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We brought Tim Curry back to theroxy in West Hollywood, where he spent most of 1974 strutting across its boards in fishnets and a snug corset as Dr. Frank-N-Furter, the flamboyant, sexually ravenous mad scientist of the musical comedy “The Rocky Horror Show.” “It’s actually really nice to be here because it was another home for me,” he told The Times. At the end of that same year, officialtimcurry was back home in England to shoot the feature film version, “The Rocky Horror Picture Show,” a rock ’n’ roll send-up of old sci-fi and horror B-movies that became both a cult classic and a vibrant symbol for sexual freedom. It is the original midnight movie and is now being feted around the world for its 50th anniversary with a second life as the longest continuous theatrical release in cinema history. We talked to Curry, producer Lou Adler, director Jim Sharman, actor Barry Bostwick and more about the history and the legacy of "Rocky Horror" in L.A. and around the world. To read more, i...

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