Words & Music

Words & Music
Author: Sigmund Spaeth
Publisher:
Total Pages: 72
Release: 1926
Genre: Burlesques
ISBN:

Burlesque (Songbook)

Burlesque (Songbook)
Author: Cher
Publisher: Hal Leonard Corporation
Total Pages: 144
Release: 2011-02-01
Genre: Music
ISBN: 1458430898

(Piano/Vocal/Guitar Songbook). Our folio features 11 tracks from the Golden Globe-nominated movie soundtrack, along with pages of full-color photos of sexy co-stars Cher and Christina Aguilera! Includes: The Beautiful People * Bound to You * Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend * Express * Guy What Takes His Time * Long John Blues * Show Me How You Burlesque * Something's Got a Hold on Me * Tough Lover * Welcome to Burlesque * You Haven't Seen the Last of Me.

Neo-Burlesque

Neo-Burlesque
Author: Lynn Sally
Publisher: Rutgers University Press
Total Pages: 193
Release: 2021-10-27
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1978828101

The neo-burlesque movement seeks to restore a sense of glamour, theatricality, and humor to striptease. Neo-burlesque performers strut their stuff in front of audiences that appreciate their playful brand of pro-sex, often gender-bending, feminism. Performance studies scholar and acclaimed burlesque artist Lynn Sally offers an inside look at the history, culture, and philosophy of New York’s neo-burlesque scene. Revealing how twenty-first century neo-burlesque is in constant dialogue with the classic burlesque of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, she considers how today’s performers use camp to comment on preconceived notions of femininity. She also explores how the striptease performer directs the audience’s gaze, putting on layers of meaning while taking off layers of clothing. Through detailed profiles of iconic neo-burlesque performers such as Dita Von Teese, Dirty Martini, Julie Atlas Muz, and World Famous *BOB*, this book makes the case for understanding neo-burlesque as a new sexual revolution. Yet it also examines the broader community of “Pro-Am” performers who use neo-burlesque as a liberating vehicle for self-expression. Raising important questions about what feminism looks like, Neo-Burlesque celebrates a revolutionary performing art and participatory culture whose acts have political reverberations, both onstage and off.

Horrible Prettiness

Horrible Prettiness
Author: Robert Allen
Publisher: Univ of North Carolina Press
Total Pages: 369
Release: 2000-11-09
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0807860085

Robert Allen's compelling book examines burlesque not only as popular entertainment but also as a complex and transforming cultural phenomenon. When Lydia Thompson and her controversial female troupe of "British Blondes" brought modern burlesque to the United States in 1868, the result was electric. Their impertinent humor, streetwise manner, and provocative parodies of masculinity brought them enormous popular success--and the condemnation of critics, cultural commentators, and even women's rights campaigners. Burlesque was a cultural threat, Allen argues, because it inverted the "normal" world of middle-class social relations and transgressed norms of "proper" feminine behavior and appearance. Initially playing to respectable middle-class audiences, burlesque was quickly relegated to the shadow-world of working-class male leisure. In this process the burlesque performer "lost" her voice, as burlesque increasingly revolved around the display of her body. Locating burlesque within the context of both the social transformation of American theater and its patterns of gender representation, Allen concludes that burlesque represents a fascinating example of the potential transgressiveness of popular entertainment forms, as well as the strategies by which they have been contained and their threats defused.

The Song Is You

The Song Is You
Author: Bradley Rogers
Publisher: University of Iowa Press
Total Pages: 295
Release: 2020-10-15
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 1609387325

Musicals, it is often said, burst into song and dance when mere words can no longer convey the emotion. This book argues that musicals burst into song and dance when one body can no longer convey the emotion. Rogers shows how the musical’s episodes of burlesque and minstrelsy model the kinds of radical relationships that the genre works to create across the different bodies of its performers, spectators, and creators every time the musical bursts into song. These radical relationships—borne of the musical’s obsessions with “bad” performances of gender and race—are the root of the genre’s progressive play with identity, and thus the source of its subcultural power. However, this leads to an ethical dilemma: Are the musical’s progressive politics thus rooted in its embrace of regressive entertainments like burlesque and minstrelsy? The Song Is You shows how musicals return again and again to this question, and grapple with a guilt that its joyous pleasures are based on exploiting the laboring bodies of its performers. Rogers argues that the discourse of “integration”—which claims that songs should advance the plot—has functioned to deny the radical work that the musical undertakes every time it transitions into song and dance. Looking at musicals from The Black Crook to Hamilton, Rogers confronts the gendered and racial dynamics that have always under-girded the genre, and asks how we move forward.