Hedwig And The Angry Inch -
"Ladies and gentlemen," the announcer’s voice cracked over the feedback, "whether you like it or not... Hedwig!"
Across the street, the stadium lights blurred into the horizon. Tommy Gnosis, the boy she had molded, the boy who stole her songs and her heart, was playing to thirty thousand people. His voice boomed through the walls of her dive bar, a ghostly echo of the melodies they had written in a trailer park in Kansas. Hedwig and the Angry Inch
Hedwig sang louder. She sang until her throat burned, tell-all tales of Plato’s symposium and the search for the other half—the soulmate torn away by jealous gods. She ripped off her wig, revealing the sweat-slicked head beneath, shedding the costume of the victim. "Ladies and gentlemen," the announcer’s voice cracked over
She adjusted the towering blonde wig—a majestic architectural feat of synthetic fiber—and checked the jagged scar between her legs. It was her "Angry Inch," the surgical souvenir of a botched operation and a passport to a freedom that felt more like a cage. His voice boomed through the walls of her