Photographer Chris Blakeley reviews The Castaways in “K.O.” and “Glitterati”.

•06/07/2011 • Leave a Comment

Jonny Boy & Rainbow Fletcher

Jonny Boy & Fiona Minx

– Written and photographed by Chris Blakeley, Contributing Writer/Photog (Seattle)

Sometimes I just need a break from the burlesque scene. It’s a question of balance, of timing and sometimes of exhaustion. Now some people would use this as an opportunity to put the camera down or maybe move on to another project, which I gladly do when I need that break. But sometimes I just find it so much more satisfying to shoot a different kind of show. That’s when I grab my gear and head down to the Can Can to be blown away like the old Memorex ad, taking pictures like a fiend.

Refreshing is an understatement.

I love the Castaways. Underline that, bold it, italicize it and put that in 144 point font and you’ll come close to my feelings for them. No matter what, I feel like I go into full on fanboy mode whenever I talk to them, all stuttering and awkward “where do I look now?” moments.

The Castaways (Benihana, Easy-E, Fiona Minx, Jonny Boy, Rainbow Fletcher) are a little bit burlesque, a bit more cabaret, a lot of acrobatics and a whole heaping helping of modern dance, pulled together by Rainbow Fletcher’s ever changing and amazingly inventive choreography. It’s almost impossible to describe their acts because for every one that has a clear through-line (a gladiator pursues a unicorn, a duet to a mournful ballad by The Bad Things) there are three or four that defy description except possibly as the set up to a joke (“A badger, a spaceman and a karate fighter walk into a bar…”). It is dance for the sake of dance with the occasional pastie. It is performance with a casual indifference to that whole “fourth wall” thing.

Benihana breaking that pesky 4th wall.

It’s wonderful. It’s mesmerizing. It’s also bloody hard to explain the shows when you’re dealing with their kind of strange reality. Group acts that defy explanation as well as gravity: masked sumo with fans, big band covers of Britney Spears, Benihana bouncing around the stage like a demented puppet, Fiona Minx being chastised by Jonny Boy in bad drag for her sexy clothes. They are conceptual, they are dynamic and they are nothing at all like each other except that they hold the audience’s attention from high speed antics to gentle aerial duets and back. And then there’s Vladi, who I leave to the audience to discover for themselves.

I can’t recommend these shows enough, whether it’s one of the “greatest hits” shows on Friday nights, their spectacles on Saturdays or even one of their forays into the Triple Door and beyond. If you’re looking for something truly unique, you can’t go wrong with anything the Castaways bring to the stage.

***Visit Chris Blakeley’s Can Can collection on Flickr by clicking HERE; and check the sidebar links at right for more on Can Can’s showtimes and tickets.***

Rainbow Fletcher & Fiona Minx

Share your BHOF love; also meet the bad girls of The Detroit Cobras.

•06/06/2011 • 2 Comments
Rachel and Mary of The Detroit Cobras
 
 

This week BSP will feature a review of the latest Castaways double feature at Can Can Cabaret, as well as some juicy firsthand accounts and images from BHOF 2011 (please feel free to contact us via burlesqueseattlepress@gmail.com if you have anything you’d like to share that you have permission to share)…

While we wait for those feathers to be preened and arranged, I thought I’d give a little attention to the undomesticated ladies who front the rollicking retro-garage combo The Detroit Cobras. Any burlesque fan worth their salt understands that music plays a huge role in the energy and feel of a burlesque number. The Detroit Cobras have energy in spades, and I’d love to see a number featuring one of their fiery tunes. Frontwoman Rachel Nagy (a former exotic dancer who looks a bit like a blonde Tura Satana) screams and shouts her way through innuendo-laden fifties and sixties covers and throwdowns such as “Leave My Kitten Alone” and “Shout Bama Lama”. I’m surprised I haven’t heard of a burlesque routine to Cobras original “Hot Dog (Watch Me Eat)”. One can only hope.

For more on the Cobras, read my random preview HERE and check them out at Neumos in Seattle Tuesday, June 7 by clicking HERE.

And the 2011 winners are….

•06/05/2011 • 1 Comment

Miss Exotic World, 2011 Reigning Queen of Burlesque: MISS INDIGO BLUE!!!!!! (a pre-BHOF photo teaser by Chris Blakeley)

By all accounts (and the insane amount of Twitter hashtag activity last night), the 54th Annual Burlesque Reunion and accompanying 21st Annual Tournament of Tease proved to be the most fantastic display of creativity and greatest outpouring of love in the weekend’s history.

Reports and pictures will follow in the coming days, but here’s the results of the Burlesque Hall of Fame Tournament of Tease 2011:

Reigning Queen of Burlesque 2011:
Miss Indigo Blue (Seattle, WA)

First Runner-Up: Anna Fur Laxis (Yorkshire, UK)
Second Runner-Up: Lily Verlaine (Seattle, WA)

Reigning King of Burlesque: Captain Kidd (Brisbane, Australia)

Best Debut: LouLou D’Vil (Tampere, Finland)
Best Group: The Stage Door Johnnies (Chicago, IL )
Most Dazzling: Captain Kidd (Brisbane, Australia)
Most Classic: Miss Indigo Blue (Seattle, WA)
Most Comical: The Dolls of Doom (Chicago, IL )
Most Innovative: Jett Adore (Chicago, IL)

Congratulations to all who performed at BHOF 2011.  You make the sparkling world of burlesque go ’round- and WE LOVE YOU!!!! Thank you for all that you do!!!

Luck Be A Lady: the Northwest goes to BHOF; Behind the Burlesque Curtain video teaser.

•06/01/2011 • Leave a Comment

This weekend four Seattle burlesque performers- and two from our sister city of Portland- will compete in Las Vegas during the “21st Annual Tournament of Tease” at the Burlesque Hall of Fame Weekend & Reunion. Miss Indigo Blue and Lily Verlaine are up for the coveted “Miss Exotic World, 2011 Queen of Burlesque” title; Iva Handfull and Randi Rascal are up for “Best Debut” along with Portland’s Angelique DeVil and Charlotte Treuse.

BHOF weekend also features several nights of non-competitive showcases including “Movers, Shakers, & Innovators”, in which Waxie Moon (Seattle) Inga Ingénue (Seattle) and Nina Nightshade (Portland) will appear. The Swedish Housewife has had a hand in producing the 54th Annual Burlesque Reunion Showcase, which will feature Kitten Natividad, Joan Arline, Marinka, April March, Toni Elling, and a host of other untamed ladies.

Each year countless other performers from around the globe as well as a glittering tidal wave of burlesque aficionados migrate to Vegas to witness the proceedings and meet the legends. The history of this pastie-studded exodus to BHOF is as lovingly passed down as a hand-sewn Swarovski brassiere. The makeshift museum started by Jennie Lee on a goat farm in Helendale, California has since relocated to Las Vegas (along with burlesque matriarch Dixie Evans) and has been growing ever since.

In the meantime, Paul O’Connell of POC Photo has been diligently shooting behind-the-scenes video with the Seattle competitors, collaborating with the performers (as well as Madeline Rider and yours truly with Burlesque Seattle Press) for the first in a series of shows focused on burlesque. Where better to launch a pilot than in our own talent-rich burlesque city?

The first installment of this experimental new series focuses on the Seattle performers bound for Burlesque Hall of Fame 2011 Weekend. Miss Indigo Blue, Lily Verlaine, Iva Handfull and Randi Rascal appear in their private boudoirs, speaking about their art as well as what it means to be a part of burlesque history in Vegas. The forthcoming featurette will spotlight this moment in time and of course…what happens next.

Come see what’s behind the glitz and glam of the art of the tease of four Seattle burlesque performers as they get ready to head to Las Vegas to compete at this year’s Burlesque Hall of Fame weekend. Discover the divine toil behind all those rhinestones and sequins. Learn how they seductively remove gloves, stockings and other slippery accoutrements. Witness the perspiration and the passion invested in perfecting the art of the tassel twirl.

Check out the show’s teaser on POC’s youtube channel:

And finally, meet this year’s BHOF contenders from the Northwest…GOOD LUCK TO ALL!

MISS INDIGO BLUE (Seattle) competes for Miss Exotic World, 2011 Queen of Burlesque:

Miss Indigo Blue (POC Photo)

LILY VERLAINE (Seattle) competes for Miss Exotic World, 2011 Queen of Burlesque:

Lily Verlaine (POC Photo)

RANDI RASCAL (Seattle) competes for Best Debut:

Randi Rascal (POC Photo)

IVA HANDFULL (Seattle) competes for Best Debut:

Iva Handfull (POC Photo)

CHARLOTTE TREUSE (Portland) competes for Best Debut:

Charlotte Treuse (POC Photo)

ANGELIQUE DeVIL (Portland) competes for Best Debut:

Angelique DeVil (Photo Tyler Spencer)

All the Boys and Girls: L’Edition Francaise in review.

•05/29/2011 • Leave a Comment

La Danse! Le Burlesque! L’Edition Francaise wrapped up three unique and exhilarating evenings at The Triple Door last night. Having seen the show’s debut last year, it was a treat to sit back and anticipate what was coming this time around with just a few minor casting tweaks and the show settled into confident perfection. “Coquette” marks esteemed choreographer Olivier Wevers’ first flirtation with burlesque, and his direction of Kylie Shea and Ty Alexander Cheng in a female/male carnal gender role reversal was a jaw-dropper for cheeky suggestiveness, bold and sublimely physical movement, and a bizarre crescendo of caterwauling felines. The audience was in stitches and enthralled; Kyle Shea and Ty Alexander Cheng were nothing short of mind-blowing. Wevers mentioned to me after the show that future collaborations with producer and performer Lily Verlaine are very possible. One can only hope- the pairing would be unstoppable.

Kitten LaRue’s trademark over-the-top femininity was given full rein in “Les Filles yé-yé”. From mini-skirted yé-yé girls to lazy bathing beauties casually batting at an oversize ball while two doting, beaming boys made ambient waves behind them, each piece of Kitten’s portion of L’Edition Francaise captured the deliberately innocent- but overtly seductive- nature of French female pop stars in the sixties. In “7 in the Morning”, Kitten wakes in a giant bed, dances in pajamas and pigtails, clutches pop records to her bare chest, and ultimately finds herself too exhausted to choose between a red or blue blouse, collapsing back into bed. Ruby Mimosa’s “Baby Shark”- complete with fin and bright blue bow- was adorable; Indigo Blue brought a bit of dirty bump and grind to the proceedings with “Nitty Gritty”. It’s easy to see why she’ll compete for Reigning Queen of Burlesque next weekend at the Burlesque Hall of Fame in Las Vegas. Nobody grinds like Miss Indigo Blue.

Lily Verlaine’s interpretation of Serge Gainsbourg’s “Histoire de Melody Nelson” captured a young girl’s physical coming of age and tragic end in a stylish, sophisticated, and unflinchingly sexual way. Lily is never one to shy away from art that takes the viewer a bit outside the lines. Her exploration of female sexuality is never concealed or hinted, but lingers- allowing her audience to luxuriate and actually look without shame.

Trojan Original & Lily Verlaine (Photo Chris Blakeley, 2010)

And lest you forget…there are now just 6 days left to help Lily’s Stargazer campaign- she’s almost reached her goal but isn’t quite there yet. See Lily and designer Danial Webster’s video and patronize this work of art in process by clicking HERE.

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In other news, if you are not part of next week’s mass exodus to the Burlesque Hall of Fame where the film Tournée will be screened, do not despair. It’s actually being screened as part of the 2011 Seattle International Film Festival. The film, directed by and starring Mathieu Amalric, features burlesque luminaries Julie Atlas Muz, Mimi Le Meaux, Dirty Martini, and Kitten on the Keys, who is scheduled to attend the June 9 and June 11 showings. Get tickets HERE and watch the trailer below: