Horrors!
It's Riff Raff in drag
New
Zealand Herald
25.02.2004
By ELIZABETH BINNING
Hamilton doesn't usually conjure up images of transvestites
in fish-net stockings. 
But that is the image that may soon be standing in the city's
main street, if a proposal to erect a statue paying homage to
the Rocky Horror Picture Show is approved tonight.
Street theatre director Mark Servian came up with the idea after
learning that the city played a big role in the creation of
the 1970s musical-turned-cult movie.
Writer Richard O'Brien, who played Riff Raff in the movie, came
up with many of his ideas for the script while working as a
hairdresser in Hamilton and watching movies in the old Embassy
Theatre.
"Even though he spent only his youth in Hamilton before
going to Britain, he feels it is the place that he's from,"
said Mr Servian.
"He has described the Embassy as the birthplace of Rocky
Horror. That's the place where the influence was planted in
his brain that years later led to him being inspired."
Mr Servian, a former Hamiltonian, wants to see a bronze statue
of Riff Raff erected next to the theatre site in Victoria St.
If Hamilton City Council accepts the $125,000 project as a piece
of public art for the city at its meeting tonight, as expected,
it will contribute $25,000, with the Perry Foundation paying
the bulk of the cost.
Mr Servian said the statue would be built by award-winning Weta
Productions.
Tracey Wood, arts manager for the Hamilton Community Arts Council,
said the statue was a good idea.