His breakthrough play Camille is included in this text. Camille was his first major success. Written in 1975, Camille is a loving adaptation of Alexander Dumas' Camille. Ludlam's Camille follows the story of the original very closely, but he adds modern touches to make the humour more contemporary. For anyone who is not familiar with the story of Camille, the action takes place in Paris around 1865. Marguerite Gautier is the Lady of the Camillias. In the opening of the play, we find out that Marguerite has Tuberculosis, and has only a few months to live. She lives her life as a kept woman, allowing anyone to pay for her living expenses for a couple of nights of pleasure. Instead of listening to her doctor and taking care of herself, she drinks and throws lavish parties. Everything goes well until she falls in love with a penniless young man. Camille is a wonderful camp melodrama with some beautifully touching moments. The script reads like poetry, I would recommend Camille to anyone.
Also included in this volume is The Mystery of Irma Vepp, Ludlam's biggest success. Irma Vepp is a gothic horror play set in a dark old castle crawling with every classic monster one could imagine. There are wherewolves, mummies, and of course vampires. The play is cast with only two actors, requiring endless amounts of quick changes. The play is fast, furious and a pleasure to read.
Ludlam's career spanned only about 20 years, but there has been a resurging interest in his work lately. This book is perfect for anyone interested in the history of theater or gay writers of the twentieth century.
List price: $16.95 (that's 30% off!)
List price: $29.95 (that's 30% off!)
The design, which eschews traditional punctutation such as indented paragraphs, is difficult and unpleasant to read, because it doesn't allow the narrtive to flow. Much of the writing is repetitous, as Ludlam's passive-agressive directing technique is detailed again and again for each show.
But the biggest flaw is a lack of an epilogue to update the lives of the book's vivid "supporting cast" (Black-Eyed Susan, Lola Pashalinski, Bill Vehr, the late Christopher Scott, and most important, Everett Quinton, who became an icon of the off-off-Broadway movement himself with his later perfomances in Irma Vep and Camille. Are they still performing or are they out of the business? (P.S. Pashalinski was just in a theatre piece about the changing lives of actresses.) I know that the book is about the life of Ludlam and not the ridiculous theatre movement in general, but this reader felt cheated by the amount of time spent getting to know Ludlam's actors in print, only to have them disappear at the book's final scene, the memorial performance.
Also needed is information about about the few shows that the Ridiculous produced after Ludlam. It would be fascinating to know just how many performances of Irma Vep (one of the most wonderful nights in New York theatre this show biz addict ever experienced) are given today, or if Ludlam's Die Fledermaus is still in the rep at Santa Fe or elsewhere. These are big questions, because Ludlam has been dead for fifteen years, and his light is dimming, in spite of his influence on Tony Kushner (and who is performing his epic Angels in America lately, much less Ludlam's Turds in Hell?) and Charles Busch (who had his biggest success in years as the author of a mainstream comedy where he didn't even perform, much less wear fish nets).
And finally, like many biographies, you end up wondering why someone didn't haul off and smack Ludlam--he's that exasperating, and ultimately, not the kind of person you want to may want to spend a lot of time with. But in spite of the book's flaws, I am grateful to Kaufman for catching the excitement of Ludlam's life and times.
One of the sources of irritation while reading the book is that the author refers too many times to the libraries on the CD rather than the generic functions available in Emacs itself. However, this does get the reader accustomed to the idea of customizing Emacs, which is what makes Emacs such a powerful editor. There is also a introductory chapter on Lisp, which should suffice most beginners.
That's not, however, to say he was a benevolent gay genius. On the contrary: secondhand stories about his professional habits and beliefs are enough to curl the toes of even the cruelest tyrant. That, of course, is why this book is SO enjoyable--and important. Part autobiography, part manifesto, it explains Ludlam's ideas about art, life, and theatre in his own words. And while it's certainly polemic at times, it's very enlightening and always entertaining.