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"Dammit Janet" is a song/musical number in the original 1973 British musical stage production, The Rocky Horror Show as well as its 1975 film counterpart The Rocky Horror Picture Show, book, music and lyrics by Richard O'Brien, musical arrangements by Richard Hartley.
The Rocky Horror Picture Show is a 1975 independent [6] [7] musical comedy horror film produced by Lou Adler and Michael White, directed by Jim Sharman, and distributed by 20th Century Fox. The screenplay was written by Sharman and Richard O'Brien , who also played the supporting role Riff Raff.
In 1978, he began work on a script titled Rocky Horror Shows His Heels, [10] which found Frank and Rocky resurrected, Brad and Dr. Scott now lovers, and Janet pregnant with Frank's baby. Director Jim Sharman was resistant to revisit the material and Tim Curry had no desire to reprise the role of Frank, [ 11 ] but O'Brien had put some work into ...
'The Rocky Horror Picture Show' is notorious for gender-bending costumes. Here's why die-hard fans fear for its future amid drag bans. ... When "Frank" meets prudish newlyweds Brad and Janet ...
The Rocky Horror Show is a musical with music, lyrics and book by Richard O'Brien.A humorous tribute to various B movies associated with the science fiction and horror genres from the 1930s to the early 1960s, the musical tells the story of a newly engaged couple getting caught in a storm and coming to the home of a mad transvestite scientist, Dr Frank-N-Furter, unveiling his new creation ...
Curry returned to Rocky Horror as the Criminologist in a 2016 TV film remake and again as Dr. Frank-N-Furter in a 2020 reading in support of Joe Biden's presidential campaign. Related: Cross ...
Let's do the time warp again! Several decades have passed since the release of 1975's The Rocky Horror Picture Show, and original movie cast member Barry Bostwick is looking back on his experience ...
The album peaked at No. 49 on the Billboard 200 in 1978. [3] It reached No. 12 on the Australian albums chart [4] [5] and No. 11 on the New Zealand albums chart. [6] William Ruhlmann of AllMusic gave the album a retrospective star rating of five stars out of five and described it as the "definitive version of the [Rocky Horror] score". [7]