The colorful life story of an American Christian superstar who became a gay icon because of her empathy for people with HIV/AIDS is the subject of a new stage musical with a score by Elton John.
Rehearsals began this week for the world premiere of Tammy Faye at the Almeida theater in north London in October. As well as Elton John’s music, the show’s script was written by James Graham, the author of the television dramas Sherwood and Brexit: The Uncivil War, and the play Ink.
The show is, said the Almeida, a “testament of faith, resilience and the temptations of success.”
Photo: AP
Tammy Faye Messner, who died in 2007, built a Christian television empire with her first husband, Jim Bakker. With her elaborate hairstyles, heavy makeup and warm personality, Tammy Faye was a hit. At its height, the couple’s flagship program, The PTL Club (short for praise the lord), was seen in more than 13m households across the US.
The couple, who met at bible college, also created a hugely successful Christian theme park, Heritage USA, in South Carolina. In its peak years in the 1980s, it was the third most popular theme park in the world behind Disneyland and Disney World.
BIZARRE LIFE STORY
Photo: AP
Tammy Faye’s guileless persona and willingness to discuss subjects considered out of bounds by other Christian broadcasters won her a huge following. But it was acceptance of LGBT+ people, and her empathy for those facing illness and death as a result of the AIDS epidemic, that marked her out within a religious movement characterized by homophobia. In particular, her emotional 1985 television interview with Steve Pieters, an openly gay church pastor living with HIV, was a break with religious and political orthodoxy. At the time, some public figures were suggesting that AIDS was a divine punishment for homosexuality.
A few years later, Jim Bakker was jailed for fraud and conspiracy; he had also been accused of raping and paying off a church secretary, which he denied. Tammy Faye, who divorced Bakker while he was in prison, wrote three memoirs and continued to appear on television. Her last appearance, on the Larry King Show, was two days before she died of cancer at the age of 65.
“It was a bizarre, baroque, almost operatic life story,” said Rupert Goold, the Almeida’s artistic director who is directing the musical. “She’s at times kitsch, at times sentimental, but basically a very empathic figure.”
Photo: AFP
THEATRICAL WORLD
The world of televangelism, in particular the Bakkers’ show, was “a theatrical world” which lent itself to a musical comedy, he added. But there was a serious side, too.
“We’re in a really interesting time regarding faith and belief, with the repealing of Roe v Wade in various [US] states and the return of the idea of faith-based morality or legislation. There is talk that that may move towards gay marriage and parenting, and there’ll be a policing of civil liberties and people’s bodies. And it’s not without resonances over here.
“So although Tammy Faye is a historic story, and looks really at the birth of the prosperity gospel, it has something politically to say now.”
Elton John has written the scores for several musicals, including The Lion King and Billy Elliott.
“I think there’s quite a lot of faith music and church music influences in classic Elton John,” said Goold. “Tammy came to early fame in the 70s, and then became a different kind of public figure in the 80s and 90s. And the score in some ways traces Elton’s own musicality through those periods as well.”
The Eyes of Tammy Faye, a film starring Jessica Chastain, came out last autumn to mixed reviews and grossed just US$2.7 million at the box office.
The entire saga involving the Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) and its Chairman Ko Wen-je (柯文哲) continues to produce plot twists at such a rapid pace that fiction publishers would throw it out for being ridiculously improbable. This past week was particularly bizarre, but surprisingly the press has almost entirely ignored a big story that could have serious national security implications and instead focused on a series of salacious bombshell allegations. Ko is currently being held incommunicado by prosecutors while several criminal investigations are ongoing on allegations of bribery and stealing campaign funds. This last week for reasons unknown Ko completely shaved
The self-destructive protest vote in January that put the pro-People’s Republic of China (PRC) side in control of the legislature continues to be a gift that just keeps on giving to the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT). Last week legislation was introduced by KMT Legislator Weng Hsiao-lin (翁曉玲) that would amend Article 9-3 of the Act Governing Relations Between the People of the Taiwan Area and the Mainland Area (臺灣地區與大陸地區人民關係條例) to permit retired and serving (!) military personnel to participate in “united front” (統戰) activities. Since the purpose of those activities is to promote annexation of Taiwan to the PRC, legislators
Nov. 18 to Nov. 24 Led by a headman named Dika, 16 indigenous Siraya from Sinkan Village, in what is today’s Tainan, traveled to Japan and met with the shogun in the summer of 1627. They reportedly offered sovereignty to the emperor. This greatly alarmed the Dutch, who were allies of the village. They had set up headquarters on land purchased from the Sinkan two years earlier and protected the community from aggressive actions by their more powerful rivals from Mattau Village. The Dutch East India Company (VOC) had been embroiled in a bitter trade dispute with Japan, and they believed
Anyone who has been to Alishan (阿里山) is familiar with the railroad there: one line comes up from Chiayi City past the sacred tree site, while another line goes up to the sunrise viewing platform at Zhushan (祝山). Of course, as a center of logging operations for over 60 years, Alishan did have more rail lines in the past. Are any of these still around? Are they easily accessible? Are they worth visiting? The answer to all three of these questions is emphatically: Yes! One of these lines ran from Alishan all the way up to the base of Jade Mountain. Its