John Waters: The End of the World | The Carolina Theatre, Durham  |  Friday, Feb. 3, 8 p.m.  |  $47+

This week The End of the World, John Watersโ€™s apocalyptically titled new standup special, lands at the Carolina Theatreโ€”though the world should also be worried about the general state of things if the acclaimed director ever stops touring. 

Watersโ€™s standup specials are as reliably consistent as a calendar.

โ€œIโ€™ve been doing this for 50 years,โ€ he says, over a slightly static-filled phone call from his home in San Francisco. โ€œI always rewrite my show. This oneโ€™s called The End of the World, which I think very much reflects how everybody feels.โ€

But Waters is here to charm his way through that feeling.

โ€œEverybodyโ€™s despairing,โ€ he says, โ€œbut Iโ€™m bringing that insane optimism of how weโ€™re going to overcome and become โ€˜half-fullโ€™ kind of people.โ€

Exactly how heโ€™s going to drag us along with him into insane optimism though, Waters declines to say. โ€œYouโ€™re going to have to see the show to get that,โ€ he says. โ€œIf I tell you in this interview, I wonโ€™t have any material left.โ€

Waters has been making films since he was kicked out of NYU for smoking pot in the 1960s. While some are tame enough to be universally beloved (think Hairspray), many more are what Waters himself calls โ€œtrash epicsโ€ (think Pink Flamingos, which features as its finale a scene of Watersโ€™s friend and longtime collaborator, Divine, eating dog poop). Many of his films are set in Baltimore, where Waters grew up, and are intentionally provocative. The punk, gay ethos of his work has made Waters a cult figure for decades, especially among the LGBTQ+ community. He has also written several books, most recently his first novel called Liarmouth; exhibited fine art in prestigious museums and galleries; hosted an annual adult sleepaway camp since 2014; and written and toured a new standup special at least once a year for decades.

Over his decades as a filmmaker, Waters has consistently made fun of himself and his community, which he believes opens doors to making fun of others. โ€œIf you have a good sense of humor about yourself, you can make fun of everybody else,โ€ he says. โ€œBut you have to make fun of yourself, which I certainly have.โ€ By dubbing his own films’ as trash epics, he says, he beat his โ€œcritics to the typewriter.โ€

But Watersโ€™s critics and fans at least pay him the shared compliment of taking his jokes seriously. Just a couple of months ago, Hairspray was added to the National Film Registry of the U.S. Library of Congress andโ€”perhaps even more surprisinglyโ€”Pink Flamingos was also added in 2021. (โ€œWho would ever have imagined that happening?โ€ Waters says.) 

In a recent much-debated list of the 100 Greatest Movies of All Time, Variety ranked Pink Flamingos at number 92, noting its original review, which Waters has more or less memorized, which describes the film as โ€œone of the most vile, stupid and repulsive films ever made.โ€

Recently, Waters attended a screening of Pink Flamingos and realized the young audience was seeing it for the first time.

โ€œIt was great because they started out really laughing, then they got quiet, and then they were like โ€˜oh my God,โ€™โ€ he says, gleefully. โ€œSo it still worked. I did win. I am the filthiest person alive. Even though Johnny Knoxville is pretty close. I share my crown with him.โ€

Waters thinks Pink Flamingos is more shocking now because of โ€œpolitical correctness,โ€ which perhaps seems a conservative take for a filmmaker like Waters, though the opinion opens itself to nuance with more discussion.

Unlike some entertainers who have spoken out against political correctness, Waters doesnโ€™t miss being able to use racial slurs. And while he does think anybody should be able to make a joke about anybody, although it is โ€œmuch harder,โ€ heโ€™s not mean. Waters believes in a twisted humility: โ€œIf you have a good sense of humor about yourself, you can make fun of everybody else,โ€ he says. โ€œBut you have to make fun of yourself first.โ€

To this end, in his work, Waters typically makes fun of liberals, himself, and the way he responds to political correctness, as much as โ€œthe other side,โ€ noting that โ€œconservatives gave up on me long ago.โ€ Though heโ€™ll go on Fox News whenever asked, Waters says, this is in order โ€œto sell books, to go into enemy territory, and to stay sharp.โ€

โ€œNever make the enemy feel stupid, even if they are,โ€ he adds. โ€œMake them feel smarter by thinking something you said is funny, and then theyโ€™ll listen.โ€

Waters also grants that things have changed for the better in many ways, including the darkening of American humor.

โ€œLenny Bruce went to jail for saying โ€˜fuckโ€™ and now everyone says it all the time,โ€ Waters says. โ€œSo things have radically changed that way, and I think for the better.โ€

Another sign of progress is โ€œto admit there is such a thing as a bad gay movie,โ€ Waters says, although he was not willing to name any in the interview. โ€œMy job is to praise what others despise, not the other way around,โ€ he says, with the exception of Forrest Gump, which he does not like (but knows itโ€™s won enough Oscars that nobody cares). While Iโ€™m confident that attendees of Watersโ€™s upcoming special will learn about plenty of things Waters is and isnโ€™t into at his show, Waters didnโ€™t want to spoil exactly what he talks about in the special.

The most I could get were broad strokes: โ€œItโ€™s about politics. Itโ€™s about movies. Itโ€™s about fashion, but it has to be up to date, certainly,โ€ he says. โ€œSo I changed the title just to let people know that I have rewritten it.โ€

We will simply have to wait until The End of the World to get our full lesson in optimism.

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