A sea of legs in fishnets, bedazzled corsets, wigs galore: Every Friday night, theatergoers are greeted by a projected screen that reads “LDOD” in big, bloody letters at the red-lit LeFont Auditorium at the Plaza Theatre .
The Rocky Horror Picture Show —the 50-year-old satirical horror film based on the 1973 musical that stars Tim Curry as a gender-bending alien—is not only a cult classic, but also a cultural phenomenon. For the past 25 years, Lips Down on Dixie , a nonprofit theater organization, has had a shadow cast acting in tandem with the film every Friday night. During the first kill scene of the movie, the audience sees the shadow cast Frank-N-Furter chase his victim through the aisles, pushing past audience members’ legs with a plastic pickax while lip-synching the exact wor