the
museum of mayhem
by Douglas Messerli
Charles Ludlam
(director) Museum of Wax / 1981-1987, remastered 2010
In the late 1970s or
early 1980s (several sources suggest the project was begun in 1981), Charles
Ludlam worked on a silent film Museum of Wax, a work left unfinished at
the time of his death of complications from AIDS in 1987.
The incomplete work was shown only three or four times after; but in 2010, singer/songwriter Anthony Hegarty along with the New York Film Forum approached Ludlam’s surviving partner Everett Quinton, who reported that both Museum of Wax and another of Ludlam’s film’s The Sorrows of Dolores were still sitting on shelf in his closet. Making a digital transfer of the works and adding music by composer Peter Golub, the Film Forum showed the films on February 22 of that year for the first time in 20 years.
Since then, there have been only a handful of other viewings. But thankfully the Outfest site has posted the 21 minute work, featuring members of Ludlam’s Ridiculous Theatrical Company cast members—Quinton, Minette, “Crazy Arthur” Kraft, Lola Pashilinski, John D. Brockmeyer, and Black-Eyed Susan—in three small on-line segments. I also found these three segments posted on the blog of translator Tricia Vita. Vita, who as a child worked in carneys with her parents, translated one of the favorites of my Sun & Moon Press publications, the gay Japanese writer Inagaki Taruho’s One Thousand and One-Second Stories.
A mix of elements from the horror, comedy, and melodrama genres, along with moments of vaudeville-like slap-stick routines, Ludlam’s film is a highly fragmented and a fairly incoherent work, but its major concerns are quite apparent. Using his own and his cast’s talent as quick-change artists, Ludlam and others appear at various moments in numerous “drag” outfits, mixing their sudden appearances and disappearances of the wax heads and other body parts along with the wax tableaux of the Coney Island wax museum hinting about sexual mayhem.
Other subplots include a bearded villain,
evidently the owner of the museum, desperate to rape any woman that crosses his
path, including the ticket-taker, and an elderly woman visitor in a wheelchair.
He is finally stabbed to death with a pair of scissors by a 1920s-style actress
who might remind one of Sunset Boulevard’s Nora Desmond, an action that
parallels one of the museum’s panoramas. To hide the body, she makes up the
cadaver to appear in the Dr. Einstein exhibit.
At another point our prisoner hero meets
up with a second escaped prisoner and engages in a lengthy kiss among the body
museum body parts with his prisoner-lover, reminding me of the two prisoners of
love in John Requa and Glenn Ficarra’s 2009 film I Love You Phillip Morris.
The actress also kisses another woman
for several moments.
In short, one of Ludlam’s major themes
in this work is gender and sexual confusion, as well as questioning whether
these figures are among the living or the dead.
Do the two kissing women, one of them a
male in drag, represent a lesbian couple or a heterosexual pair who just happen
to be cross-dressing?
Similarly, are some of the figures we
encounter simply visiting the museum or are they variations of the museum’s wax
figures momentarily come to life as in the later commercial film fantasy, Shawn
Levy’s Night at the Museum (2006).
If one cannot quite argue that Ludlam’s
film is profound or even as much fun as his numerous theatrical offerings, this
black-and-white piece of cinema is stall enchanting. And we cannot help but
ponder, given Ludlam’s highly expressive face, that he surely might have made a
great silent film star. At least, before he died, he gave himself the
opportunity to be just that.
Los Angeles, March 10,
2021
Reprinted from My
Queer Cinema blog and World Cinema Review (March 2021).



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