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Poster for The Cramps and The Mutants: The Napa State Tapes

The Cramps and The Mutants: The Napa State Tapes

Opens on June 20

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*Limited Walk-Up shows no longer have online tickets for sale. A limited number of tickets will be available at the box office 45 minutes before a show's start time, on a first-come first-served basis. Standby tickets will be available when Walk-Ups are sold out.

Run Time: 71 min. Format: DCP

45th Anniversary Celebration of the legendary Napa show in 1978

In-Person: Jackie Sharp from Target Video, Mike Plante, co-director of We Were There To Be There, Dino Everett, Archivist from the Punk Media Research Collection (PMRC), and Howie Klein, writer/promotor/label executive.

On June 13, 1978, the soon-to-be legendary rock band The Cramps went to play Napa State, a psychiatric hospital in the small town of Napa in Northern California. Opening for them was The Mutants, an eclectic septet of art school punks from nearby San Francisco. Also in the van was seminal Bay Area art collective Target Video, there to capture the show using one of the first video cameras available to the public, democratizing a medium controlled by mainstream media outlets.

What resulted may be the most unique punk show ever, as the two bands played for the residents at the hospital, a rehabilitation facility that was skimming the danger of being shut down by former California Governor Ronald Reagan.

Here for the first time ever: the long-lost tape of The Mutants playing at Napa State and the full tape of The Cramps’ show, both unedited and fully remastered from the original reel-to-reel videotape. In between the shows is Mike Plante and Jason Willis’ We Were There To Be There, a new short documentary about how the Napa State show happened and its lasting effect.

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