#lsoh crystal
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moog-enthusiast · 2 years ago
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little shop of horrors doodle page. can you guess who my favorite is from this. flutters eyelashes
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Can’t believe Little Shop of Horrors 1986 made sure that Audrey II came to Earth on Bi Visibility Day.
This is your reminder that every single Little Shop of Horrors character is bisexual. This is canon.
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calliemity · 8 months ago
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So I just recreated my "Which Little Shop of Horrors Character Are You?" quiz! It's been in the oven for awhile, and I finally got around to finishing it! I'd love if you could take it, and you should totally reblog with the result you got, hehe :]
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scriv3lloirl · 5 months ago
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Little Shop digital art dump!
(under the cut)
The first drawin/screenie redraw— Orin n Seymour
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Fat Orin canon‼️ — I love projectin m' body type onto m' favorite characters. (Some folks might've already seen this posted on other platforms lol)
Second Drawin I did (which also doubles as a b'day gift fer' @nicowasheree — HAPPY B'DAY!!) is also of Orin n Seymour!!
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Seymorin for the win, ladies n gentlemen. (Not the proudest of this, but it was late when I finished this up n I don't feel like changin shit round'.)
Third piece I did was of Audrey‼️‼️
My Audrey design is heavily inspired by both Joy Woods n Mj Rodriguez <3 (I love both of them so much.)
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Her chipped tooth was inspired by our fictive. (She gave permission n said it was okay if I used some elements of her n her source memories into my interpretation/design of her. Thanks Audrey!! We love you!!)
Fourth was a screenie redraw of Audrey n Seymour!!
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This one isn't my favorite. But it's always fun learnin how t' draw side profiles wit features I'm not used t' drawin yet.
Audrey's short hair is purposeful, by the way. In my version, she cuts her hair shorter after Orin dies cus she believes that "hair holds memory." N Seymour helps her cut her hair after they sing 'Suddenly Seymour' hehe.
I might have t' draw Seymour helpin Audrey cut her hair soon cus it's cute.
Final drawin I did was m' designs of The Urchins!!
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They're so underrated, please.
Their designs are inspired by the like- hundred different versions of Little Shop I've seen online lol — I'm still learnin how t' draw POC features so.. if anyone wants t' give tips? My DMS are open.
Anyway, that's m' art dump.
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vinegar-rights · 7 months ago
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Stupid ass tiktok lolllll just seymour and the urchin gals
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homoexualpigeon · 6 months ago
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“Maybe these are bad movies and you actually only like them because they have puppets in.”
Maybe you should shut up. Don’t listen to them, Labyrinth, they don’t know what they’re talking about
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cut-me-and-call-me-yours · 1 year ago
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LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS (1986)
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I couldn't believe how ridiculous and fun this movie was. It totally threw me for a loop. I was expecting a low-budget film that was the usual plot line for any film of this Era. Boy, was I wrong. Not only is this a musical with super catchy songs, but it throws the usual "protagonist saves the day" trope right out the window. In fact, none of the cast saves the day. The day is not saved at all. The plants take over, and we all die, and that is an ending that is so unusual, and I loved it so much. The was Audrey II moves was very life like to tye point I almost forgot she was just a puppet. The plot was super original, and there were so many funny moments. Not to mention, the 3 black ladies that sing killed it and every preformence and slayed while doing it. Seriously, who is their stylist? I need them in my personal life
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greenesmyfavcolor · 3 months ago
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Ok I just got done with my audition which went really well imo. I got called back for the urchins and Audrey. So it’s looking like either of those. The director said that they’ll likely have the cast list ready by Monday so now we wait 😮‍💨
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ohnoitsjetster · 10 months ago
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I don’t think we talk about the headcanon potential of the Urchins enough. I just think there’s more we could be making with these omniscient, financially opportunistic, doo-wop elementary school dropouts. What are their hopes? What are their dreams? What are Crystal’s thoughts on the Wolf Man?
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lovecommajaime · 1 year ago
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this is EXTREMELY important
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I took a crack at practicing some of the main cast! Mushnik is the hardest for me to draw.
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Welcome to my combination flower shop/ dentist's office/ confession blog! currently the flower shop is closed for renovations, and the dentist's office, well we've hit a few dead ends- i mean the current situation is a little suffocating- no I just mean some things are going funny- uh, forget about it. It's just a confession blog
This blog is for anything LSOH. The stage show, the 80s movie, the 60s movie. Fanfics to Funko pops, go wild. Just leave your deep dark secrets in the askbox above!
Reblogs are much appreciated
This blog is run by @ohnoitsjetster
Pfp by @mellowyellow56
REST BELOW THE CUT
TAGS:
#cw Suggestive is what i use to indicate nsft asks, filter this if you don’t wanna see the horny stuff
Characters: #Seymour Krelborn, #Audrey Fulquard, #Orin Scrivello, #Mr Mushnik, #Arthur Denton, #The Urchins, #Twoey or #Audrey 2 on the older ones, ive even got some #Skip Snip tags on here
Shows: #lsoh movie, #60s movie, #stage show are used for those versions of lsoh
Other: #Simping, #Shipping, #Cw Suggestive, #hater tag of shame, and #lsoh production are the main ones, plus I tag basically everything as #Little Shop of Horrors and #Confession
I will post confessions whether or not they are anonymous so make sure it’s on the setting you want. If you need me to take down one of your confession for any reason, let me know and it will be done.
I tend to commentate. I will post most confessions but you are not safe from my opinion in the tags.
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dr-sunshine-md-is-me · 6 months ago
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GUESS WHOS IN FRICKING BROADWAY WORLD!!?!?!
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calliemity · 3 months ago
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The Album That Inspired Little Shop of Horrors
Written by Calliope Avery
In June, while out of town to see my third production of Little Shop of Horrors, I found a sealed copy of an album I've had my eye on for awhile. It's notable to me not just because it's a great album, but because it holds the foundations for most of the music written for the musical Little Shop of Horrors. This album is none other than...
He's a Rebel by The Crystals!
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Released in 1963, with songs recorded between 1961 and 1963, this album was both a smash hit and very influential to music going forward, much like how many other girlgroups were! But even more importantly, this was the album that Alan Menken and Howard Ashman used as the basis for the musical identity of Little Shop of Horrors as we know it!
Well, that fact is all but confirmed. I do have extremely strong evidence to support this claim, so let's go through everything together!
According to "Attack of the Monster Musical: A Cultural History of Little Shop of Horrors" by Adam Abraham, Ashman was greatly inspired by the gritty sounds and detached vocals of music produced by Phil Spector in the early 60's. Here's a direct quote from the book:
Indeed, Ashman grew up listening to the girl groups of the period: the Crystals, the Ronettes, the Chiffons, the Shangri-Las. For research, he began to revisit records by Phil Spector, the Bronx-born music producer who was, according to Tom Wolfe, “The First Tycoon of Teen." Spector pioneered the "wall of sound": a dense musical tapestry that doubled, tripled, and quadrupled the guitars and rhythm and included backing vocals, handclaps, brass, and strings. In the recording studio, Spector would demand take after take from his musicians. Rather than use the first take or two, when the musicians were still fresh, he wanted the twentieth, the thirtieth. After hours in the studio, their playing lost much of its personality; the musicians merged into a single unit, machine-like.
-Adam Abraham, Attack of the Monster Musical: A Cultural History of Little Shop of Horrors
The book also includes a direct quite from Howard Ashman:
I heard something I hear to this day-something very dark and horrifying and scary as hell in the Phil Spector sound. There's a BUNK-BUNK- BUNK-TSCH, BUNK-BUNK-BUNK-TSCH. There are chains and whips in the background. There's real dark, nasty stuff going on under some of these very innocent lyrics. And if that doesn't sound like a horror movie, I don't know what does.
-Howard Ashman
This Phil Spector sound influences both the lyrics of the songs in Little Shop of Horrors, but also the way the music itself sounds and how it's written. The entire soundtrack is deeply rooted in these 60's grilgroup pop ideas, which has rooted itself in many aspects of music today. This adds a timeless quality to LSoH's soundtrack, but by leaning even further into the unsettling aspects of Spector sound, it elevates this musical's specific type of horror. It's brilliant and very effective!
There's one more quote I'd like to share with you, one that clues us into which album specifically had the most impact on their vision and songwriting:
Ashman brought a record by the Crystals to Menken's place, in Manhattan Plaza, where they usually worked by the piano. Ashman announced that this would be the sound of their show; he called it “the dark side of Grease." "We started over again," Menken conceded.
-Adam Abraham, Attack of the Monster Musical: A Cultural History of Little Shop of Horrors
An album by The Crystals, you say? Hmm, I wonder which one it could be. Surely it couldn't be the one with a song that sounds nearly identical to "Skid Row (Downtown)" from LSoH's soundtrack...
The second number in the show, "Skid Row (Downtown)," is "a direct inversion of the Crystals' 'Uptown,"
-Adam Abraham, Attack of the Monster Musical: A Cultural History of Little Shop of Horrors
This was my first clue into "He's a Rebel" being the album in question. The aforementioned song, "Uptown", seems to be where Menken and Ashman took heavy inspiration from (if not outright stolen it) in both melody and lyrics. Take a listen for yourself!
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Another notable song that they definitely pulled from has the same name as the album- "He's a Rebel." You might recognize this lyric, "He's a dentist, and he'll never ever be any good", from the song "Dentist!", but that lyric is directly pulled from the former song! It's the exact same line, they just replaced "rebel" with "dentist."
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(Skip to 41 seconds in if you wanna hear the line!)
There's also a smaller reference that I discovered on one of my many relistens to the album. During the song "He's Sure the Boy I Love", our singer remarks that her boyfriend "doesn't drive a Cadillac car." In LSoH however, Audrey II tries to bribe Seymour into murder by offering to get him a Cadillac. So we can even see smaller references to the album within the musical, reinforcing just how influential it was!
It's also outright confirmed that the cut LSoH song, "The Worse He Treats Me", was directly inspired by the tone and subject matter of another song on this album. "He Hit Me (It Felt Like a Kiss)" is... an uncomfortable song, but you can definitely hear the lyrical inspiration. "The Worse He Treats Me" seems to be a satirical response to this song, playing up the objective absurdity of excusing physical abuse in the way it does.
Ashman and Menken wrote a song that focuses on Audrey's relationship with her abusive boyfriend, and the wellspring was yet another track by the Crystals, "He Hit Me (And It Felt Like a Kiss)," from 1962.
-Adam Abraham, Attack of the Monster Musical: A Cultural History of Little Shop of Horrors
Musically, the song takes plagiarism-level inspiration from a completely different song sung by a different girlgroup- "Leader of the Pack" by the Shangri-Las. The main melody of the song is taken directly from the guitar riff that carries the verses. Funnily enough, the music that serves as Orin's introduction theme in the stage show is the exact same riff, making it both a reference to "Leader of the Pack" and the cut song all about his horrible abuse. Pretty thematically relevant, I'd say.
There's actually a lot in LSoH that's inspired by the Shangri-Las! Their song "Leader of the Pack" proved rich in ideas to pull from and reference. Some of it ended up cut out, as described in this upcoming quote, but a good amount was kept in!
Besides the pop nightmares of Phil Spector, another influence was the New York-based girl group the Shangri-Las. "I already knew the Shangri-Las were funny in 1964," Ashman boasted. On the very first page of the first draft of Little Shop of Horrors, there is a stage direction that reads, “Shouted, a la the Shangri-La's." The line that follows, in the show's opening number, is drawn from one of the girl group's signature hits, "Leader of the Pack." Audrey, terrified by something, cries, "Lookout, lookout, lookout, lookout!" (This remained in the show, although in subsequent drafts it is assigned to someone else.) Other sly references follow. Later in the first draft, Audrey defends her dentist boyfriend: "Folks are always putting him down"; the other women on stage echo, à la the Shangri-Las, "Down, down, down." These latter two lines from "Leader of the Pack" were eventually dropped. However, when audiences finally meet Orin Scrivello, DDS, he is introduced thus: "Here he is, girls, the Leader of The Plaque." So Little Shop of Horrors recreates the popular music of the late 1950s and early 1960s and sees the world through the prism of doo-wop records and girl-group patter.
-Adam Abraham, Attack of the Monster Musical: A Cultural History of Little Shop of Horrors
Have you noticed that Orin keeps getting brought up? Ignoring how much it drives me insane that he manages to worm his way into everything I've ever done, there seems to be a reason for this. In the transition between Roger Corman's 1960 movie and Menken & Ashman's 1982 stage musical, the dentist character got the most substantial makeover. Orin Scrivello is almost unrecognizable from his roots as Dr. Phoebus Farb; more specifically, he seemed to have gotten a brand new coat of early 60's rebel paint. Let's take another look at the cover of the album we've been discussing.
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For variety, here's a picture of my own personal LP!
Now, what do you notice about this cover? Does the man pictured look familiar at all? Does he remind you of anything perhaps? Like, oh, I don't know... a certain dentist?
So I have absolutely no way to prove this, and I don't believe that this was the only inspiration taken for Orin's reimagining, but I do firmly believe that the cover of this album played a large part in the aesthetic that Orin would adopt. I mean, look at it. And with the added context of this album having so many influential songs, it wouldn't surprise me if seeing that album cover for extended periods of time would've made some creative gears turn.
I would argue further that this album's non-music related influence even extends to LSoH's themes and ideas. While not the entire focus of the album, reoccurring themes of class and wealth can be heard in songs like "Uptown" and "He's Sure The Boy I Love." Mentions of abuse and a difficult life are found in "He Hit Me" and "No One Ever Tells You." These themes, while prevalent, take on more positive and optimistic perspectives within these songs. Little Shop of Horrors takes these themes and responds with a much more pessimistic outlook. The exception to this are the album's themes of finding love regardless of what society might expect or want for you. I'd say it's the most prevalent theme found in the album; songs such as "He's a Rebel", "He's Sure the Boy I Love", "Another Country-Anothor World", and "Uptown" all demonstrate this idea. And LSoH seems to respect this one while even elaborating further with Seymour and Audrey's relationship.
My personal favorite is only found in one song: "On Broadway." The song sings idealistically about Broadway, and the singer states that she will someday make her way out of her small town to go have a life there. Both ideas, dreaming about a idealistic place and wanting to escape your current living situation, have been split between two songs in LSoH's soundtrack: "Somewhere That's Green" and "Skid Row: Downtown" respectively. LSoH's twist is that Audrey doesn't dream of a glamorous life on Broadway, she dreams of a cozy and domestic suburban life.
To keep myself from talking for the rest of time, I will cut myself off here. I hope you found this interesting, and I highly reccomend giving the album "He's a Rebel" a listen for yourself! It's definitely become one of my top favorite albums. In the future I would also like to do research and make a post about the impact that The Ronnettes and The Shangri-Las had on LSoH, but work has me pretty busy lately, so I'm not sure when I can get that out.
Anyway, thank you for reading all of this I very much appreciate it! :]
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scriv3lloirl · 5 months ago
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Dentist be like
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the-lesbian-clown · 1 year ago
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I've had an idea for a Helluva boss/little shop of horrors au for a while now so here's who I think would be who and why bc Im bored asf
Cast:
Moxxie is Seymour
Millie is Audrey
Blitzø is Mr mushnik
Striker is orin
Asmodeus is Audrey ii
And Keenie,Cletus,and Colin are the street urchins (Chiffon,Crystal,and Ronnette)
Reasons:
Moxxie - moxxie is HEAVILY nerd coded in my opinion along the fact that he's just a dork in general
Millie - she's moxxie's wife so it makes sense (also she's hot asf)
Blitzø - 1, he's M&Ms boss and 2, he has greedy traits from his dad (at least I think)
Striker - 1, he's KNOWN to be very aggressive. 2, moxxie was OBVIOUSLY jealous of striker in s1 ep5. And 3, he acted SO much like orin scrivello in s2 ep6
Asmodeus - 1, he has a very soulful voice which is PERFECT for the role of Audrey ii. 2, he's sassy asf. and 3,he LITERALLY ATE CRIM'S LAWYER IN S2 EP6
Keenie, Cletus, and Colin - I honestly couldn't think of anyone else
Extra:
Another reason for Moxxie AND Millie as Seymour and Audrey is that they have basically the same ship dynamic
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