Jump directly to the page contents
Filmstill from HAIRSPRAY: A woman with tousled blonde hair and a yellow pearl necklace looks to the left and stands in a room with eye-catching wallpaper and posters in the background.

Sat 31.08.
19:30

  • Director

    John Waters

  • USA / 1988
    92 min. / 35 mm / Original version with German subtitles

  • with

    Sonny Bono, Ruth Brown, Divine, Mink Stole

  • Original language

    English

  • Cinema

    Arsenal 1

    zu dem Kalender

Written as a parody of a pop music program he had seen on television in his youth, HAIRSPRAY was John Waters' first film for a large audience. The comedy about a dance competition in Baltimore in 1962, where music by African-Americans is played but non-whites are refused entry, combines wry humor, the music and pastel colors of the time, anti-racist commitment and sympathy for people who do not conform to the norms of mainstream society. Debbie Harry plays Velma von Tussle, "a racist, power-hungry mother" (DH) with a beehive who wants to make a star out of her daughter, who conforms to normative ideals of beauty, and resorts to unfair means to boot out her biggest rival, a chubby outsider. The cast united Sonny Bono and the queen of R&B, Ruth Brown, with John Waters regulars Mink Stole and his muse Divine in a double role. (hjf)

Further Dates

Funded by:

  • Logo Minister of State for Culture and the Media