By the late 1980s, John Waters was ready for a change. After a decade of shocking audiences with boundary-pushing midnight movies, he set his sights on something a little more… family-friendly. The result was HAIRSPRAY — a pastel-soaked 1960s dance-party satire that retained Waters’ signature weirdness while appealing to a much broader audience.
In this episode, we dig into how Waters transitioned from underground cult provocateur to mainstream darling, how a then-unknown Ricki Lake became the face of the film, and how HAIRSPRAY overcame a modest box office performance to become one of the most enduring and beloved films in Waters’ entire filmography — inspiring a Broadway musical and a big-budget Hollywood remake nearly two decades later.