“Vogue” Em Performances Do Carnaval Carioca Strike a Pose!

“Vogue” Em Performances Do Carnaval Carioca Strike a Pose!

<p>COMUN. MÍDIA CONSUMO, SÃO PAULO, V. 16, N. 46, P. 376-395, MAI./AGO. 2019 DOI 10.18568/CMC.V16I46.1901 </p><p><em>Strike a pose</em>! A mediação do videoclipe “<em>Vogue</em>” </p><p>em performances do Carnaval carioca Strike a Pose! Mediations of “vogue” music video in Performances of Brazilian Carnival </p><p>Sim one&nbsp;Pereira de Sá<sup style="top: -0.2775em;">1 </sup>Rodolfo Viana de Paulo<sup style="top: -0.2775em;">2 </sup></p><p>Resumo: O artigo tem por objetivo abordar as m&nbsp;ediações do videoclipe da canção “Vogue”, de M&nbsp;adonna, buscando discutir o seu agenciam&nbsp;ento de corporeidades periféricas em dois m&nbsp;om entos:&nbsp;nos anos 1980, quando o videoclipe se apropria e am&nbsp;plia a visibilidade da dança voguing, praticada pela cena cultural LG BT&nbsp;nova-iorquina, e duas décadas depois, quando o videoclipe é, por sua vez, um a&nbsp;das referências para jovens dançarinos gays nas suas apresentações em alas das escolas de sam&nbsp;ba do C&nbsp;arnaval carioca. Assim&nbsp;, interessa-nos discutir as zonas de diálogo e de tensão entre perform&nbsp;ances locais e globais, tendo com&nbsp;o aportes teóricos a discussão sobre “cosm&nbsp;opolitism o&nbsp;estético” (RE&nbsp;G E V,&nbsp;2013) e sobre as divas pop com&nbsp;o ícones culturais (JE&nbsp;N N E X,&nbsp;2013), entre outras referências. <strong>Palavras-chave</strong>: Vogue; M adonna; perform&nbsp;ance; videoclipe; escolas de sam&nbsp;ba. </p><p>Abstract: The article discusses the m&nbsp;ediations of M&nbsp;adonna’s M&nbsp;usic Video Vogue, seeking to discuss its agency on peripheral bodies in two m&nbsp;om ents: the first, in the 80s, when the song and m&nbsp;usic video appropriates the steps and gestures of Voguing created by the LG&nbsp;BT scene in N&nbsp;ew York; and the second m om ent,&nbsp;two decades later, when the m&nbsp;usic video is, in turn, one of the references for young, black and gay dancers who practice Vogue dance during their presentations on Rio de Janeiro’s sam&nbsp;ba schools in the present tim&nbsp;e. Thus, we are </p><p>12<br>U niversidade&nbsp;Federal Flum&nbsp;inense (U&nbsp;FF). N&nbsp;iterói, R&nbsp;J, Brazil. <a href="/goto?url=https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5581-0508" target="_blank">https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5581-0508. em</a><a href="/goto?url=https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5581-0508" target="_blank">&nbsp;</a>ail: sibonei.sa@&nbsp;gm ail.com U niversidade&nbsp;Federal Flum&nbsp;inense (U&nbsp;FF). N&nbsp;iterói, R&nbsp;J, Brazil. <a href="/goto?url=https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0557-6514" target="_blank">https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0557-6514. em</a><a href="/goto?url=https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0557-6514" target="_blank">&nbsp;</a>ail: rodolfo.viana@&nbsp;gm ail.com </p><p>simone pereira de sá | rodolfo viana de paulo&nbsp;377 </p><p>interested in discussing the areas of dialogue and tension between local and global perform&nbsp;ances, having as theoretical contributions the discussion on “aesthetic cosm opolitanism ”&nbsp;(Regev, 2013) and on pop divas as cultural icons (Jennex, 2013), am&nbsp;ong others. <strong>K eywords</strong>: Vogue; M adonna; perform&nbsp;ance; videoclips; sam&nbsp;ba schools. </p><p>comun. mídia consumo, são paulo, v. 16, n. 46, p. 376-395,&nbsp;mai./ago. 2019 <br>378 strike&nbsp;a pose! </p><p>T he&nbsp;year w&nbsp;as 1990. For M&nbsp;adonna, the 80’s w&nbsp;ere closed under the spotlight of the popular album Like a Prayer. Looking&nbsp;for a new song that could be released as a B-side of the single “K&nbsp;eep it Together”, she w&nbsp;rites </p><p>“Vogue”. “Strike a pose, there’s nothing to it. Vogue, Vogue, Vogue”. </p><p>T he&nbsp;song is inspired in the dance w&nbsp;ith the sam&nbsp;e nam&nbsp;e practiced on <br>LG BT&nbsp;dancefloors of N&nbsp;ew York clubs, w&nbsp;here dancers created a series of gestures, poses and body m&nbsp;ovem ents&nbsp;that im&nbsp;itate their fam&nbsp;ous H&nbsp;ollyw ood&nbsp;stars, as w&nbsp;ell as Vogue m&nbsp;odels. And the videoclip, film&nbsp;ed in black and w&nbsp;hite, presents M&nbsp;adonna reproducing the steps and poses from Vogue in a glam&nbsp;ourous setting, that recriates the am&nbsp;biance of H&nbsp;ollyw ood&nbsp;in the 20’s. <br>T hroughout&nbsp;the years, this clip becam&nbsp;e an icon in M&nbsp;adonna’s body of w&nbsp;ork.<sup style="top: -0.3063em;">3 </sup>But not only that. Because, if w&nbsp;e m&nbsp;ake a cut to the recent years of the second decade of the 2000’s, w&nbsp;e w&nbsp;ill find black hom&nbsp;osexual dancers from R&nbsp;io using vogue steps during their presentations in som&nbsp;e of the Sam ba&nbsp;Schools on R&nbsp;io’s C&nbsp;arnaval. And m&nbsp;entions of M&nbsp;adonna’s videoclip or their derivations in videoclips of dancers like Yanis M&nbsp;arshall,<sup style="top: -0.3056em;">4</sup>, Leiom y<sup style="top: -0.3053em;">5 </sup>and the pop group K&nbsp;azaky,<sup style="top: -0.3053em;">6 </sup>w hich&nbsp;perpetuate and dissem&nbsp;inate vogue through YouTube as a reference to a set of poses and gestures that they develop in their choreographic routines. <br>Based on these observations, our article has the goal of approaching the m&nbsp;ediations of the videoclip Vogue, by M&nbsp;adonna, seeking to discuss its agency of “peripheral bodies” in tw&nbsp;o m&nbsp;om ents.&nbsp;T he&nbsp;first, w&nbsp;hen M&nbsp;adonna appropriates elem&nbsp;ents of the N&nbsp;ew Yorker LG&nbsp;BT scene, due to the creation of the song and videoclip of “Vogue”, transform&nbsp;ing this </p><p></p><ul style="display: flex;"><li style="flex:1">3</li><li style="flex:1">For exam&nbsp;ple, the videoclip had nine nom&nbsp;inations for M&nbsp;T V&nbsp;V ideo&nbsp;M usic&nbsp;Aw ards&nbsp;in 1990 </li></ul><p>and w&nbsp;as included in the 29th position am&nbsp;ong the 100 best videoclips listed in R&nbsp;olling Stone m agazine&nbsp;<a href="/goto?url=https://pt.wikipedia.org/w iki/Vogue_(canção)#cite_note-12." target="_blank">in 1993. Available at: https://pt.w</a><a href="/goto?url=https://pt.wikipedia.org/w iki/Vogue_(canção)#cite_note-12." target="_blank">&nbsp;</a><a href="/goto?url=https://pt.wikipedia.org/w iki/Vogue_(canção)#cite_note-12." target="_blank">ikipedia.org/w iki/Vogue_(canção)#cite_note-12. </a>Accessed in: August 1st, 2018. <br>4</p><p>56<br>Yanis M&nbsp;arshall is a French dancer and choreographer specialized in choreographies perform ed&nbsp;in high heels know&nbsp;<a href="/goto?url=https://ww w.youtube.com /" target="_blank">n as stiletto. See video available at: https://w</a><a href="/goto?url=https://ww w.youtube.com /" target="_blank">&nbsp;</a><a href="/goto?url=https://ww w.youtube.com /" target="_blank">w w.youtube.com / </a>w atch?v=m D zx33N T g20.&nbsp;Accessed in: Aug. 12th 2018. Leiom y&nbsp;M aldonado is a trans dancer, instructor, activist and m odel that gained special visibility through the T&nbsp;<a href="/goto?url=https://en.wikipedia.org/w iki/Leiom y_M aldo-" target="_blank">V show Pose from FX. Available at: https://en.w</a><a href="/goto?url=https://en.wikipedia.org/w iki/Leiom y_M aldo-" target="_blank">&nbsp;</a><a href="/goto?url=https://en.wikipedia.org/w iki/Leiom y_M aldo-" target="_blank">ikipedia.org/w iki/Leiom y_M aldo- </a>nado. Accessed in: August 21st, 2018. U cranian&nbsp;<a href="/goto?url=https://ww w.youtube.com /" target="_blank">group of pop music. See video available at: https://w</a><a href="/goto?url=https://ww w.youtube.com /" target="_blank">&nbsp;</a><a href="/goto?url=https://ww w.youtube.com /" target="_blank">w w.youtube.com / </a>w atch?v=7T d3Q W-Q R w A.&nbsp;Accessed in: June 26th, 2018. </p><p>comun. mídia consumo, são paulo, v. 16, n. 46, p. 376-395,&nbsp;mai./ago. 2019 simone pereira de sá | rodolfo viana de paulo&nbsp;379 </p><p>underground dance in a reference to pop culture. T&nbsp;he second m&nbsp;om ent, tw o&nbsp;decades later, w&nbsp;hen the videoclip is, in turn, one of the references for gay black young dancers to dance these steps in R&nbsp;io Sam&nbsp;ba schools. Agencies that, in case of carioca dancers, are not strictly affiliated to the vogue culture of the fam&nbsp;ous houses – cultural groups that developed specific styles of dancing vogue in the 80’s –, but that dissem&nbsp;inate from m ix&nbsp;w ith&nbsp;other local rhythm&nbsp;s like funk and sam&nbsp;ba, case that w&nbsp;e w&nbsp;ill approach. <br>W hen&nbsp;proposing the reflection about the agency of peripheral bodies, our w&nbsp;ork is articulated to issues that are being developed&nbsp;in our research projects about the form&nbsp;s how the im&nbsp;aginary and pop iconography – especially of pop divas – are enacted and perform&nbsp;atized in peripheral scenes, articulating issues of perform&nbsp;ance, corporeities and m edia&nbsp;popular culture (PE&nbsp;R E IR A&nbsp;D E&nbsp;SÁ, 2013; V&nbsp;IAN A&nbsp;D E&nbsp;PAU LO , 2017). T&nbsp;hereforem taking the pictures of pop divas as “aesthetic epicenters” (PE&nbsp;R E IR A&nbsp;D E&nbsp;SÁ, 2019) that point tow&nbsp;ards a type of corporeity that inhabits the m&nbsp;ediascape of m&nbsp;odernity (APPAD&nbsp;U R AI,&nbsp;2005), w&nbsp;e are interested in discussing the zones of dialogue and tension that are given in tw&nbsp;o w&nbsp;ays: the first, w&nbsp;hen M&nbsp;adonna appropriates N&nbsp;ew York’s LG&nbsp;BT ghetto culture; in the second, w&nbsp;hen LG&nbsp;BT dancers from R&nbsp;io appropriate the video as reference for their choreographies. <br>To do so, the study is divided into three parts. T&nbsp;he first, w&nbsp;e sought theoretical support for the discussion around this trinom&nbsp;ial; in the second, w e&nbsp;describe the context of creation of the videoclip and the dialogue betw een&nbsp;M adonna&nbsp;and the N&nbsp;ew York scene in the 80’s/90’s; in the third part, w&nbsp;e discuss the appropriation of gay black dancers from the M aculelê part of the sam&nbsp;ba school Acadêm&nbsp;icos do Salgueiro, from R&nbsp;io, voguing in the parade and in presentations of sam&nbsp;ba schools through ethnographic incursion and interview&nbsp;s m&nbsp;ade w&nbsp;ith the dancers.<sup style="top: -0.3076em;">7 </sup>T herefore, </p><p></p><ul style="display: flex;"><li style="flex:1">7</li><li style="flex:1">O ne&nbsp;of the authors of this article frequented the rehearsals of the section in the period betw&nbsp;een </li></ul><p>April and August 2017. T&nbsp;he interview&nbsp;s w&nbsp;ere m&nbsp;ade w&nbsp;ith Lucas G&nbsp;abriel (m&nbsp;ay 2017), V&nbsp;ictor C antuária&nbsp;(June, 2017) and V&nbsp;inicius M&nbsp;onteiro (July 2017). </p><p>comun. mídia consumo, são paulo, v. 16, n. 46, p. 376-395,&nbsp;mai./ago. 2019 <br>380 strike&nbsp;a pose! </p><p>it is a study m&nbsp;apping issues and presenting the first results of ongoing research that w&nbsp;ill later be unfolded into new field incursions.<sup style="top: -0.3053em;">8 </sup></p><p>Pop divas, aesthetic cosmopolitanism and performance </p><p>According to w&nbsp;hat w&nbsp;e previously discussed (PE&nbsp;R E IR A&nbsp;D E&nbsp;SÁ, 2018), the w&nbsp;ord “diva” appears in music linked firstly w&nbsp;ith great opera singers, the popular prim a&nbsp;donnas, extending its use throughout the 20<sup style="top: -0.3054em;">th </sup>century to refer not only cultural item&nbsp;s in the cinem&nbsp;a, music and entertainm&nbsp;ent culture, but, m&nbsp;ore recently, to any pow&nbsp;erful, spectacular and glam&nbsp;ourous w&nbsp;om an&nbsp;(PE R E IR A&nbsp;D E&nbsp;SÁ, 2018). <br>E xploring&nbsp;the relation betw&nbsp;een gay culture and the diva cult in the opera environm&nbsp;ent, Jennex (2012) highlights the clichés, the tricks and exaggeration in the representation of heterosexual love as elem&nbsp;ents of the O&nbsp;pera perform&nbsp;ance.<sup style="top: -0.3058em;">9 </sup>O n&nbsp;pop music, in turn, the term refers to the lineage of transnational singers/artists that em&nbsp;phasize visual spectacle, scenic presence, choreography and the developm&nbsp;ent of dram&nbsp;atic characters. D&nbsp;iana R&nbsp;oss, M adonna, Britney Spears, R&nbsp;ihanna, Lady G&nbsp;aga and Beyoncé can be considered exam&nbsp;ples of the sam&nbsp;e lineage of w&nbsp;om en that enact form&nbsp;s of being in the w&nbsp;orld through the idea of em&nbsp;pow ered fem ininity,&nbsp;body aw&nbsp;areness, entertainm&nbsp;ent and political aspects related to w&nbsp;om en&nbsp;and hom&nbsp;osexuals” (XAV&nbsp;IE R ,&nbsp;E VAN G E LISTA&nbsp;e SO&nbsp;AR E S, 2016, p. 96). <br>In his study, Jennex relates the im&nbsp;age of the diva to R&nbsp;ogers’ discussion <br>(1999) about cultural icons, understood as </p><p></p><ul style="display: flex;"><li style="flex:1">8</li><li style="flex:1">It is about the project “C&nbsp;artography of the urban in musical and audiovisual culture: sound, </li></ul><p>im age,&nbsp;places and territorialities in a com&nbsp;pared perspective” (2014-2020), coordinated by Sim one&nbsp;Pereira de Sá and financed by C&nbsp;apes/Procad; “Strategies of visibility of pop-peripheral music in contem&nbsp;porary Brazil: betw&nbsp;een local, transnational and peripheral”, from Sim&nbsp;one Pereira de Sá and financed by edital PQ&nbsp;/C N Pq&nbsp;(1D productivity scholarship); and “’In a land of rascals w&nbsp;e are bandits’: viral dissem&nbsp;ination of bodies m&nbsp;aculating sam&nbsp;ba conventions” by R odolfo&nbsp;R .&nbsp;V iana&nbsp;de Paulo, in developm&nbsp;ent at the PhD from PPG&nbsp;C O M /U FF&nbsp;under the orientation of professor Sim&nbsp;one Pereira de Sá, also counting w&nbsp;ith the help of C&nbsp;apes scholarship and help of the aid from the R&nbsp;esearch and Productivity program of U&nbsp;niversidade E&nbsp;stácio 2019. “In opera, em&nbsp;otions and plots are, Bronski argues, exaggerated to the point of absurdity” (JE&nbsp;N - N E X,&nbsp;2013, p. 352). <br>9</p><p>comun. mídia consumo, são paulo, v. 16, n. 46, p. 376-395,&nbsp;mai./ago. 2019 simone pereira de sá | rodolfo viana de paulo&nbsp;381 </p><p>[… ]&nbsp;T hese&nbsp;objects or people that becom&nbsp;e catalysts of fantasies and identifications for big audiences for their versatility and openness to different senses, allow&nbsp;ing, therefore, multiple cultural appropriations and layers of multifaceted cultural identification (JE&nbsp;N N E X,&nbsp;2013, p. 351). </p><p>In addition to that, paradoxically, icons allow the evocation of feelings of com&nbsp;munity and difference. Therefore, what gives life and sustains cultural icons – in which divas are inserted – are the “experiences, m&nbsp;em ories and fantasies” of individuals that love them (JEN&nbsp;N EX,&nbsp;2013, p. 351). <br>T herefore,&nbsp;relating divas perform&nbsp;ances to the context of discussion about versatility and multivocality of cultural icons helps us understand them ,&nbsp;firstly, through its presence as part of the global pop im&nbsp;aginary that Appadurai (2005, p. 35) calls “m&nbsp;odernity m&nbsp;ediascape”, understood by us as an archive of im&nbsp;ages, m em ories and affections acquired through the globalized m&nbsp;edia apparatus and that crosses multiple different territorialities and tem&nbsp;poralities. <br>T he&nbsp;use of the notion of perform&nbsp;ance, in turn, is affiliated to the com municational&nbsp;perspective and it is understood by us as a “com&nbsp;municative process anchored in the corporeity and, at the sam&nbsp;e tim&nbsp;e, an experience of sociability, once it supposes negotiated rules and conventions” (PE&nbsp;R E IR A&nbsp;D E&nbsp;SÁ and H&nbsp;O LZ BAC H ,&nbsp;2010); also as “restored behavior” (SC&nbsp;H E C H N E R ,&nbsp;1988). It is about, therefore, according to Taylor (2013), an epistem&nbsp;e, a form of producing know&nbsp;ledge and negotiating position through body tangibility (PE&nbsp;R E IR A&nbsp;D E&nbsp;SÁ, 2018).<sup style="top: -0.3067em;">10 </sup><br>Finally, the notion of aesthetic cosm&nbsp;opolitanism (R&nbsp;E G E V,&nbsp;2013) refers to this dynam&nbsp;ic of mutual circulation and appropriation am&nbsp;ong global and local item&nbsp;s defined by the author as a w&nbsp;ider cultural condition that crosses the experience of inhabitants of different countries, even those considered peripheral, in relation to the hegem&nbsp;onic cultural flow s.&nbsp;Far from m&nbsp;anacheistic argum&nbsp;ents about the relationship of dependence of&nbsp;“peripheral” cultures regarding global centers, the author discusses how cultural singularities are articulated (not erased) in global </p><p>10 For&nbsp;a discussion of the notion of perform&nbsp;ance in a com&nbsp;municational perspective, see Am&nbsp;aral, <br>Soares and Polivanov (2018). </p><p>comun. mídia consumo, são paulo, v. 16, n. 46, p. 376-395,&nbsp;mai./ago. 2019 <br>382 strike&nbsp;a pose! </p><p>processes of circulation of consum&nbsp;ption goods and im&nbsp;ages, highlighting cultural practices of negotiation betw&nbsp;een local and global, that w&nbsp;e intend to scrutinize through the analysis of multiple m&nbsp;ediations of the videoclip “Vogue”. </p><p><em>Vogue</em>: poses, mediated corporeities and one videoclip </p><p>Bringing back the em&nbsp;blem atic&nbsp;docum entary&nbsp;Paris is burning (1991), it is possible to know the cultural aspects that originate the style of dance and, especially, the gender expressions of black LG&nbsp;BT people in the inner city of N&nbsp;ew York betw&nbsp;een the 80’s and the 90’s. <br>T he&nbsp;film presents aspects of drag culture, w&nbsp;hose m&nbsp;em bers,&nbsp;facing the lack of access to the glam&nbsp;our of the sophisticated clothing of the fam ous&nbsp;fashion m&nbsp;agazine Vogue, ironize their good taste creating a style of dance nam&nbsp;ed Vogue, stylizing body m&nbsp;ovem ents&nbsp;in form of poses that m im ic&nbsp;editorial pictures of the fashion w&nbsp;orld. Approaching&nbsp;the inform al&nbsp;contests of drag queens that took place in underground clubs in the city, the docum&nbsp;entary em&nbsp;phasizes the form how voguing choreographies enact, through dancing gestures, a body that fights back against heteronorm ative&nbsp;sexuality: </p><p>In a sociocultural environm&nbsp;ent (N&nbsp;ew York, 1980) w&nbsp;here w&nbsp;hite heterosexuals could do anything w&nbsp;hile gays should control how they dressed, spoke and behave, the ball culture created spaces w&nbsp;here its m&nbsp;em bers&nbsp;could be w ho&nbsp;they w&nbsp;anted to m&nbsp;e, show&nbsp;ing their elegance, seduction, beauty, skills and know&nbsp;ledge (BE&nbsp;RT E ,&nbsp;2014, p. 70). </p><p>The strength of gesture, added to the invention of a garm&nbsp;ent – or better yet, to stealing – the re-appropriation of clothing of the fashion world m ade in a low cost by the dancers them&nbsp;selves, m&nbsp;akes clear how the dynam&nbsp;ic of global pop culture icons is locally agencied. Therefore, the corporeity assum ed&nbsp;during the dance can loan the idea of a fashion show, rem&nbsp;aking it in an am&nbsp;biance that can be seen either only as a dance solo perform&nbsp;ed by </p><p>comun. mídia consumo, são paulo, v. 16, n. 46, p. 376-395,&nbsp;mai./ago. 2019 simone pereira de sá | rodolfo viana de paulo&nbsp;383 </p><p>one person,<sup style="top: -0.3053em;">11 </sup>or as if it were a showdown against another voguer dancer, </p><p>12 </p><p>in the challenges known as battles between houses. <br>In this context, it is interesting to take back Lepecki’s (2005) discussion on the pow&nbsp;er of the still act in the context of m&nbsp;odern dance. According to Lepecki (2005, p. 14), the im&nbsp;m obility&nbsp;of the pose does not m ean&nbsp;a freezing of the m&nbsp;ovem ent,&nbsp;but another relation w&nbsp;ith the tem&nbsp;porality of the gesture, that leads the subject to break w&nbsp;ith preestablished body rhythm&nbsp;s. In this sense, it is about a body that keeps inform&nbsp;ation, transm its,&nbsp;updates, distorts and create sym&nbsp;bolic elem&nbsp;ents according to the lived territory. O&nbsp;r, as Jussara Setenta (2008) puts it in her thesis, it is the body being a m&nbsp;edia for itself, in other w&nbsp;ords “a bodym&nbsp;edia” that is in constant perm&nbsp;eability, w&nbsp;hich is not only processing, but producing a “relation of constant co-authorship betw&nbsp;een body and environm&nbsp;ent” (SE T E N TA,&nbsp;2008, p. 37). <br>In a dialogue w&nbsp;ith these reflections, w&nbsp;e understand that the steps and poses of voguing, developed in the 80’s through a com&nbsp;plex glossary of nam es&nbsp;and subtitles of m&nbsp;oves,<sup style="top: -0.3064em;">13 </sup>do not m&nbsp;ean na im&nbsp;itation or a reproduction irreflected of poses extracted from the m&nbsp;edia, but a creation of coreographies that w&nbsp;ill dialogue w&nbsp;ith identity and local aspects of cultural scenes that w&nbsp;ill discuss next. </p><p>Madonna’s videoclip </p><p>After the contact w&nbsp;ith N&nbsp;ew York dancers, M&nbsp;adonna releases, in 1990, “Vogue”, one of her m&nbsp;ost fam&nbsp;ous songs and videoclips (V&nbsp;O G U E , 1990a), w&nbsp;hich she invites the listener to strike a pose. T he&nbsp;song, inspired in the previously described scene, and especially, on the choreographers José and Luiz Xtravaganza, from the H&nbsp;ouse Ball com&nbsp;munity at H&nbsp;arlem , </p><p>11 T&nbsp;his is called 007, as V&nbsp;ictor C&nbsp;antuaria explains his position in the scene of R&nbsp;io de Janeiro <br>(V IAN A&nbsp;D E&nbsp;PAU LO ,&nbsp;2017b). <br>12 It&nbsp;is im&nbsp;portant to clarify that there are m&nbsp;any styles to dance vogue, as the voguer dancer R&nbsp;<a href="/goto?url=https://ww w.youtube.com /w atch?tim e_" target="_blank">aquel Pereira explains in a video available at: https://w</a><a href="/goto?url=https://ww w.youtube.com /w atch?tim e_" target="_blank">&nbsp;</a><a href="/goto?url=https://ww w.youtube.com /w atch?tim e_" target="_blank">w w.youtube.com /w atch?tim e_ </a>continue=3&amp; v=cniZ bH U AlO A.&nbsp;Accessed in: June 26th, 2018 <br>13 Am&nbsp;ong m&nbsp;any others, w&nbsp;e can quote the m&nbsp;ovem ents&nbsp;of catw&nbsp;alk, duckw&nbsp;alk (perform&nbsp;ance in the ground), dips and drops and spins. E&nbsp;ach house claim&nbsp;s a specific w&nbsp;ay of dancing each step. </p><p>comun. mídia consumo, são paulo, v. 16, n. 46, p. 376-395,&nbsp;mai./ago. 2019 <br>384 strike&nbsp;a pose! </p><p>appropriates vogue steps to call listeners to the dancefloor. “It m&nbsp;akes no </p><p>difference if you’re/Black or white/If you’re a boy or a girl/If the m&nbsp;usic’s pum ping/It will give you new life/You’re a superstar/Yes, that’s what you </p><p>are, you know”,<sup style="top: -0.3055em;">14 </sup>M adonna&nbsp;sings. <br>T he&nbsp;videoclip, in turn, connects the LG&nbsp;BT scene to an iconographic <br>H ollyw ood&nbsp;m em ory&nbsp;in a perform&nbsp;ance that pays an hom&nbsp;age to m&nbsp;ovie divas from the 20’s and 30’s. D&nbsp;irected by D&nbsp;avid Fincher and film&nbsp;ed in black and w&nbsp;hite in an art deco-style scenario – at the Burbanks Studios, in C&nbsp;alifórnia –, the videoclipe uses pictures from H&nbsp;ollyw ood&nbsp;stars, recreating fam&nbsp;ous poses of actresses like M&nbsp;onroe, G&nbsp;reta G&nbsp;arbo, M&nbsp;arlene D ietrich,&nbsp;K atherine&nbsp;H epburn&nbsp;and Jean H&nbsp;arlow, etc. R&nbsp;eferences that are outlined in the song lyrics, along w&nbsp;ith also iconic actors. </p><p>G reta&nbsp;G arbo&nbsp;and M&nbsp;onroe </p><p>D ietrich&nbsp;and D&nbsp;iM aggio M arlon&nbsp;Brando, Jim&nbsp;m y&nbsp;D ean O n&nbsp;the cover of a m&nbsp;agazine G race&nbsp;Kelly; H&nbsp;arlow, Jean Picture of a beauty queen [… ] D on’t&nbsp;just stand there, let’s get to it Strike a pose, there’s nothing to it Vogue<sup style="top: -0.2775em;">15 </sup></p><p>It m&nbsp;ay be im&nbsp;portant to outline D&nbsp;avid Fincher’s contribution, film&nbsp;- m aker and producer that began his career on Industrial Light and M agic (IM L)&nbsp;by G&nbsp;eorge Lucas and built his reputation through m&nbsp;ovies like Seven (1995) and Fight C lub (1999).<sup style="top: -0.3055em;">16 </sup>As a videoclip director, he w&nbsp;orked w ith&nbsp;M adonna&nbsp;before in “E&nbsp;xpress Yourself” (1989) – videoclipe that, just like “Vogue”, brings cinem&nbsp;atographic references that brings back a </p><p>14 </p><p>.</p><p>15 </p>

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