How To Sew
Lingerie
Or Burlesque Costumes
- A Brief History
Suddenly burlesque and pinup
fashions are all over the Internet. The
original burlesque designs with their risqu
overtones have become the fun fashion, being
adapted and adopted by rockabilly. Almost every
city now hosts regular burlesque events where
not just the performers, but the audience gets
to dress the part as well.
Origins of burlesque -
lingerie on show!
The word burlesque probably
derives from the French, which describes a
piece of slightly outrageous, humorous art. The
term burlesque originally applied to shows
intended for middle or lower classes. Such
shows lampooned upper class niceties and
parodying upper class entertainments like opera
& dance. Such music and comedy shows and
plays grew in popularity on both sides of the
Atlantic during the nineteenth century. In
Victorian England, where even "a glimpse of
stocking was looked on as something shocking",
burlesque challenged its audience by offering
rather more than a "glimpse of stocking" - the
lure of young ladies appearing in tights and
lingerie! Certainly demure by today's standards
these slightly suggestive interludes certainly
boosted the popularity of burlesque. Lydia
Thompson took a burlesque troupe, called the
British Blondes to New York near the end of the
1860s where they were an immediate hit. At
first they were feted by the press, but before
long strident voices, from the pulpit and the
papers were complaining of loose morals and
indecency. The result of all this adverse
publicity was to spread the word about
burlesque far and wide in America effectively
having the reverse effect to that desired by
burlesque's critics - female burlesque troupes
with close copies of the original British act
sprung up around the country.
These shows owed a great
deal of their structure to the minstrel shows
of the time and generally consisted of three
parts - the initial section featuring the
ladies, the middle section was a mix of male
comedians and specialty acts and the final part
the grand finale. Copying Lydia Thompson's
lead, most of the troupes had female managers.
However towards the end of the nineteenth
century, as male managers took over, they
switched the emphasis away from comedy to push
boundaries, determined to show as much
uncovered female flesh as the laws would
allow.
This form of entertainment
metamorphosed in the early twentieth century
into a mix of music hall, satire and
striptease. During the twenties the bias
continued inexorably towards striptease and
away from the accompanying elements. This shift
doubtlessly was burlesque's downfall; by the
thirties the popularity of burlesque dropped
away probably reacting against what had become
slightly tawdry striptease shows. Local
authorities were no longer as tolerant of this
entertainment, which had lost much of its music
hall variety flavor.
New Burlesque
In the mid nineteen nineties
the genre was resurrected, with troupes in the
USA, and the trend has snowballed over to the
UK. Now, once more on both sides of the
channel, it is possible to see shows equal in
glamour, bawdiness and variety to equal the art
form in its heyday in clubs and theatres in
major cities. Arguably the Internet has played
a major part to spread the interest in the
genre. There are websites, such as Ministry of
Burlesque dedicated to promoting it, to
teaching dance, makeup and fashion.
Burlesque lingerie
fashion
The mainstay of this style
is lingerie and modern burlesque generally
concentrates on the fifties and to a lesser
degree the forties look. This extends not only
to clothing, but hats, footwear and makeup too.
There have always been fans of fifties silk and
nylon stockings. The majority stocking mills
closed up shop when pantyhose all but killed
the stocking market. Their huge stocking
machines were destroyed and along with it the
expertise to manufacture fully-fashioned
stockings. Now the rare machines remaining are
being rebuilt and returned to service to again
produce faux fifties seamed stockings. However
a few companies trading online still have
limited supplies of the original fifties
stockings so the purists can satisfy their need
to the 'real thing' rather than the modern
copies. Sadly, once that depleting stock is
exhausted, they will only be viewable in
museums and private collections.
However, for burlesque stage
performance it is the fishnet tights or
pantyhose that are still really popular.
Companies are making exact
copies both of retro costumes and burlesque
accessories, from ostrich feather fans to
bullet bras. Lingerie companies, sensing an
opportunity not to be missed, are enticing
well-known burlesque artists to lend their
names and expertise to burlesque-inspired
lingerie designs.
Burlesque is eagerly
embraced by all physiques, from plus size to
skinny-minny, proving how empowering it can be
to women - all physiques are equally welcomed,
but there is not set 'burlesque costume'
either. It is very common for burlesque artists
to take everyday lingerie, adapt it by sewing
on sequins to devise their own unique take on
burlesque. However the common thread that runs
through the new outfits, going right back to
the earliest days of the art form is the
element of 'tease', the showing of rather more
lingerie and stocking tops that would normally
be seen in everyday life.
Rockabilly fashion
Over the years a number of
fashion styles have grown towards each other,
oft times overlapping. The word rockabilly was
used around the mid forties and was a blend of
hillbilly and rock and roll music styles.
Todays pinup photographers generally recreate
the stylish fifties imagery which overlaps but
is distinct from rockabilly. Many rockabilly
enthusiasts have tattoos and piercings, and
that certainly was never a fad of the fifties,
but a modern phenomenon.
Pinup fashion
The term pinup also has
blurred origins, covering photos of movie stars
from around the thirties and forties, but also
the airbrushed fantasy women gracing men's
magazines by such exponents as Petty and
Elvgren. The fashions often featured nylons and
lingerie, sometimes being exposed by a sudden
unexpected gust of wind or other 'mishap' that
befell the model. The intention was actually to
reveal very very little by today's standards.
It is a certainty that pinup art, with the sexy
lingerie has strongly influenced the outfits
adopted by many of today's burlesque
artists.
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