Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Christine Jorgensen Reveals

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Date premiered
  
2005

Genre
  
Play

Date closed
  
18 January 2006

Producers
  
Sandra Garner, Greg Tully

Original language
  
English

Date opened
  
29 December 2005

Director
  
Josh Hecht

Christine Jorgensen Reveals

Characters
  
Christine Jorgensen and Nipsey Russell

Place premiered
  
Edinburgh, Scotland: Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Awards
  
Drama Desk Award for Unique Theatrical Experience

Nominations
  
GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding New York Theater: Off-Off Broadway

Producing companies
  
Sterling Bridge Productions, Highbrow Entertainment, The Splinter Group

Christine jorgensen reveals


Christine Jorgensen Reveals is a theatrical show that depicts the 1957 one-hour interview of Christine Jorgensen by Nipsey Russell. This was her only recorded interview. The show begins with a brief documentary. Then, Jorgensen's entire interview is lip synched by the two actors. The show received a generally positive critical response and earned the 2006 Drama Desk Award for Unique Theatrical Experience. It has been mounted several times since its 2005 Off-Broadway production.

Contents

Background

At the time of the interview, Jorgensen, the first celebrity transsexual, was considered to be the most famous woman in the world, according to critics from The Guardian and Broadwayworld.com and one of the most famous according to other sources, such as The New York Times. On December 1, 1952, the New York Daily News ran a front-page story of her operation, and her February 12, 1953, return to the United States at Idlewild Airport was the largest press gathering in history to that date. In 1952, she had gone to Denmark to have sex reassignment surgery and hormone treatment to change sexes at a Copenhagen hospital. In the 1957, the interview of Jorgensen by comedian Nipsy Russell was produced as a LP record.

Bradford Louryk stumbled across the LP in a used record store. He recalled, "there she was in that green dress on this great cover, which made me want to pick it up. And written on the cover were all these leading questions, like 'is she a woman?' 'can she have children?' and things like that." He created the show and finally got it produced a few years later.

Description

The show begins with a brief documentary. Then, Jorgensen's entire interview is lip synched by the two actors, who "at the same time [provide a] visual counterpart to every phoneme, snort, scratch, or hesitation". The Jorgensen character sits next to a television that plays a recording of the interview, with a microphone hanging overhead, as in a TV studio. Jorgenson is portrayed as "beautiful, intelligent and media-savvy". Nipsey Russell, an African American, is played "in prerecorded video form" by a white actor. The young Russell is depicted in the entertainment as a credulous, star-struck interviewer who asks "oft naïve or prurient questions". At times he is also "appalled" and "seductive". The interview runs about 50 minutes.

Performance history

The show premiered in New York City in 2005 at the 59E59 Theaters, Dodger Stages and the Edinburgh Festival, before a 2006 engagement on Theatre Row. It starred Bradford Louryk as Jorgensen, was directed by Josh Hecht and produced by Greg Tully. Russell was portrayed by the white actor Rob Grace. It was then produced in Boston, a week after closing in New York, at the Calderwood Pavilion. Subsequently, the show went to Dublin before returning to New York City in 2009 for a return engagement at The Lion Theatre on 42nd Street, again starring Louryk.

Critical response

The show "makes compelling viewing" and is "stylishly staged", according to The Guardian. Critics praised Louryk's performance in the title role. The Boston Phoenix reviewer called the show "something between a docudrama, an elegant drag show, and a sedentary ballet ... what Christine Jorgensen reveals is just how much of a performance traditional gender specificity can be." The New York Times regarded the performance as "meticulous", commenting that the title character "articulates ideas about gender and homosexuality that sound well ahead of her time, while also projecting a demure model of femininity that seems distinctly of the 1950's." Nytheatre.com commented that the entertainment "is a grand example of the impact performance can have in taking a single event in time and memorializing it in the best and strongest way possible, enabling that moment to survive and continue to affect the world in new and different ways around each corner."

Awards and nominations

Other accolades include The Hilton Edwards Award for Outstanding Production, The Micheal MacLiammoir Award for Best Actor, and an IRNE Award nomination for Best Play.

References

Christine Jorgensen Reveals Wikipedia