Requirements to Be a Burlesque Dancer
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The Texas Observer DEC. 13, 1963
The Texas Observer DEC. 13, 1963 A Journal of Free Voices A Window to The South 25c Who Was Lee Harvey Oswald? Dallas Much has been written about Lee Harvey Oswald, 24, of New Orleans, Fort Worth, and, for a time, the Soviet Union, but I have learned the most about him as he was on November 22 in Dallas from two long interviews here, one with a man who had an argument with him less than a month before that day and one with a man who knew him as well as anyone who has spoken up. His mother, too, has had a part of her say, but she is determined to sell her story; she did not know him well at the end; and he had moved beyond her influence. His brothers kept then ovvr: cywnsel. His wife has yet to talk to reporters, other than a Life team who did not report much from her. And he is dead now. The argument occurred at a meeting of the Dallas chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union at Selectman Hall on the S.M.U. campus Oct. 25. Michael Paine, Os- wald's only close acquaintance, as far as is known, during the last months of his life, had brought him as a guest. The program for the evening was built around a showing of a film developing the theme that a Washington state legislator had been defeated by right'-'wing attacks based on previous communist-type associa- tions of the legislator's wife. The discussion was running along the theme that liberals should oppose witch-hunts, but with scru- pulous methods. -
Dallas Striptease 1946-1960 A
FROM MIDWAY TO MAINSTAGE: DALLAS STRIPTEASE 1946-1960 A Thesis by KELLY CLAYTON Submitted to the Graduate School of Texas A&M University-Commerce in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS May 2019 FROM MIDWAY TO MAINSTAGE: DALLAS STRIPTEASE 1946-1960 A Thesis by KELLY CLAYTON Approved by: Advisor: Jessica Brannon-Wranosky Committee: Sharon Kowalsky Andrew Baker Head of Department: Sharon Kowalsky Dean of the College: William Kuracina Dean of the Graduate School: Matthew A. Wood iii Copyright © 2019 Kelly Clayton iv ABSTRACT FROM MIDWAY TO MAINSTAGE: DALLAS STRIPTEASE 1946-1960 Kelly Clayton, MA Texas A&M University-Commerce, 2019 Advisor: Jessica Brannon-Wranosky PhD The entertainment landscape of post-World War II Dallas, Texas included striptease in different types of venues. Travelling and local striptease acts performed at the city’s annual fair and in several nightclubs in the city. In the late 1940s, the fair featured striptease as the headlining act, and one of the city’s newspapers, the Dallas Morning News, described the dancers as the most popular attraction of the largest fair in the United States. Further, the newspaper reporting congratulated the men who ran the fair for providing Texans with these popular entertainment options. The dancers who performed at the fair also showcased their talents at area nightclubs to mixed gender audiences. Dallas welcomed striptease as an acceptable form of entertainment. However, in the early 1950s, the tone and tenor of the striptease coverage changed. The State Fair of Texas executives decried striptease as “soiled” and low-class. Dancers performed in nightclubs, but the newspaper began to report on one particular entertainer, Candy Barr, and her many tangles with law enforcement. -
DALLAS + ARCHITECTURE + CULTURE Winter 2018 Vol. 35 No. 1
DALLAS + ARCHITECTURE + CULTURE Winter 2018 Vol. 35 No. 1 strip COLUMNS // aiadallas.org 1 ARCHITECTURAL LIGHTING IS COMPLICATED NOW. Our professional lighting consultants know the latest in lighting and can make it simple for you. P LIGHTS R FANTASTIC O P LIGHTS R FANTASTIC O LIGHTSFANTASTICPRO.COM P 2525 E. STATE HWY. 121LIGHTS • BLDG. B, SUITE 200 • LEWISVILLE,R TX 75056 • 469.568.1111 FANTASTIC O 2 COLUMNS // aiadallas.org P LIGHTS R FANTASTIC O AIA Dallas Columns Winter 2018 + Vol. 35, No. 1 strip “Doing more with less” seems to be a mantra for the 21st Century. Design work, however, doesn’t need to be either prudish or garish to be smart. Are we slowly stripping away history, meaning, and character in our community? STRIP EXPLORATION 14 The Evolution of Place What does “character” refer to when describing Dallas architecture? 18 Fixing “Strip-urbia” Are the commercial byproducts of sprawl outdated? 22 At Our Wit’s End Can a sense of humor in strip malls be the recipe for success? 28 A Strip of Pavement that Changed Texas Forever How did our nation’s first highway system transform the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex? 33 The Politics of Stripping Should public art be stripped of its historic and political meaning? Cover Illustration: Frances Yllana COLUMNS // aiadallas.org 1 Prairie View A&M University Agriculture & Business Multipurpose Building architect Overland Partners, San Antonio general contractor Linbeck, Houston Building Connections In Brick masonry contractor Camarata Masonry Systems, Houston At Prairie View A&M University’s historical gathering “We worked with Prairie View place, a clock tower now marks a center of academic A&M to design a central campus as well as social convergence. -
The Rise and Fall of Fair Use: the Protection of Literary Materials Against Copyright Infringement by New and Developing Media
South Carolina Law Review Volume 20 Issue 2 Article 1 1968 The Rise and Fall of Fair Use: The Protection of Literary Materials Against Copyright Infringement by New and Developing Media Hugh J. Crossland Boston University School of Law Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/sclr Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation Hugh J. Crossland, The Rise and Fall of Fair Use: The Protection of Literary Materials Against Copyright Infringement by New and Developing Media, 20 S. C. L. Rev. 153 (1968). This Article is brought to you by the Law Reviews and Journals at Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in South Carolina Law Review by an authorized editor of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Crossland:THE RISE The Rise AND and FallFALL of Fair Use:OF The FAIR Protection USE: of Literary Materia THE PROTECTION OF LITERARY MATERIALS AGAINST COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT BY NEW AND DEVELOPING MEDIA HuGH J. CROSSLAND* St. Coumba, sitting up all night to do it, furtively made a copy of abbot Fennian's Psalter, and how the abbot protested as loudly as if he had been a member of the Stationers Company, and brought an action in detinue, or its Irsh equivalent, for Columba's copy, and how King Diarmid sitting in Tara's halls, not then deserted, gave judgment for the abbot .... I. INTRODUCTION Many copies of literary material-books and periodicals- have been made in violation of the law. The growing use' of copying machines is causing a decline in the market for litera- ture, is unfair competition2 to the publisher and copyright owner, and has possible constitutional significance.3 Although the copyright statute4 grants absolute rights5 protecting writ- ings that are published in accordance with its provisions, the courts have put a gloss on the statute by allowing non-infringing * Assistant Professor of Law, Boston University School of Law; B.B.A., M.B.A., University of Michigan; J.D., Wayne State University; LL.M., Yale University; Member of the Michigan Bar. -
P E R F O R M I N G
PERFORMING & Entertainment 2019 BOOK CATALOG Including Rowman & Littlefield and Imprints of Globe Pequot CONTENTS Performing Arts & Entertainment Catalog 2019 FILM & THEATER 1 1 Featured Titles 13 Biography 28 Reference 52 Drama 76 History & Criticism 82 General MUSIC 92 92 Featured Titles 106 Biography 124 History & Criticism 132 General 174 Order Form How to Order (Inside Back Cover) Film and Theater / FEATURED TITLES FORTHCOMING ACTION ACTION A Primer on Playing Action for Actors By Hugh O’Gorman ACTION ACTION Acting Is Action addresses one of the essential components of acting, Playing Action. The book is divided into two parts: A Primer on Playing Action for Actors “Context” and “Practice.” The Context section provides a thorough examination of the theory behind the core elements of Playing Action. The Practice section provides a step-by-step rehearsal guide for actors to integrate Playing Action into their By Hugh O’Gorman preparation process. Acting Is Action is a place to begin for actors: a foundation, a ground plan for how to get started and how to build the core of a performance. More precisely, it provides a practical guide for actors, directors, and teachers in the technique of Playing Action, and it addresses a niche void in the world of actor training by illuminating what exactly to do in the moment-to-moment act of the acting task. March, 2020 • Art/Performance • 184 pages • 6 x 9 • CQ: TK • 978-1-4950-9749-2 • $24.95 • Paper APPLAUSE NEW BOLLYWOOD FAQ All That’s Left to Know About the Greatest Film Story Never Told By Piyush Roy Bollywood FAQ provides a thrilling, entertaining, and intellectually stimulating joy ride into the vibrant, colorful, and multi- emotional universe of the world’s most prolific (over 30 000 film titles) and most-watched film industry (at 3 billion-plus ticket sales). -
Rose La Rose and the Re-Ownership of American Burlesque, 1935-1972
TAUGHT IT TO THE TRADE: ROSE LA ROSE AND THE RE-OWNERSHIP OF AMERICAN BURLESQUE, 1935-1972 DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Elizabeth Wellman Graduate Program in Theatre The Ohio State University 2015 Dissertation Committee: Jennifer Schlueter, Advisor Beth Kattelman Joy Reilly Copyright by Elizabeth Wellman 2015 ABSTRACT Declaring burlesque dead has been a habit of the twentieth century. Robert C. Allen quoted an 1890s letter from the first burlesque star of the American stage, Lydia Thompson in Horrible Prettiness: Burlesque and American Culture (1991): “[B]urlesque as she knew it ‘has been retired for a time,’ its glories now ‘merely memories of the stage.’”1 In 1931, Bernard Sobel opined in Burleycue: An Underground History of Burlesque Days, “Alas! You will never get a chance to see one of the real burlesque shows again. They are gone forever…”2 In 1938, The Billboard published an editorial that began, “On every hand the cry is ‘Burlesque is dead.’”3 In fact, burlesque had been declared dead so often that editorials began popping up insisting it could be revived, as Joe Schoenfeld’s 1943 op-ed in Variety did: “[It] may be in a state of putrefaction, but it is a lusty and kicking decomposition.”4 It is this “lusty and kicking decomposition” which characterizes the published history of burlesque. Since its modern inception in the late nineteenth century, American burlesque has both been framed and framed itself within this narrative of degeneration. -
Behind the Burly Q
BEHIND THE BURLY Q A film by Leslie Zemeckis HDCAM SR, 98 minutes, 2010 First Run Features 630 Ninth Avenue, Suite 1213 New York, NY 10036 [email protected] (212) 243-0600 PRAISE FOR BEHIND THE BURLY Q “Utterly entertaining Behind the Burly Q is a painstakingly researched love letter to the women and men who once made up the community of burlesque performers…its treasure trove of vintage photographs and performance footage is enough to make historians and fans of classic erotica swoon…insightful, fascinating.” –Ernest Hardy, The Village Voice CRITICS’ PICK! “Intriguing…fans of theatrical history are well advised to check it out” -New York Magazine “Charming, entertaining…a delight!” –Manohla Dargis, Behind the Burly Q “Provides a privileged front-row seat to sample several of the form's most memorable practitioners… stories run from raunchy to touching to funny to flat-out incredible.” –Ronnie Scheib, Variety “Affectionate and engaging…wonderful vintage footage, a fascinating glimpse into a corner of American history.” –New York Daily News “Fascinatingly strips away at the myths surrounding the most popular American entertainment form of the first half of the 20th century.” –Michael Musto, The Sundance Channel “Quickly paced, absorbing.” –Kyle Smith, The New York Post “History done right: informative, entertaining, funny and finally rather moving…jam-packed with juicy detail, and most of that jam is tasty indeed.”-James van Maanen, Trustmovies “Delightful, engaging…A veritable who's who of the grande dames of the burlesque stage…for -
The Untitled Black Burlesque History Project
City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works School of Arts & Sciences Theses Hunter College Winter 1-5-2017 The Untitled Black Burlesque History Project Sekiya Dorsett How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/hc_sas_etds/243 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works School of Arts & Sciences Theses Hunter College Fall 12-20-2017 The Untitled Black Burlesque History Project Sekiya Dorsett CUNY Hunter College The Untitled Black Burlesque History Project by Sekiya Dorsett Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Fine Arts in Integrated Media Arts, Hunter College The City University of New York Fall 2017 Thesis Sponsor: Dec 20, 2017 Date Signature Tami Gold Dec 20, 2017 Date Signature of Second Reader Rachel Stevens Dec 20, 2017 Date Signature of Third Reader Ricardo Miranda 2 Abstract The Untitled Black Burlesque History Project is a character driven short documentary featuring Chicava Honeychild, a neo-burlesque1 dancer who is unearthing a hidden Black burlesque history. As Chicava searches for her “stripper grandmas,” she mentors a new generation of burlesque performers who are of women of color. Chicava Honeychild first meeting with Black burlesque Jean Idelle is interwoven with the burlesque journey of Henrietta, Chicava Honeychild’s burlesque student. As Henrietta is honing her burlesque craft in preparation for her first performance, we learn about Jean’s dynamic life as a burlesque dancer in the 1940s and 1950s. -
Classical Mythology in the Victorian Popular Theatre Edith Hall
Pre-print of Hall, E. in International Journal of the Classical Tradition, (1998). Classical Mythology in the Victorian Popular Theatre Edith Hall Introduction: Classics and Class Several important books published over the last few decades have illuminated the diversity of ways in which educated nineteenth-century Britons used ancient Greece and Rome in their art, architecture, philosophy, political theory, poetry, and fiction. The picture has been augmented by Christopher Stray’s study of the history of classical education in Britain, in which he systematically demonstrates that however diverse the elite’s responses to the Greeks and Romans during this period, knowledge of the classical languages served to create and maintain class divisions and effectively to exclude women and working-class men from access to the professions and the upper levels of the civil service. This opens up the question of the extent to which people with little or no education in the classical languages knew about the cultures of ancient Greece and Rome. One of the most important aspects of the burlesques of Greek drama to which the argument turned towards the end of the previous chapter is their evidential value in terms of the access to classical culture available in the mid-nineteenth century to working- and lower- middle-class people, of both sexes, who had little or no formal training in Latin or Greek. For the burlesque theatre offered an exciting medium through which Londoners—and the large proportion of the audiences at London theatres who travelled in from the provinces—could appreciate classical material. Burlesque was a distinctive theatrical genre which provided entertaining semi-musical travesties of well-known texts and stories, from Greek tragedy and Ovid to Shakespeare and the Arabian Nights, between approximately the 1830s and the 1870s. -
Ronald Davis Oral History Collection on the Performing Arts
Oral History Collection on the Performing Arts in America Southern Methodist University The Southern Methodist University Oral History Program was begun in 1972 and is part of the University’s DeGolyer Institute for American Studies. The goal is to gather primary source material for future writers and cultural historians on all branches of the performing arts- opera, ballet, the concert stage, theatre, films, radio, television, burlesque, vaudeville, popular music, jazz, the circus, and miscellaneous amateur and local productions. The Collection is particularly strong, however, in the areas of motion pictures and popular music and includes interviews with celebrated performers as well as a wide variety of behind-the-scenes personnel, several of whom are now deceased. Most interviews are biographical in nature although some are focused exclusively on a single topic of historical importance. The Program aims at balancing national developments with examples from local history. Interviews with members of the Dallas Little Theatre, therefore, serve to illustrate a nation-wide movement, while film exhibition across the country is exemplified by the Interstate Theater Circuit of Texas. The interviews have all been conducted by trained historians, who attempt to view artistic achievements against a broad social and cultural backdrop. Many of the persons interviewed, because of educational limitations or various extenuating circumstances, would never write down their experiences, and therefore valuable information on our nation’s cultural heritage would be lost if it were not for the S.M.U. Oral History Program. Interviewees are selected on the strength of (1) their contribution to the performing arts in America, (2) their unique position in a given art form, and (3) availability. -
Two Infamous Homewreckers Meet in the New Stage Play, “The Duchess and the Stripper” the Duchess of Windsor, Wallis Simpson
Two Infamous Homewreckers Meet in the New Stage Play, “The Duchess and the Stripper” The Duchess of Windsor, Wallis Simpson, and the premier burlesque dancer of her time, Blaze Starr meet in the new stage play, “The Duchess and the Stripper,” making its world premiere in the Hollywood Fringe Festival in June 2019. The play takes place in 1961 Baltimore, at the Two O’Clock Club, the famous strip club owned by Blaze Starr. These two women who outwardly have nothing in common, in fact, shared a number of similar experiences. Their reactions to those events vary greatly due to their upbringing and yes, their social standing. The play has attracted great talent. The director, Ezra Buzzington, is not only a veteran of stage and screen, but co-founder of the New York Fringe Festival. “It has some of the wittiest dialogue I’ve read in years. I really wanted to be a part of it.” Playing the Duchess, Wallis Simpson is Miss Blaire Chandler, who’s last Fringe appearance as Big Mama in the multi-lauded Theatre of Note/TMB production of Hot Cat. Blaire is the winner of multiple drama critics’ awards across the country, and has appeared on stage in Los Angeles at The Road, Theatre of Note, Chalk Rep, and The Actors’ Gang. Regional Theatre: Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park; Santa Cruz Shakespeare. Off Broadway: The Public Theatre. Television: Paramount mini-series Waco, and CBS’ Criminal Minds. Twitter: @blairezdoodle. Blaze Starr will Be played By Miss Alli Miller. She s from Hooiser land and has a BA in musical theatre from Ball State University. -
Thesis-1969-P769l.Pdf
THE IMPORTANCE OF THE BURLESQUE ASPECTS OF JOSEPH.ANDREWS, A NOVEL BY HENRY FIELDING By ANNA COLLEEN POLK Bachelor of Arts Northeastern State College Tahlequah, Oklahoma 1964 Submitted to the Faculty ot the Graduate College of the Oklahoma State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS May, 1969 __ j OKLAHOMA STATE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY 8iP 291969 THE IMPORTANCE OF THE BURLESQUE ASPECTS OF JOSEPH ANDREWS, A NOVEL BY HENRY FIELDING Thesis Approved: ~~ £~ 1{,· if'~ Jr-- Dean of the Graduate College 725038 ii PREFACE This thesis explores the·impottance of the burlesque aspects of Joseph Andrews, a novel by Henry Fielding· published in 1742. The· Preface. of.· the novel set forth a comic. theory which was entirely English and-which Fielding describes as a·11kind of writing, which l do not remember-· to have seen· hitherto attempted in our language". (xvii) •1 . The purpose of this paper will be to d.iscuss. the influence o:f; the burlesque .in formulating the new-genre which Fielding implies is the cow,:l..c equivalent of the epic. Now, .·a· comic· romance is a comic epic poem in prose 4iffering from comedy, as the--·serious epic from tragedy its action· being· more extended ·and· c'omp:rehensive; con tainiµg ·a ·much larger circle of·incidents, and intro ducing a greater ·variety of characters~ - lt differs :f;rO'J;l;l the serious romance in its fable and action,. in· this; that as in the one·these are·grave and solemn, ~o iil the other they·are·light:and:ridiculous: it• differs in its characters by introducing persons of.