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The Decline of Burlesque
Modern
audiences, when they think of burlesque at all, tend to equate it with
striptease, but the striptease was, in truth, a relatively late
addition to the burlesque repertoire. Early burlesque performers
may have been scantily clad when they walked onstage, but they did not
strip off their garments as part of their acts. No one is quite
sure how stripping onstage began; there have been many origin stories,
and just as many different performers attempting to take credit for
this landmark event. But whether it began intentionally or
accidentally, striptease had been popularized on burlesque stages by
the 1920s. As striptease became more popular, comics and other
variety acts which had been part of burlesque since its early days were
gradually cut back in favor of more marketable female flesh.
Burlesque stripteasers usually stripped down to a G-string and pasties,
though some were inclined to go further. Acts became
progressively more risqué as public interest in burlesque began
to wane, pushed aside first by vaudeville and Broadway revues, and
later by the motion picture industry. Burlesque tapered off in
the 1920s, only to have a resurgence during the Great Depression, even
moving to Broadway playhouses under the purview of the famous Minsky
brothers.
Burlesque’s
escalating focus on titillation rather than performance attracted an
even stronger antiburlesque discourse, as well as legal measures.
Police raids on burlesque theatres suspected of showing too much flesh
became commonplace. One of the most famous raids, of a prominent
Minsky theatre, occurred on April 20, 1925. This raid has a place
in history as what many consider to have been the beginning of the end
for burlesque. It has since been immortalized in a 1960 novel,
written by Rowland Barber, and a 1968 film, both entitled The Night They Raided Minsky’s.
As
the sexualized display of the female body increased, the performer
herself lost her voice. When she was permitted to appear in
comedy sketches at all, she was relegated to the role of “talking
woman,” reacting to the male comic rather than speaking for
herself. Morton Minsky himself admitted that “burlesque was
becoming nothing more than a legal way of selling the illusion of sex
to the public” (qtd. in Allen 232).
Burlesque
continued on for years following the raid of Minsky’s, but
antiburlesque legislators finally succeeded in outlawing it in New York
City beginning in 1937. The very next year, in his book Strip Tease: The Vanished Art of Burlesque,
H.M. Alexander observed that “the heart is out of
burlesque” but “it will be back” (118), and his
prediction proved correct. Burlesque has lived on throughout the
twentieth century and into the twenty-first in several
incarnations. Today, there is a growing neo-burlesque scene,
populated by performers who are determined to bring back the retro
glamour of the strip and the tease, but with their own modern
twist. The burlesque of today bears little resemblance to the
performances of Lydia Thompson, but it remains a significant means of
sexual self-expression for women.
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