The week in burlesque news.

•08/11/2012 • Leave a Comment

Darlinda Just Darlinda

Consider this exceptionally critical advance warning: Darlinda Just Darlinda is coming to the Northwest in September. Aside from being one half of the phenomenal burlesque duo The Schlep Sisters (producing shows like Menorah Horah and The Burning Bush vs.The Second Coming), Darlinda is also co-producer and member of Dangerous Curves Ahead: Burlesque on the Go-Go. She’s a longtime faculty member at the New York School of Burlesque and was a competitor at Burlesque Hall of Fame Weekend 2012 for the title “Miss Exotic World, Queen of Burlesque”.

Aside from her many well-deserved titles (voted into the “Top 100 Burlesque Dancers In the World”, winner of the Liz Renay look-a-like contest, and recipient of 2009 Golden Pastie Awards for “Biggest Hair” and “Most Innovative and Creative”) – she also happens to be one of the most inspired, atypical, and fearless burlesque performers I’ve ever seen. Darlinda is a rare kind of artist, one that bravely takes burlesque to a whole new realm of live performance. Whatever her act, whatever her costume, it’s as though she’s pummeling you with living, breathing, in your face, extra strength WOMAN. I love her, and you will too.

Here’s one of the acts she performed in Seattle a little over a year ago for Let My Bunnies Go that left me speechless:

(Year in Dance Day 240 I’ve Been Loving You Too Long from Darlinda Just Darlinda on Vimeo)

We’ll have more news on possible Portland and other Northwest appearances for Darlinda in the next month, but for now you can register for her classes at the Academy of Burlesque: “Oh How I Love You! Connecting with the Audience” can be found HERE and “Shimmying up the Burlesque Ladder: Getting Booked” is HERE.

********************************************************************************************************************

In other news, it has just been announced that BurlyCon is going for a rather unusual world record this year…from the communications desk of BurlyCon came this press release:

BurlyCon, the educational and social convention for the burlesque community, will hold a Guinness Book of World Records Attempt for the “World’s Largest Fan Dance” during the November 1-4, 2012 event. Now in the fifth year, BurlyCon is a fixture of the booming burlesque festival circuit and attracts hundreds of burlesque performers, fans, and aficionados from around the world for a full weekend of classes, panels, networking, shopping, and social events. This year’s Guinness Book of World Records Attempt will involve over 250 burlesque dancers executing fan dance choreography in “traditional” costumes at The Seattle Doubletree Inn near the SeaTac Airport.

Inspired by an offhand suggestion from local sensation Waxie Moon, Executive Director Miss Indigo Blue contacted the Guinness World Records association. When BurlyCon was granted the attempt, Blue said “we’re absolutely thrilled. This is a great opportunity to demonstrate the current popularity and historical relevance of Burlesque, particularly at Seattle’s own BurlyCon Convention!” Blue expects several local luminaries to participate in the attempt, including The Shanghai Pearl, Sydni Deveraux, Inga Ingenue (Miss Viva Las Vegas 2011), and the aforementioned Waxie Moon.

International stars and Guests of Honor Miss Dirty Martini, Miss Exotic World 2004, and Julie Atlas Muz, Miss Exotic World 2006 are expected to attend the event, and Catherine D’Lish has been invited to participate. All three are currently part of the Cabaret New Burlesque troupe, which was featured in the Cannes Award-winning film “Tournee” by Mathieu Amalric.

********************************************************************************************************************

The Shanghai Pearl and her “PNW GLITTER PAC” (Pacific Northwest Glitter Political Action Committee) have a throbbing, glittering hard on for a very special cause. BURLESQUE FOR BARACK will take place August 31 at West Hall. The lineup so far includes El Vez, Heidi Von Haught, Armitage Shanks, Aleksa Manila, Randi Rascal, Fuchsia FoXXX, Violet Tendencies, Scandal from Bohemia, Flirty Sanchez, and more to be announced soon. More on this show to come…check back for details or visit HERE.

********************************************************************************************************************

And last – Ruby Mimosa of the newly open-for-business Burlesque Boutique interviewed me (my first reverse interview ever) over HERE. Check it out! I run my mouth loud and proud about a few of my favorite things…

Che festa! Lily Verlaine and Jasper McCann’s ‘Burlesco DiVino’.

•08/04/2012 • Leave a Comment

Lily Verlaine and Jasper McCann (POC Photo)

Fearless production duo Lily Verlaine and Jasper McCann have no shortage of arresting ideas. So when opportunity came knocking in the form of an invite to create a new work for the Triple Door’s Summer Of Riesling celebration, the pair rose to the challenge with their usual flair. Burlesco DiVino: Wine in Rome (debuting August 8 at The Triple Door) is a wine-soaked bacchanal of burlesque heavy hitters and rising stars carousing their way through the Roman Empire to the era of La Dolce Vita and the swingin’ Sixties.

Though up to their pretty necks in grape-stomping rehearsals and Roman holidays, Lily and Jasper took some time to email about their brand new “theatrical burlesque mélange”:

BSP: What have you both been up to this summer?

Jasper: Up to? No good, of course! No, seriously, I’ve been doing preproduction for DiVino and Alice most of the summer. I did manage to take a weeks’ vacation to Los Angeles (my first time, if you can believe it) and I attended a wedding in Minneapolis. But this summer has been mostly work on our shows, which is fine by me. Except for Independence Day, which was all about rum and ribs.

Lily: Corralling wonderful artists, being inspired through the consumption of wine and studying the mannerisms of Anita Ekberg and Sophia Loren.

BSP: Lily, you just did a little European traveling, and visited other places as well. Did you perform abroad? (I saw photos of you with Jamie Von Stratton striking poses around the H. R. Giger Bar in Gruyere, Switzerland…)

Lily: Yes, I performed at an event in Basel, Switzerland produced by my friend Auntie Sam. She booked some of my better-known acts, like Picasso. The show was quite well-received. I also performed this year in Christchurch, New Zealand and in Hong Kong for the benefit of The Hong Kong Cancer Fund. It has been an exceptional year for traveling and inspiration. The photo shoot in the H.R. Giger bar was a highlight of all my travels. Firstly, the art in the H.R. Giger museum is absolutely awesome and the bar photo shoot was fun, productive and caused a sensation in the idyllic little town that is Gruyere. J. Von Stratton is hands-down one of the most fun people in the universe to travel with.

BSP: What was the idea for this show, as the Triple Door presented it to you? As a creative team, how were you inspired once you were commissioned?

Jasper: Cortney Lease, the head of the wine program at Wild Ginger/Triple Door approached us and asked if we had anything in our rep concerning wine. Our answer was “No, but we’d be happy to create something for you.” So that’s kind of how it started. It was Cortney’s idea to attach a burlesque show to the Wild Ginger/Triple Door’s participation in the nationwide “Summer Of Riesling” event, and so she reached out to us. The concept from the start was “a show about wine”, and we asked if there was something specific they wanted to see, and they gave us carte blanche.

We went through all the classic (and by “classic” I mean the modern idea of that term) ideas and pictures that can be evoked by the term “wine”. Obviously, there was Caravaggio’s “Bacchus”, and Lucy & Ethel in the juicing vat, and things like that. We thought about doing an “around the world” sort of concept to all the places that grow grapes, but we realized that anything of this sort would be a pastiche and that’s not really our style. So we thought about doing 4 long pieces, and then we thought about 2 one-act pieces, and settled on that. But we were still missing a cohesive theme (something that our two other shows have). So we decided that in this show, the location would be the consistent factor, and that it would be Italy.

Lily: As I recall, they contacted Jasper and asked for a show that included a bacchanal. I was happy that he wanted to include me in the grand vision given how opinionated I can be. I was inspired by my Alpine adventures at the time and wanted to make a burlesque show full of yodeling and lederhosen for this event, given that Riesling is a grape that is grown primarily in Germany but Jasper insisted on Italy and I have to admit that it was truly the more glamorous locale. I also knew how close this idea was to Jasper’s heart (Italy) so I wanted to treat it as beautifully as I could. I hope that it comes off successfully.

Bacchus and the Muses (POC Photo)

BSP: You have worked together for so many years now- were you reading each other’s minds once the ideas started flowing for this production?

Jasper: We started working together in August of 2006. And just like that Beatles song, “it’s getting better all the time.” I don’t know about reading each other’s minds, but our process has become much more easygoing. We have gotten really good at bringing a bunch of ideas to the table and then being fearless in deciding which ones will work and which ones won’t. I think in the past we both had moments of wanting to see a particular flourish or picture in the show so badly that we couldn’t see that even though it might be beautiful, didn’t necessarily fit into the story, or would be too difficult from a technical standpoint. On the other side of that coin, we’ve also become a lot more exploratory. There’s been a lot of “what do you think about this?” followed by “I don’t know, let’s try it and see how it looks/works/feels.” And some really great moments in the show have come out of us being brave enough to try things that we might not have in the past.

Lily: Thank God that we were also traveling while conceiving of the ideas around this show. We do some of our best work in the car on long trips. Maybe it is our version of license plate poker.

BSP: Lily, you’ve done an homage to French culture (with L’Edition Francaise), so this should be a fun departure for you. Does channeling Italian culture put you in a different sort of mood? As for you Jasper, you lived in Italy for a while as I recall…? This must have been a fun exercise for you…

Jasper: One of my degrees is in Italian, and I have traveled extensively there. So I dig Italy, I just never resided there. As to fun- well, it’s always fun creating something new with Verlaine. And I’m sure that this show is another in a string of many still to come. (Just as a side note, I think Lily’s L’Historie du Melody Nelson is one of the most brilliant pieces of dance/performance art I’ve ever seen.) But as far as Italy and the mood is concerned I think that, speaking with all due understanding of stereotypes, that Italian sentiment is much less self-serious than French. So this show has some real tongue-in-cheek moments to reflect that. We wanted to keep it lighthearted, even in the more “serious” performative passages. (And we got to include iconic images, like Vespa scooters and an orgy…)

Also, knowing the language allowed me to write a different sort of script because it is trilingual (if you count the Latin I threw in). Some characters speak English, others speak English as a second language, and still others speak English and Italian, so in a lot of cases I got to use language itself as a comic device. And I wrote a song in Italian, which I’ll obviously be singing in Italian, so that’s a pretty groovy change for me. It isn’t very often that I get to utilize my degree in a professional sense. (Mom and Dad will be so proud). So I guess this is where I get to say to all you liberal arts majors out there… “Stick with it!”

Lily: Well, the stories we told in L’Edition Francaise were primarily focused on youth culture, at least where women were concerned. I think that the female characters in this show might read as a bit more ambitious, fierce and independent. They all seem to be in possession of powers- be they mystical or professional and they are all in a position to effect change in their environments.

BSP: Lily, you mentioned to me in a previous conversation that this show has helped to stretch your mind as to what burlesque is, and think of how you feel about presenting material that makes even you blush. This reminds of the Picasso quote we’ve talked about before: “Art is never chaste” (which we both had taken note of when that exhibit was in Seattle). Can you tell me what your current mood and/or dominant thoughts are on this lately, and in pushing the boundaries of burlesque as a sexual art?

Lily: Well, I didn’t approach this show with any particular agenda, but as the material revealed itself, I realized that some of it challenged my own sensibilities, and that pushed me to stretch my mind into trusting the work. I think that it will help me grow as a creator to yield to the material from time to time instead of having to finesse and control every teeny detail. I think that it was good for the show to leave some room for spontaneity. And from what I understand, that is a very Italian thing to do. I think that we should in fact start the show a half-hour late just to be thematically consistent. (Joke.)

BSP: You have stated DiVino is a more production number driven show for you. Do you find these types of acts easier to coordinate, or actually more pressure due to volume and scale?

Jasper: I think the challenge for us has been that the format is not what anyone is really used to in “burlesque”, as it is for the most part a solo-based form. So while it is a departure from what most of us would call traditional, I feel like it is a natural evolution for our shows to head in this direction, becoming more and more ensemble-inclusive. I’ve always talked about the Freed Unit films and other musicals of the 30s-60s as being part of the canon that resonates with me, and it has been a great experience to work this way. Getting everyone together isn’t always easy, though. But I think that it will be exciting for our fans and supporters to see this development… it is really exhilarating to see so many talented performers on stage for 8-12 minuets at a time, depending on the scene.

Lily: You know, it is always hard and always a delight. The talent that has come our way for this show is absolutely fantastic to work with-they are great dancers and thespians and are used to taking direction. There are also several other creatives in the cast who have contributed tremendously to the choreography and this has been fun and liberating for me and really helped to diversify the show.

BSP: You’ve worked with many costume designers- Danial Hellman being one the most incredible (we’re so lucky to have him in Seattle). Lily famously worked with Danial on the Stargazer Gown. Can you talk about collaborating with him, and what he made for DiVino?

Jasper: Danial is amazing, and is coordinating the overall wardrobe look of the show, not to mention making custom couture for a number of the performers. We’re so fortunate to have him on board with us, he has been a great collaborator and has really helped to drive the vision of this show toward being fully realized.

Lily: Working with Danial is so incredible. He is so thoughtful- from concept to palette. It probably sounds like a cop-out to call him an artist, but he demonstrates a rare level of depth in thought and mastery of skill. I love him. Danial has made I would say…ninety-nine percent of the costuming for the show. Trojan Original is contributing some beautiful leather masks as well. Inga and I have custom-made gloves by Echo Boudoir and to bring the fabulous to an entirely new level, the whole show has been custom-makeup’ed by Atomic Cosmetics. (How fortunate are we to have these amazing people contributing 100% original design concepts to this show?!) In addition, Danial has a great staff of interns at the moment, all of whom have put in the necessary stitches and rhinestones.

BURLESCO DIVINO: WINE IN ROME plays August 8-10, 2012 at The Triple Door, located at 216 Union in downtown Seattle. For tickets, call 206-838-4333 or buy online at www.thetripledoor.net.

(POC Photo)

A look back at ‘Everything In Between’.

•07/31/2012 • Leave a Comment

Le Petit Piège, an immense spider web made from steel cable by Kevin MacDonald

Editor’s Note (~Jessica Price): Though the Seattle Erotic Art Festival took place last month, the festival’s 10th anniversary celebration won’t fade from memory any time soon. The art was outstanding (my personal favorites included Jim Wilkinson’s “Homophotoart” collection; Lillian Mary Elizabeth Ripley’s digital art merry-go-round of strippers on poles; Jeff Palmer’s extraordinary, sexually-charged black and white photos; and Linda Marsh’s beautiful triptych “Ties That Bind”) and so were the off-site extras (Christopher Ryan’s humorous lecture for Sex At Dawn – complete with a PowerPoint of copulating bonobos). The 2012 fete will be a tough year to top. Luckily the Seattle Erotic Art Festival is a growing, ever- shifting jewel in Seattle’s carnal crown and will return June 15-23, 2013. I can hardly wait to see what their eleventh year will bring.

In case you missed out on the festival this year, I wanted to draw some attention to the 800 photos of the grand finale weekend that are now live and posted HERE, plus there’s links to various photos, videos, and reviews that were posted on the 10th anniversary HERE. To follow is a recap of grand finale weekend’s Everything In Between show, written by Seattle photographer Paul Swortz.

*****************************

~ Written by Special Guest Contributor, Paul Swortz

If you are going to offer burlesque at the Seattle Erotic Art Festival, you better bring a damn fine show to get the attention of an audience surrounded by sexy distractions of every – and I mean every – taste. When the lights dimmed and the music rose inside Fremont Studios on June 22, the burlesque-focused Everything In Between finale weekend show managed to keep the crowd awed and thoroughly entertained with a world-class lineup of performers.

Armitage Shanks was the masterful emcee, introducing performances with his usual flair for humor and wit – he peeled off triple-entendres and subtle sexy puns as sweetly as Miss Indigo Blue peels off stockings. One of the acts was Miss Indigo Blue herself, “Queen of Burlesque/Miss Exotic World 2011”, who transformed from a dainty Navy Nurse to a sexy Wonder Woman and dizzyingly demonstrated her mastery of tassel twirling.

Armitage Shanks

Miss Indigo Blue

Opening the show was New York City boylesque star Tigger!, who has been making regular appearances in Seattle lately. Tigger’s energy, acrobatics, and flair for the dirty/nasty/sexy quieted the crowd: first as a demure bride and in his second number, peeling from one gender to the next to the strains of the Cheap Trick classic ”Surrender” (Mama’s all right, Daddy’s all right, they just seem a little weird…”).

Tigger! on loan to Seattle from NYC

With Kevin MacDonald’s 40-foot x 20-foot steel spider web in the entrance of the Seattle Erotic Art Festival space (which featured separate aerial performances choreographed by Aerialista Elizabeth Rose), Everything In Between included two acrobatic and sexy live numbers performed over the stage. Seattle burlesque legend Tamara the Trapeze Lady rose over the stage in aerial silks and climbed, wrapped, dropped – and got mostly naked – with grace, power, and beauty; she was erotic artistry incarnate.

The other aerial number had Elizabeth Rose performing acrobatic gymnastics with a clawfoot bathtub and shower ring (complete with working shower). No cleaning lady I’ve ever seen made removing bathtub rings more sexy. Tubs may be slippery when wet, but Elizabeth managed to clean things up with power and grace (and just a touch of dirty).

Elizabeth Rose

Other performers included:

– The Shanghai Pearl – who performed with her usual beauty, class, and gorgeous costumes

– Lusty Zins – dizzying pole dancing with feats of strength and balance

– Adra Boo and the Wet Spots — kept things humming during breaks and stage cleanup with Adra’s powerful pipes and the Wet Spots’ dirty lyrics (“Do You Take it in the Ass?”) keeping the audience entertained.

Closing the Friday show was a reprise of an ingenious, hilarious number by Waxie Moon that I first saw at That’s F*cked Up! 3! Waxie danced and was joined onstage by a handful of dashing sidekicks in tighty whiteys and gym socks, performing to a pair of classic Beatles numbers: “Come Together” and “Here Comes the Sun.” Two words and I’ll say no more: glitter bukkake. Quite a finish (and I’d wager you can watch for some variation of that number in this year’s “Hump!” competition).

Waxie Moon

Other Seattle Erotic Art Festival items of note (not on the main stage):

– Heidi Von Haught reprised a chillingly beautiful and haunting performance from That’s F*cked Up! 3! Dressed as a clown, she seduces and finishes off an innocent boy to the haunting words and music of “John Wayne Gacy Jr.” by Sufjan Stevens. (I’ve always found clowns a little disturbing, and now my dreams will become even more confusing, as my psyche will include images of mostly naked clowns with boobs and “Sissy Boy” written on their bodies…)

– Sinner Saint Burlesque shared a work of performance art called “Sculpture Garden”. This was a complex and thoughtful piece, with the women being posed in turn by one another according to a single word. Here’s Sinner Saint’s Jesse Belle-Jones’ description of the work:

‘Sculpture Garden’ explores erotic language and the power of touch. Dancers physically manipulate each others’ bodies, using one another as our canvas for painting our interpretation of words like ‘restraint’, ‘lust’, ‘ecstasy’, ‘initiation’, etc. This is done taking into consideration creative, intimate and sensual ways that the Sculptor might use her own body to manipulate the Sculpture.

Seattle Erotic’s next big event will be Seduction, “Seattle’s sexiest Halloween party”, on Saturday October 27.

***
Paul Swortz is an avid fan and dedicated follower of all things burlesque. He can be found behind the camera at Paul Swortz Photography, and online at www.paulswortz.com

Sculpture Garden, featuring members of Sinner Saint Burlesque

The Shanghai Pearl

Picks of the (g)litter July 27 edition: Stripped Screw Burlesque in “Undressed to Kill”.

•07/27/2012 • Leave a Comment

Special guest “The Scintillating Sleuth” Flirty Sanchez will appear in Undressed to Kill (Photo by Flirty Sanchez)

Who doesn’t love a good old-fashioned erotic thriller? Move over Basic Instinct, tonight Stripped Screw launches our top show pick for the week: Undressed to Kill.

Here’s the details:

The dangerous dames of Stripped Screw are on the loose and one of these kinky kittens just might be a cold blooded killer. Watch as our fiery forensics femme and sexy slinkster sleuth uncover all the dirty details. Which one of these red hots did the rub out? And will our gum-shoes be able to make her sing? Someone has to take the fall for the stiff we found in the JewelBox Theater! Starring the dangerous dames of Stripped Screw Kutie LaBootie, Kylie Koyote, Stella D’Letto and Violet Tendencies with special guest Seraphina Fiero and featuring Bella Bijoux and Flirty Sanchez.

5 shows over 3 days
July 27 at 8 pm
July 28 at 7 pm and 8.30 pm
July 29 at 6.30 pm and 8 pm

Get tickets by clicking OVER HERE.

Stella D’Letto (Photo by Wavepainter Photography/Charles Davis)

Violet Tendencies (Photo by Wavepainter/Charles Davis)

Kylie Koyote (Photo by Wavepainter/Charles Davis)

Kutie LaBootie (Photo by Wavepainter/Charles Davis)

“The Forensics Babe” Bella Bijoux (Photo by Louie Baweja)

“The Mistress of Ceremonies” Seraphina Fiero (POC Photo)

Strip Poachers: Fandom & Appropriation in Neo-Burlesque.

•07/25/2012 • 1 Comment

~ Written by Sailor St. Claire, Special Guest Contributor

JoJo Stilleto has dubbed summer 2012 the “Summer of Nerdlesque” and documented several instances of nerdlesque (or geeklesque, if you prefer) performances in our fair city for this very site. If you happen to spend a lot of your life traveling through wibbly-wobbly timey-wimey stuff, or don’t get out much due to your duties as a Slayer, here’s a quick definition of nerdlesque as a performance genre: nerdlesque is a means for fans to perform loving tributes to their favorite pop culture properties. It’s getting your geek on while taking your clothes off. But although nerdlesque is clearly a trend in our community, I’d like to propose that nearly all neo-burlesque is, in a way, nerdlesque.

What I mean is that burlesque is and always was a kind of fan culture. Classical burlesque, the burlesque genre Lydia Thompson and her British Blondes brought to the United States in 1869, was a style of performance in which women in drag performed parodies of classical dramas. These scripts poked fun at contemporary culture from within their ancient narrative contexts by including political satire, cultural references to other popular entertainments of the time, and so on. The racy part of these performances was the costuming: burlesque actresses performing male roles wore breeches that showed the curves of their calves and ankles through silk socks. The appearance of feminine calves in a masculine role was yet another way performers poked fun at contemporary culture: by asserting a visual gag about gender into the genre of the performance itself. The texts they performed drew extensively on mainstream popular culture in the late 19th century, appropriated it, poked fun at it, and, in so doing, extended the text’s life and meaning in a way that enabled burlesque performers (and writers) to articulate something about the culture in which they were performing.

Lydia Thompson circa 1870. Photo from the New York Public Library.

This method of appropriating, rescripting, and extending texts is what media studies scholar Henry Jenkins refers to as “textual poaching.” For Jenkins, poaching is the very heart of fan culture. Fandom, and particularly fan fiction, filk songs, or other kinds of fan-art that is sourced and created by fan communities, is about arresting control of the dominant text from its creator to rework it for one’s own purposes. So if Mulder and Scully don’t hook up onscreen, they can hook up in fan fiction (or, if you prefer, Mulder can hook up with Krychek). When fans create content that extends the fannish universes of their choosing, fans then have control over the creation of the dominant narrative. Likewise, a burlesque number such as Scarlett O’Hairdye’s “Romana” act (in which she considers what Romana would do with the 4th Doctor’s scarf if she were alone with it in a Tardis) appropriates the Whoniverse and extends the narrative in the manner of the performer’s imagining. Nerdlesque can also appropriate and resignify the meaning of the texts they poach, as I do in my “Trouble with Tribbles” number. Those problematically multiplying, purring little balls of fur from the classic Star Trek episode become my pasties and merkin. It’s a parodic appropriation and resignification of a dominant cultural text which turns a sci-fi icon into a comment on body hair.

Scarlett O’Hairdye (Photo by Joshua Weiner)

Sailor in “The Trouble with Tribbles” (Photo by Nate Gowdy)

The union of burlesque and fandom that is the nerdlesque movement marks an important feminist intervention with fan culture, a topic I spoke about at the inaugural GeekGirlCon in 2011. The nerdlesque genre and GeekGirlCon share similar missions: to create a female-driven space through which women can celebrate their geekery without being subject to (and objectified by) fandom’s patriarchal tendencies. In Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema, Laura Mulvey argues that the eye of the camera replicates the male gaze, particularly noticeable in cinema’s tendency to represent female bodies as fragmented accumulations of parts (legs, breasts, lips, eyes, hair) rather than whole figures. This fragmentation stalls the body’s potential for action. It renders something as progressive as a superheroine into a passive object of the male gaze. Because science fiction fandoms have been historically created by and for men, these kinds of fragmented representations of female bodies tend to persist within fan culture. Fanboys get upset at the thought of Wonder Woman donning pants (that are still skin tight), while fangirls are saddened to see Starfire wearing the comic book equivalent of a Slingshot. (Not that Slingshots aren’t awesome – they’re just not awesome on teenage girls.) Then there are booth babes: the models hired by film studios, game designers and comic houses to dress up as female characters from fan universes in order to pose for pictures and sell merchandise. The booth babe has very little agency. She’s the opposite of the empowered heroine she may be dressed up to represent. And the ratio of male to female characters within fannish universes is still skewed in favor of those with Y-chromosomes.

Although these fannish universes might exhibit very masculinist tendencies, most fan fiction (particularly slash fiction) is written by women. Because fan fictions are about arresting control of the dominant narratives from their creators to extend the possibilities of the text, this creative aspect of fandom is a space where women can have agency. As the neo-burlesque movement is built on the foundations of feminist performance art, it too grants agency to its participants. Unlike the booth babes (or the sci-fi heroines they dress up as), burlesque allows the performer to control the gaze of the audience. Every movement of a hand, every well-placed glance, is intended to guide where the audience is meant to look. By inviting and manipulating the gaze, the performer retains agency through action. This is a common feature in all neo-burlesque. It allows performers to narrate their own bodies while telling stories – even if those narratives are poached from other sources.

Though not all neo-burlesque is nerdlesque, it seems to return to the model begun by Lydia Thompson in its need to poach from cultural texts. Neo-burlesque draws inspiration from pop music (Valkyrie Production’s Women Behind the Music), movies and television (Roxy Ruby & Pepper Patootie’s Blues Brothers duet, “Mission from Gawd”), and politics (The Von Foxies’s “Masochism Tango”). While not necessarily derived from “fannish” universes, performances that reference contemporary culture are, in a sense, poaching from dominant cultural texts and rescripting them. In this way, all neo-burlesque shares a common desire for the creation and control of meaning, whether that is about how female bodies should be looked at through manipulation of the audience’s gaze or about the co-option of a pre-existing cultural narrative.

Iva Handfull (POC Photo)

But to say that the brunt of meaning making lies entirely with the performer would neglect a key part of burlesque as a genre. Neo-burlesque is a special kind of live theatre that invites audiences to share more intimate connections with performers via the lack of a fourth wall and the potential for interaction. In fact, the participation of the audience in the forms of hoots, hollers, cheers and other forms of call-and-response add another layer to the struggle for meaning. So when Iva Handfull locks eyes with you during her dirty cowpoke strut (“Marlboro Woman”), your response is actually reshaping the narrative arc of the act. It matters whether or not you meet Iva’s gaze or look away. And it matters where you cheer and what you cheer for. So burlesque fans, too, co-opt authorship by inserting their own voices and actions into the performer’s narrative. Another unique feature in burlesque is the way in which performances are built around the need for this audience response, and thus invite it in. This recognizes the need for meaning to be a co-constructive act between audiences and performers, fans and creators – which is why nerdlesque is very much at home within the larger world of neo-burlesque.

***

Sailor St. Claire isn’t called The Showgirl Scholar for nothing. In addition to stripping off sparkly bits, she’s working on her doctorate in English literature and routinely returns graded papers to her students that are covered in glitter. She is a member of Tempting Tarts Burlesque and the producer of Tuesday Tease, a monthly burlesque revue with live musical accompaniment at Lucid Jazz Lounge.

The author, Sailor St.Claire (Photo by Parris Blue)