Tag Archives: 7 Stages

Krampus creeps into Christmas this year more than ever

Everyone knows that Santa Claus delivers toys to all the good girls and boys and Rudolph’s red nose made him a misfit until it helped save Christmas. But for all its gay apparel and good cheer, Christmas has always had its share of villains, too. Ebenezer Scrooge was a lost soul until a few ghosts led him to redemption. Christmas’ biggest heel the Grinch wanted to steal Christmas away from Whoville, only to make a turn for the better when they welcomed him into their holiday celebration. But in recent years a cloven-hooved creature from Germanic folklore known as the Krampus has crept to the forefront of many Christmas celebrations. Despite his demonic appearance, Krampus is kind of like one of Santa’s helpers. While Santa rewards well-behaved children, Krampus punishes the bad kids by kidnapping and beating them. Events such as the Krampus Krawl (in which numerous costumed Krampii go barhopping through Little Five Points on Dec. 6, beginning at Manuel’s Tavern at 9 p.m. and ending at Java Lords) and Krampus Xmas (an absurd and depraved musical taking place at 7 Stages Dec. 18-20) have become hilarious annual holiday hooplas. But this year more than ever the Krampus has been creeping into my holidays in more ways than ever. In hopes of avoiding the wrong end of his switch, Wrestling with Pop Culture offers a few Krampus creations to get you into a different type of holiday spirit.

Krampus print by Artetak

Krampus by ArtetakUnder her Artetak moniker, Kate Logan takes horror movie icons, comic book characters and mythological creatures and gives them a cute, yet somewhat sinister, makeover. In some cases, such as with Ash from Army of Darkness and House of 1000 Corpses‘ Captain Spaulding, that means changing the character’s gender. So it’s quite all right to behave badly in hopes that this pale-skinned, leather-and-spikes clad Krampus comes to visit on Christmas. Or, as Logan says, “Nothing is more metal than a demon that kidnaps and beats children for being naughty when they’re expecting St. Nicholas.”

www.artetak.org

artetak.storenvy.com

Grimm Fairy Tales 2014 Holiday Edition 

Grimm Fairy Tales 2014 Holiday EditionZenescope Entertainment‘s Grimm Fairy Tales reimagines the morality tales of the Grimm brothers in a contemporary setting, replacing damsels in distress and knights in shining armor with buxom butt-kickers and their buff male counterparts. In this year’s holiday special, the Highborns put up Christmas decorations at Arcane Acre while learning of the Krampus’ origin. Meanwhile, Sela secretly protects the Highborns when she sneaks away to do battle with the Krampus. This story is an interesting take on the Krampus legend, ending in a cliffhanger that will conclude in next year’s Christmas issue.

www.zenescope.com

 

 

Gruss von Krampus by Noel Saabye

Gruss von Krampus by Noel SaabyeNoel Saabye specializes in sexy pin-up interpretations of Nosferatu, the Creature from the Black Lagoon, Mars Attacks! Martians and other monsters. “Obviously I fit in really well with Halloween stuff,” he says. “So I was trying to come up with a Christmas bad guy that I could make into a pin-up girl.” The Grinch was the first thing that came to mind, then he remembered Krampus. “I had never seen a female Krampus drawing before, so I found a bunch of Krampus art and took bits and pieces of the clothing, features, skin tones and made it work within the style I’ve been drawing.”

www.noelsaabye.com

www.etsy.com/shop/NoelSaabye

 

 

Krampus mask and magnets by BonesArt

Krampus mask by BonesArtAndrew Bones of BonesArt creates monstrous sculptures of Predators, Cthulu, Jason Vorhees and other monsters that he then turns into small magnets, medium-sized wall plaques or full-sized masks. In addition to making Jack Skellington Christmas ornaments, Bones has also created Krampus magnets in various colors and grotesque Krampus masks ready to devour the worst-behaved children. “I feel like he is the perfect character for me to sculpt and fits well in my body of work due to his demonic appearance,” says Bones. Bones will have these and other creature creations at the Jekyll Island Comic Con on Dec. 13 and at Crafty Feast on Dec. 14.

www.etsy.com/shop/bonesart

A holiday deal with the devil? It wouldn’t be a “Krampus Xmas” without it

Krampus XmasChristmas is almost here, which can only mean one thing when it comes to 7 Stages. That’s right, it’s Krampus time! For those who aren’t familiar this demonic figure from German folklore, he’s Santa’s helper, of sorts. Only instead of simply leaving naughty kids off the gift list, he beats them with sticks and steals them away in a basket! But when the Little 5 Points Rockstar Orchestra joins forces with Syrens of the South, the 7 Stages Handbell Choir and various other creative groups that dabble in the darker arts to bring the fourth installment of the Krampus Xmas Dec. 19-21, it will be a devilishly different take on the story you may have seen over the past three years. And before the Krampus creeps onto the stage, Wrestling with Pop Culture talks to script writers Andrew McGill and James McDougald about how surprisingly nice this otherwise naughty holiday tale will be this year.

This Krampus show has an elaborately varied cast each year. What are your roles in this year’s show?

McGill: We are the co-writers. We do an original script every year. This year I am fortunate enough to star in it and also direct it.

McDougald: He’s really pulling double duty on this one.

McGill: Quadruple.

McDougald: Triple.

McGill: Quadruple. That’s more fun.

McDougald: The process this year has been phenomenal. We have such a long history working with this show at 7 Stages, going back seven or eight years now…

Krampus XmasMcGill: Oh, five years. But it started with 7 Stages coming to Rob Thompson, owner of Java Lords, to do Jesus Christ Superstar. After that, at least once a year there’s been a collaboration between Java Lords and 7 Stages. Christmas with the Devil was our first Christmas show and that was a combination of an original show about Santa getting crucified and an adaptation of Iron Maiden‘s The Number of the Beast. After that, we learned about this very bizarre Christmas character named Krampus. We took that and put together a show the next year about him. Then it was just, like, “Well, obviously we need to do that every year.” But we’re very adamant about not doing the same Christmas show every year. It’s very important to us. A lot of theater companies run a Christmas show for two months and it’s their money maker; they can just pull the same actors and do the same show they’ve done all their lives. So it’s not hard.

McDougald: This is a three-day rock concert event that also acts as a fund raiser for 7 Stages.

McGill: When people come to see it, they expect to see the same people and the same music, for the most part. But it’s crazy different every year.

McDougald: This year it has kind of acted as a response to a number of things we’ve seen on stage this past year, as well as to help the show grow. In the past, we’ve just kept making it more and more violent and bleak. This year we decided to keep a little bit of the cynicism because it’s funny, but I wound up seeing quite possibly the worst show this past year, which was a production of Doctor Faustus. I went, “Oh, this would be so funny if the guy was just aware of the things associated with making a deal with the devil.” So I brought the idea to Andrew about two months ago and I went, “We need to scrap pretty much everything we’ve done. It’s going to be Faust this year. You’re going to be Faust.” Slowly the pieces started falling into place for everybody else.We decided that Satan would have a daughter this time around, the joke being that God put his kid up for adoption, basically. [Satan] decides to raise Damian on his own, so she’s 14 or 15, really coming of age, and he’s trying to teach her what it is to be the Antichrist.

McGill: That was actually in our original script. So when we decided to introduce this character of Faust, he obviously summons the Devil. The problem is that the Devil is too busy raising his teenage daughter and they’re at the mall. So he sends Krampus, who is a newly acquired demon because Santa works at the mall, as well. All of the normal characters are trapped in the mall and are trying to do Christmas. So we have Krampus and this new character of Faust basically trying to get all these people back to them so they can find the meaning of Christmas. But it never works out, then there’s a dance party.

Is Rob reprising his role as Satan this year?

Krampus XmasMcDougald: He’s absolutely brilliant. This year he has a lot more to play with because in the past he’s primarily been focused on the music. The band has incorporated more singers so he can be more in the show. So we get to see a little more of his character. We’ve gotten pieces of who he is over the past five years, so he’s like a rock star party god. But when we meet him this year he’s in a slightly more domesticated place and he’s really rediscovering how awesome it is being the Lord of Darkness.

McGill: It’s just funny to put Satan in a place where he is horribly uncomfortable. There’s a line where he literally talks to God and says, “You will never know the joys of fatherhood.”

In a Christmas show?

McGill: Yep. We wanted to take all these characters and have the show, but not pound down the Christmas message. It’s obviously Christmas. There’s nothing you can do about that, so we might as well have a show that has all these familiar characters people have seen over the last four years. At the end of the day, it has a good message, which is, “Life is meaningless. Might as well party.”

McDougald: That’s what Christmas is about. In the past it was the last festival before the lights were turned off until spring. Yes, enjoy things to the fullest. Enjoy the season. But also don’t forget about family. All the scenes with Satan and Damian have this nice sweetness to them.

McGill: Honestly, it’s really weird to hear Rob come at these lines with this little girl, being like, “I’m so proud of you,” while in full Satan makeup with horns. To hear him be tender inside that character is really weird.

McDougald: And you’ve got to feel bad for the guy because number two down in Hell is trying to stage a revolution because [Satan] hasn’t done anything in 14 years, and he’s just trying to maintain his family and career.

McGill: Then you’ve got this guy who’s literally performing every magical ritual ever, out of boredom, to get [the Devil] there. And the Devil’s like, “Ugh! This guy again? Send the Krampus. He doesn’t want that Krampus? Send him sexy Krampus.” Krampus comes and Faust is like, “No. I want something with tits to come and talk to me.” So Krampus goes back to the mall and tells the Devil, “This guy doesn’t want me.” So he gets transformed into a chick with tits. So it’s the same character, but with tits.

So we’ll see multiple versions of Krampus this year?

Krampus XmasMcDougald: We wanted to go sexy with it this year as opposed to just violence and poop humor. You’ll see the phenomenal work that Shane Morton has done for us in the past. You’ll see cameo appearances from past characters and costumes. There’s a very high respect for the way things have happened, but this time’s there’s more show.

McGill: We’re trying to move away from trying to take the songs we’ve done over the last couple years and introduce them into the show. There’s only so many ways you can do some of these songs and so many ways you can beat up Santa Claus. Trust me, I’ve been Santa Claus three times and have been beaten up three times! We just wanted to go somewhere else with that and I think we’ve found subtle ways of having the songs be in between scenes where the songs are vignettes. You’ve got Faust trying to be evil and Satan desperately trying not to be good. Then they meet at a point and decide they are both OK.

McDougald: We have the Baphomettes coming back this year, Shane’s creature creations, which are awesome, and the Little 5 Points Rockstar Orchestra is awesome.

McGill: We have Prentice Suspensions coming back. We have them every year because there’s nothing crazier to look at on stage than someone hooking themselves in their flesh, then getting hung 20 feet in the air. And they do it because they love that. The looks on their faces when they’re swinging in the air suspended from hooks through their flesh is honestly fascinating and beautiful. It’s crazy.

http://www.7stages.org/special-events/krampus-xmas/

“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.