TImely Theater Recommendation: Bloody, Bloody Andrew Jackson
An entertaining preview of the 'Age of Trump' at the American Shakespeare Center in Staunton, VA?

Given the prominence of nationalist populism in this presidential election, the rock opera Bloody, Bloody Andrew Jackson is an appropriate artistic rendition of that notion. As it happens, my wife and I had the pleasure of seeing the American Shakespeare Center's high-energy production of the musical recently at the Blackfriars Playhouse in Staunton, Virginia. The show runs through November. We were quite amused by the fact that during the pre-show festivities the actors issued frequent warnings to the audience that the show is filled with f-bombs and other salty language. They weren't lying.
Here's how ASC characterizes the show:
A president for the people, by the people -- that's who Andrew Jackson believes he is. Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson careens through the life and career of the charismatic and controversial seventh president, complete with rock anthems, power ballads, and wily politicians. This unswerving look at American history (sort of) and one of its most infamous presidents will keep you singing along on the edge of your seat.
In any case, the opening number - Populism Yea Yea - put me immediately in mind of Donald Trump's electoral shenanigans. The song begins with feelings of rejection, but then:
But it's the early 19th century
And we're gonna take this country back
From people like us who
Don't just think about things
People who make things happen
Sometimes with guns
Sometimes with speeches too
And also other thingsRefrain: Populism, Yea Yea
This is the age of JacksonTake a stand against the elite
They don't care anything for us
And we will eat sweet democracy
And let them eat our dust
Eat our dust, eat our dustCause it's the early 19th century
We'll take the land back from the Indians
We'll take the land back from the French and Spanish
And other people in other European countries
And other countries too
And also other places
I'm pretty sure it's our land anywayRefrain: Populism, Yea Yea
This is the age of Jackson
Well, here's hoping that the early 21st century is not the age of Trump.
The musical is flawed (a lot of modern playwrights don't seem to know how to end their works satisfactorily), but the production at the American Shakespeare Center will keep you entertained.
In fact, the American Shakespeare Center puts on the best performances of the plays of Shakespeare and his contemporaries that I have ever seen (and I've seen a lot including the over-rated Royal Shakespeare Company). Go see Bloody, Bloody Andrew Jackson, but be sure to treat yourselves to the great pleasure of seeing their other excellent productions.
Disclosure: Pamela and I donate to ASC and we go see nearly everything they produce - although I am pretty sure that I don't need to ever see another production of The Taming of the Shrew.
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Sorry Bailey but I have already been to Staunton VA once too many times. Furthest I will venture down 81 is Harrisonburg.
IH: You could take Highway 11 - but by all means avoid Interstate 66.
I have to take rt. 66 every day. Its not fun v.v
I work in Staunton VA...
Well, here's hoping that the early 21st century is not the age of Trump.
Uh, no, it's going to be the age of Clinton(s).
DR: Age of Johnson/Weld?
I have $1000 that says "nope".
If only Arthur Schlesinger were around to see this.
What's Noel Coward, chopped liver?
No, Ron. I will not watch this shitty play.
B: OK, but do consider going to see their Shakespeare productions.
I don't like Jackson (except his skepticism about a national bank and his willingness to consider bank-related constitutional issues independently of the Supreme Court).
I suspect that this opera is a hit piece which would make me sympathetic to Jackson.
Why should I make myself sympathetic to Mr. Trail of Tears?
Let me know when they make an opera about this Jackson.
Oh, I'm glad he won the Battle of New Orleans.
Cue the inevitable "that battle was fought after the peace treaty, moron! It was useless!"
Problem is, the peace treaty didn't recognize the U.S. claim to the Louisiana Purchase, meaning that the British, if they'd driven the Americans out of New Orleans, could have handed it back to their ally Spain, and there would have been no breach of the treaty!
Then Brownie wouldn't have done a heckuva job.
You know what? Jackson ended central banking in this country for nearly a century. This country would be far worse off today if he weren't president.
That assumes that no one else would have done anything similar.
No one's done anything similar in all the fuckin' years since then.
Yes, "Trail of Tears," but Democrats continue to hold their Jefferson/Jackson day dinners. When will Hillary denounce these two slave-holding racists and genocidal maniac?
They've been renaming them lately.
put me immediately in mind of Donald Trump's electoral shenanigans
HAHAHAHAHA! YOU TELL THEM YOKELZ!
Why can't anything just be an opinion for its own sake?
I know. Based on its 2008 premier, it's clearly a criticism of the conditions that led to the election of Obama.
*premiere
I prefer "premier" - This musical RULES!
Bloody, Bloody Andrew Jackson
I'm not familiar with this particular Shakespeare work. It certainly isn't anywhere in my First Folio.
Was a previously unknown manuscript recently unearthed? Because that would probably be the literary discovery of the century!
DD: They also did the musical Return to the Forbidden Planet, but that's kind of a remake of The Tempest.
OT: Summer of Recovery VII!
WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - U.S. economic growth was a bit more sluggish than initially thought in the second quarter as businesses aggressively ran down stocks of unsold goods, offsetting a spurt in consumer spending.
Gross domestic product expanded at a 1.1 percent annual rate, the Commerce Department said on Friday in its second estimate of GDP. That was slightly down from the 1.2 percent rate reported last month.
The revision also reflected more imports than previously estimated as well as weak spending by state and local governments. The economy grew at a 0.8 percent pace in the first quarter. It grew 1.0 percent in the first half of 2016.
The revision to second-quarter GDP growth was in line with economists' expectations. The economy has struggled to regain momentum since output started slowing in the last six months of 2015, which puts it in danger of stalling.
A bit sluggish?
Downfall of the Alt-Reich.
Hitler is sick of Downfall parodies.
That was funny or die? I barely dodged the bullet because I giggled a bit.
But I was taking quite a risk.
My thoughts and prayers are with you.
Sorry, I'm holding out for A New Wave Teapot Dome Scandal. Or maybe a modern-dance interpretation of the Cuban Missile Crisis.
"If the concept of Hamilton made you want to shoot yourself... if 1776 made you wish for an alternate dimension where the Indians won.... Get ready for the derivative musical-theater sensation that will make "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" look like Oedipus Rex! ""
*stands to applaud*
Just hear me out.... two words, then i'm out of your office = DISCO. TITANIC.
Roller Disco Titanic or get the funk out.
Ok, ok ... fine, i can see how the "electrified wet-set" is sort of a production hassle. I'm sure we'd lose maybe 2, 3 dancers, tops..... but ok, you want 'more urban'? I'll give you 'urban' = The Tap-Dancing Underground Railroad. That Savion Glover kid hasn't had a job in *years*
Leslie Jones as Harriet Tubman?
orry, I'm holding out for A New Wave Teapot Dome Scandal.
And in keeping with the "Hamilton" ethos Thomas Durant will be played by an Asian woman.
Oh, wait, that was Credit Mobilier, never mind. Hard to keep track of those 19th century scandals.
*Googles Teapot Dome*
Shit, Hillary makes those people look like pikers.
It's the only thing generally known about him and that's treated like a bad thing. Would that modern presidents were so boring.
That was from the olden days, before we became a banana republic.
You mean Albert Fell. He will be portrayed by a pregnant transgendered disabled Muslim black woman rape survivor over the age of 40 who just returned from her same-sex-marriage honeymoon.
Oh yeah....Teapot Dome was from the 1920s, not the 19th Century.
Yeah I know, Googled it.
Sounds about right. Because fuck history.
Go on...
They wore alot of clothes in those days, don't get your hopes up.
Until the cultural edicts of Plaek Pibulsongkram in the 1930s, the average Siamese woman's dress was topless.
Nice. I can always count on you for educational enlightenment.
I'll be in my bunk.
In high school back in the early 80s, I went to D.C. for a week as part of the Close Up program.
Overall, it was a great experience... they made us go to some dinner theater to watch "1776". It wasn't a bad show, but it was sort of surreal.
Yeah, i was forced to watch an autopsy when i was a teenager. About 10 years later, I made it through most of 1776 by mentally disemboweling the performers.
When my imagination ran dry and i begged my GF to let us leave. she relented = the tix were some freebie she got while working as an 'executive assistant' for one of the worst executives in NY. To this day i suffer from 'musical-PTSD'. Even 'modernized operas' give me nightmares. (*Candide was borderline; the music was good, but it was still like "partly-numbed-dental-surgery")
Well, on the plus side of the Close Up trip, at least I got to go to the Czechoslovakian Embassy. I think I still have the glassware pamphlets they gave us.
early 80s? that seems like it might have been fun. particularly if anyone tried to defect to your tour-group.
I should really start reading the comments to make sure my points weren't already made more effectively by Gilmore, heh.
More dead white male bashing.
Jackson was a goddamn hero and anyone who says otherwise is a lily-livered cuck piece of shit.
The fucking indians got what was coming to them because they were less developed technologically, and therefore, inferior to white settlers.
In the immortal words of Thucydides, "Right, as the world goes, is only in question between equals in power, while the strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must."
I thought that was a Hillary quote.
Hillary's would be something along the lines of the strong owing their compassion to the poor, whatever the poor want.
Really? People do that? Unbelievable.
Holy shit how times have changed.
When I was progressing through the American education system, and on into college and law school, Andrew Jackson was the hero who stood up for the people, while Alexander Hamilton was the villain who we were supposed to detest. Jackson was described as a 19th-century new dealer, while Hamilton was portrayed as a caricature of the Team Blue's caricature of modern Republicans. Now everything is reversed. Hamilton is revered, and Jackson is being taken off the $20 bill. Wow.
Did you remember to send in the "H" and "J" volumes of your Soviet Encyclopedia for "correction"?
I get email updates instead.
Eventually the whole founding class and all American presidents before Roosevelt will be extirpated from school curricula, and the selected anthology of Howard Zinn will be mandatory reading.
This looks even worse than Hamilton, if that's at all possible. Is this really someone's idea of biting satire?
Jesus, if this is what modern theater puts out its death can't come quickly enough. It speaks so poorly of the political class that they'll eat this shit up and think the consumption of the thing makes them edgy or sophisticated, instead of tired and pathetic.
Andrew Jackson is the only President I know of that I'm related to, so I'm biased towards liking him. Does the musical cover his baddass moments like refusing to clean a British soldier's boots when he was a 13 year old prisoner of war, or beating his would be assassin with a cane when he was President?
A: The boot cleaning incident is in the show.