ve ever seen on stage, I’ve absolutely hated. The first time I heard we were going to do this, I was like, ‘Wow! OK. That’s a challenge in and of itself because it’s always so [romanticized].’ Then these guys start telling me he’s a monster and that’s it, and I began to think that gives humanity to everybody else around him.”

“The really great thing about this show is it’s not just another musical or another play or another rock show,” says Jessika Cutts, who plays Lucy Westerna and one of Dracula’s brides. “It’s got the intelligence and finesse of an opera, then it has this careless fun you have when you go to see a rock concert, mixed with all these spectacular effects.”

The Orchestra has big plans for Dracula once the coffin closes on this initial run. Welborn has already been talking to his agents and managers about possibly staging it in New York, Thompson hopes to properly record the score in a studio for a future soundtrack release and there are premonitions of taking the show on the road, or even overseas, if the opportunity arises.

“My whole life I feel like I’ve been gearing up to this,” says Morton. “I’ve been obsessed with [Dracula] since I was three years old. Jesus Christ Superstar is a great rock opera, but I think Rob has written a better rock opera and if the right people get ahold of this and it gets out, people will see that it’s really something special.”

For more information, go to www.7stages.org/dracula.

Cirque du Soleil immortalizes Michael Jackson with music, theatrics

 

 

 

As is the case with any significant artist or musician, the spirit often lives on long after the person is no longer with us through the music and images he leaves behind. And when you’re talking about someone as eclectic as Michael Jackson, you should expect nothing less for his remembrance than the elaborate costumes and unique circus performers of Cirque du Soleil. Having started in Cirque’s home town of Montreal last October, Michael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour features MJ favorites like “Beat It,” “Ben” and “Man in the Mirror” while Cirque dancers, aerialists and acrobats add to the costumed spectacle seen in his iconic videos. Having performed in more than 60 North American cities since October, the tour continues through August before heading to Europe for the rest of the year. With a three-night stand in Atlanta starting tonight, tour spokesperson Laura Silverman talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about The Immortal Tour‘s spectacle.

This isn’t Cirque du Soleil’s first show based on a particular pop musician. For those of us who have yet to see MJ, how does it compare to other Cirque du Soleil performances?

Aerialists perform to “I Just Can’t Stop Loving You” in “Michael Jackson: The Immortal Tour” (photo courtesy OSA Images)

This show is much different from any other Cirque du Soleil show, including the Beatles and Elvis shows. It’s very much Cirque du Soleil meets rock/pop concert whereas the other shows are much more theatrical. This one really feels like you’re at a Michael Jackson concert. It’s taking Cirque du Soleil elements that people know the company for – contortionists, aerials, acrobatics and all of that – and pairing it with Michael Jackson’s music, his iconic dance moves and the flashy costumes that both Michael Jackson and Cirque du Soleil are known for. So it really has a high-energy concert feel to it as opposed to it being a theatrical show.

Was Michael Jackson creatively involved with the show before he passed away?

Unfortunately this specific project didn’t come about until after his passing, but he was a fan of Cirque du Soleil. He saw one of the very first big top shows in Santa Monica in the 1980s and he visited our international headquarters in Montreal in 2004. So there had always been a mutual respect between Cirque du Soleil and Michael Jackson. Cirque du Soleil is always trying to outdo itself coming up with new ideas for its shows and costumes and technology, and Michael Jackson was the same way. He was always thinking ahead of the curve, always coming up with ideas for things you couldn’t even do yet. In that respect, I think that partnership was natural.

Since the focus of this show is on the music and you said it is more like a rock concert than a typical Cirque du Soleil show, are most of the performers dancers or does it have the different types of performers we might see at any other Cirque du Soleil show?

A somewhat macabre seen from Cirque du Soleil’s “Michael Jackson: The Immortal Tour” (photo courtesy OSA Images)

We have a great mix. There are 61 total artists in our show, so that breaks down to about 12 musicians, 26 acrobats and 23 dancers. We have our duo aerial artists, a man and woman swinging and flying together in the air; we have a contortion act; and there’s a pole dancer act and she’s a two-time world champion in pole dancing, so she’s just phenomenal. There’s a Japanese acrobatic team that does a really amazing number to “Sream.” And there’s aerial stuff interjected into the dance numbers, too. So for “Thriller,” for example, you’re going to see our dancers doing the signature “Thriller” moves that most people will recognize, but you’re also going to see our acrobats flying through the air.

Speaking of “Thriller,” is the show a collection of interpretations of his songs and videos or is it more trying to capture the overall spirit of Michael Jackson, or maybe a little bit of both?

It’s definitely a little bit of both. The idea of the show is to pay tribute and celebrate everything that Michael Jackson left to us, from his music, his voice, his dance moves, his costumes, his messages and the overall idea of his spirit. So in the numbers where there are iconic Michael Jackson moves or costumes, we’ve paired those with Cirque du Soleil. So with “Thriller,” there are not only werewolves and zombies, but our artists add mummy costumes to the “Thriller” dance and we also add acrobatics to that. And with “Smooth Criminal,” for example, you’re going to see that iconic lean move, but we have pyrotechnics involved in the number. It was easy to coordinate this because there were a ton of choreographers that worked on the show, many of whom had actually worked with Michael Jackson for many years. So they were able to take moves that Michael Jackson was known for and sort of elaborate on that.

Has this show changed or evolved very much since it started last fall?

Cirque du Soleil recreates the “Smooth Criminal” lean in “Michael Jackson: The Immortal Tour” (photo courtesy OSA Images)

With any Cirque show we’re always working to make things better and evolve it as necessary. Nothing has changed in the show, but we always consider our projects sort of a work in progress and tweak things to make it the best it can be.

Once this tour wraps up in Europe next year, are there plans to do another Michael Jackson show that might incorporate some of his other songs?

There’s nothing like that planned for this show, but there is a completely different show planned to open in Vegas next year. But I’m not sure if that one will include different songs. It will be at Mandalay Bay sometime next year.

For more information, go to www.cirquedusoleil.com/en/show/michael-jackson-tour.

Paul Zaloom makes fun of white people in “White Like Me”

Paul Zaloom is best known for his portrayal of Beakman on the comically educational children’s show Beakman’s World. But Zaloom has also established a career on smaller stages with comical puppet shows that address political fears and social anxieties in insightfully funny ways. The most recent addition to his puppet show list is White Like Me: A Honky-Dory Puppet Show, which recently debuted in Vermont and Washington, D.C. before arriving at Atlanta’s Center for Puppetry Arts April 20-22. As he prepares for these shows, Zaloom talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about using junk as puppets, touring the world as Beakman and finding humor in otherwise serious subjects.

A border control agent kicks illegal aliens out of Arizona in "White Like Me." Photo courtesy Paul Zaloom

This is a very new puppet production for you. What can you tell me about it now that you are touring with it?

It is, indeed, brand new. Hot spanking fresh out of the comedy puppetry oven, so to speak. It was inspired by the ludicrous idea of having a show about being Anglo-Saxon – being white, that is. It involves two kinds of puppetry. Toy theater is like a miniature theater that’s projected in high definition on the large screen. What’s funny is I use toys, tools, appliances, junk, tchotchkes and different knick-knacks and crap that animate as puppets in this little play about being Caucasian. All this crap actually looks fabulous in HiDef, it looks just amazing. It’s kind of amazing that you can take this shit and make it look fantastic and cinematic. The proscenium is 16:9, which is the HiDef aspect ratio. So the projection fits right within the bounds of the proscenium.

You often use found objects and non-traditional items in your puppetry. Do you have an assortment of objects you bring with you for this show or do you work with what each venue has?

I bring all the crap with me. It’s all rigged in such a way that it can do the necessary gags. Like I have a dude who needs his arm to jiggle and I have a line and handle attached to that. If I just found stuff on the road, it wouldn’t have the same fabulous cheap production values, which is oxymoronic. With an emphasis on the moronic. Oxymoronic probably means “really clean moron.”

The last show of yours I saw was The Mother of All Enemies, which was mostly shadow puppets. How does this show compare to that one?

It’s probably even more fast paced and in a certain sense it’s more surreal, it’s less literal. The jokes come really fast in this particular one. There’s a lot of sight gags and visuals, playing with scale, there’s some improv if something goes wrong. If there’s a slip of the tongue, I like to take advantage of it and improv. I’m also doing a ventriloquist introduction. I have a ventriloquist dummy, a real old-school dummy, and basically what happens is he’s been packed in a box for 50 years and I take him out and hint him to what has changed in the past 50 years since he’s been in the box. It falls into a conversation about race. So the whole thing is kind of a comedy

Paul Zaloom and his ventriloquist dummy Butch Manly wrangle over race and ethnic identity in "White Like Me." Photo courtesy Paul Zaloom.

about something very serious. The motivation is the fact that Caucasian’s are going to be a minority in 2042 in the United States. So that’s kind of the tent pole this whole thing is built on. What kind of anxiety do we have about that? I think it’s hysterical that white people are going to be in the minority. The tables turn and how are we going to respond? Are we going to dig in and flip out or are we going to be copacetic and accept the inevitable? What’s interesting to me is the comedy about Caucasian anxiety. The purpose of the show is to get people to laugh their asses off about something that’s actually kind of serious. But there’s no message or anything like that.

You also still do the Beakman Live! tours. How often do you do that?

As often as I get the gigs. I know that sounds ridiculous. I’m touring with a new show called Beakman on the Brain and it’s about neuroscience for 6-to-12-year-olds. I’m going to Qatar and Brazil with that show, which I’m looking forward to. That’s a comedy about serious stuff, too. Neuroscience is serious and complicated stuff, but it’s kind of a goofy show that introduces kids to those concepts.

And in both cases you’re using comedy to make people think about things in different ways.

Exactly. The possibility of comedy is to be able to look at things in a different way. It’s like having your mind expanded in a fun way.

A lot of your shows, this one included, involve political and social ideas. Even though there are all sorts of puppet shows that deal with different subjects, a lot of people still view puppetry as a children’s art form. How do you think puppetry mixes with these more serious issues?

Puppetry has traditionally been an art form for both adults and children. It’s also traditionally been subversive because with an oppressive government, if an actor says something directly you can get into trouble. But if you mediate it through a gibbling doll, the authorities are stupid enough to think that’s OK because it’s not an actor saying it, it’s a doll. There’s a great tradition of political satire and comedy with puppets. It’s only recently that the dominant cultural application has been that it’s kids’ entertainment. But that’s changing in part because of the Center promoting puppetry as an adult thing.

We’re used to 3-D entertainment and million dollar movies, but puppetry’s kind of a return to basics. Audiences really like seeing a bunch of crap gibbled around because it’s sort of refreshing without all the hyper technology and the glossy, well-buffed [stuff] as opposed to the on-the-spot, in-the-moment, goofy, lo-tech charm of it. My shows are relentlessly lo-tech despite the video projection.

Where does White Like Me go next and what do you have going on after that?

I’m going to New York City to do three weeks at Dixon Place starting May 25. I’m taking Beakman to Brasil in June and August and Qatar in November. I’m working on some art projects. One of the things I do is take thrift shop paintings and alter them to my specifications. I don’t paint, I hire a guy named Gregg Gibbs to paint for me. But I just come up with these gags like I found a picture of a building and he painted a whole bunch of clowns in it killing each other, shooting at each other and all this clown mayhem. That one’s called “Never Rent to Show People.” You can’t rent to show people because we’re freaking crazy. There’s about 25 of those and I’d like to make some more of those. I have one where there’s a couple of mountain lions on a cliff, and it’s kind of a corny Western painting. It’s been changed where you see just the fingertips of some guy over the edge of the cliff and his backpack’s there and the cats have blood on their mouths and it’s called “Cat Chow.” That’s just a hobby, but I also want to branch out into making prints myself and doing sculpture just for the hell of it.

For more information, go to www.zaloom.com.

Prof. Morte brings monsters to the wrestling ring

For the past few years, Professor Morte has been the “ghost host with the most” at the Plaza Theatre‘s Silver Scream SpookShow, where he puts on a classic horror show with go-go dancers, screenings (or as he would say, “screamings”) of retro horror films and appearances by a cast of kooky characters. Last October, he took his monsters to the Atlanta Zombie Apocalypse to entertain the lines of people waiting to tour the facilities of the controversial Centers for Disease Development with the debut of Monstrosity Championship Wrestling. Little has been heard from MCW since those two shows, but Morte is ready to unleash the monsters again to help Wrestling with Pop Culture celebrate its first anniversary. As he plots this ultimate monster battle, he steps away from his lab to talk to Wrestling with Pop Culture about MCW’s return.

Hello again, Professor Morte.

Yes, it’s Professor Morte alive in the undead flesh!

As we’ve discussed on Georgia Wrestling Now over the past few weeks, Monstrosity Championship Wrestling debuted last October at the Atlanta Zombie Apocalypse and the Wrestling with Pop Culture Anniversary Party will be the first show you’ve done since then.

It’s the first indoor show for Monstrosity Championship Wrestling, so we don’t have to worry about lightning strikes.

Well lightning might help with some of the monsters.

Yeah. With some of the monsters we might have to bring the Tesla coils out there to jump start these guys.

A lot of people  may not have seen those shows in October…

Well shame on them! It was the greatest wrestling show that was ever put on. We had Frankenstein’s monster fighting the Wolf Man, we had a big all out zombie battle and it was pretty fangtastic. Those guys were really ripping each other’s arms off and beating each other over the head with them and stuff.

Will there be beheadings at the Monstrosity Championship Wrestling matches?!

Which monsters are on the card for tomorrow night’s show?

It’s a big surprise to everybody involved. We’re going to figure out tonight exactly what is going on tomorrow and which monsters I’ve got to let out of the cage and which monsters I’ve got to kind of spruce up in the lab so they’re presentable. And we’ll figure out what we’re going to do about some of these Platinum Championship Wrestling guys showing up and wanting to cause trouble at the MCW show.

Right. Of course Stephen Platinum very politely issued that challenge a few weeks ago on Georgia Wrestling Now. PCW will be coming over after the Atlanta Film Festival screening of The Booker and I guess they want to mix it up with the monsters a little bit.

Yes. It should be very interesting. I’ve been looking forward to this for about ten years now, so I’m really excited to finally be bringing Monstrosity Championship Wrestling to the Masquerade.

And I’m excited to have it be part of the Wrestling with Pop Culture Anniversary Party.

Great. And congratulations on your first year and all the things you’ve been doing. This show you’re putting on is like a variety show of great things that go on in Atlanta. You really pulled a lot of stuff together. You’ve got my favorite chocolate company with those spooky chocolates from Chocolate F/X and a lot of fun stuff going on at this show. You’ve really worked hard and the sponsors are fangtastic, so I’m looking forward to having an all around good time. Even if you don’t like wrestling, there are monsters! That’s reason enough to come to this show. You’ve got rock ‘n’ roll, you’ve got all kinds of stuff.

Even though it’s an all ages show, Neon Armour will also be doing body painting. So there might even be some boobies.

Oh, boobies! Well, children love boobies. And I love children. They’re delicious. I mean delightful. Children are delightful. So if they want to bring some children I’m sure the children will be very entertained with boobies, too.

With MCW, PCW, the bands, body painting and everything else, there’s sure to be a lot of stimulation at this show.

Over stimulation for some people. I’m really looking forward to it. We’re going to put on one yell of a show tomorrow night. I’m looking forward to scaring the yell out of you and the rest of the people that are attending so they can see just what is going to happen tomorrow night at the Masquerade! Muah ha ha!