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4[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bon_ton_burlesquers_m.jpg]]
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6The word "burlesque" is derived from a Romance language term meaning "to send up". Burlesque theatre originated in the UK and US in the 19th century as a form of broad satire and parody aimed at low to middle class audiences, poking fun at the "highbrow" entertainments and social activities of the upper classes. During the Victorian period, it became increasingly common for roles to be played by [[MsFanservice attractive women]], dressed more "daringly" than Victorian convention normally permitted. The women quickly became the main attraction, and costumes [[{{Fanservice}} became more revealing]] to the extent permitted by local laws. As in {{Vaudeville}} and Music Hall settings, music and variety acts became staples of Burlesque shows. The tone often became [[DoubleEntendre suggestive, even shading toward bawdy]], although outright vulgarity, obscenity, and nudity were avoided; the intent was to spoof and titillate, not offend. While Vaudeville tended to be dominated by individual acts; Burlesque shows depended on troupes travelling a circuit. It was generally looked down on as "low" humour by Vaudeville performers, and a last resort for the "washed up"; but many performed in Burlesque troops under pseudonyms, as the work was typically more steady and reliable.
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8Burlesque comedy was typically broad and low; with a strong emphasis on SlapStick and sexual innuendo. The lead comedian was known as the "top banana"; and many well-known comedians started in Burlesque -- such as Creator/BobHope, Creator/RedSkelton, and Milton Berle -- before crossing over into movies, radio, or the fledgling television industry. One of the most famous classic Burlesque comedy routines is Creator/AbbottAndCostello's ''WhosOnFirst''.
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10While not originally the focus, sexual titillation became increasingly part of the landscape of Burlesque; however, the striptease remained a "back room" affair. The death of the Burlesque circuits in the 1920s resulted in the already well-established striptease, or "hootchie cootchie dance" being incorporated by theatre owners as a [[LowestCommonDenominator gimmick to bring in audiences]]. Although music and comedy remained a large part of Burlesque, the striptease became the [[BestKnownForTheFanservice primary draw]]. The degree of nudity and types of dancing permitted were limited, not by artistic or modesty concerns, but by obscenity statutes, with the stereotypical "[[NippleAndDimed pasties and G-string]]" used to avoid violating local laws. Performers did occasionally go beyond what was permitted, [[YouCanLeaveYourHatOn up to and including full nudity]]; and raids and arrests were frequent occurrences. A few places banned Burlesque altogether. This form of Burlesque was popular from the [[TheRoaringTwenties '20s]] until the [[TheSixties '60s]], peaking during UsefulNotes/WorldWarII and the post-war [[TheForties '40s]], finally declining in the [[TheFifties '50s]].
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12Many striptease dancers incorporated elaborate gimmicks into their acts, many of them artistic and/or comedic; and some parodied celebrities. As the form declined in the '50s, a few became minor celebrities in their own right; and just as many comedians moved on to Hollywood, so did a few of the more popular dancers. Some of those who managed to make a showing on the silver screen were Gypsy Rose Lee, Creator/BettiePage, Tempest Storm, and Lili St. Cyr. Several movies were made which featured them; but these were generally [[{{Bowdlerise}} highly bowdlerized]] versions of the performances, or low-budget indie productions.
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14With the legalization of hardcore pornography in the 1960s, Burlesque lost its appeal and the theatres either closed or began showing pornographic films. A few remained, with performers playing up [[ItsNotPornItsArt the artistic]] or comedic aspects; but they typically didn't last long.
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16The modern Burlesque Revival (sometimes referred to as Neo-Burlesque or "Burlycue") started in the late 1990s; and is based predominantly on a HollywoodHistory version of Burlesque. It tends to focus entirely on the striptease, dropping the comedy and music aspects. Many performers and troops also incorporate themes of body-acceptance and [[PostModernism Post-Modern]] Feminist or NewAge themes of female empowerment through sexuality. Peformances range from re-creations of period styles featuring a minimum of nudity or sexuality, often undressing only down to their underwear, to [[{{Fanservice}} modern alterna-porn]]; with the majority emphasizing costuming, performance, and "tease" rather than sex.
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18The aesthetics of burlesque would later be used by DarkCabaret artists.
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20SuperTrope of the TheBurlesqueOfVenus, parodies of Creator/SandroBotticelli's ''Art/TheBirthOfVenusBotticelli''.
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22''For the 2010 film, head over to [[Film/{{Burlesque}} its own trope page]].''
23----
24!!Examples:
25
26[[foldercontrol]]
27
28[[folder:Comic Books]]
29* ComicBook/LuckyLuke saloons often had Can Can dancers in 'em.
30[[/folder]]
31
32[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
33* ''WesternAnimation/{{Coraline}}'': The two old ladies downstairs Spink and Forcible are retired burlesque performers, and they have posters hanging in their apartment from [[ParallelPornTitles saucy versions of Shakespeare plays]] they performed in, such as ''[[Theatre/JuliusCaesar Julius Sees-Her]]'' and ''[[Theatre/KingLear King Leer]]''. In the other world, Coraline actually sees one of their shows.
34[[/folder]]
35
36[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
37* In ''Film/BeyondAReasonableDoubt'' (1956) the murder victim was a stripper at a burlesque club. There's lots of {{Fanservice}} featuring the other strippers in their corsets and underthings.
38* Early talkie ''Film/{{Applause}}'' is about Kitty, the star singer/dancer/stripper in a burlesque show. It's a pretty grim take on burlesque. Kitty performs in a third-rate show with a lot of hefty chorus girls behind her. Men leer at her disgustingly. Her daughter April, who was educated in a convent, is shocked and horrified when she finds out what Kitty does for a living.
39* In ''Film/TheSting'', Hooker's girlfriend is shown performing in a Burlesque show. Yes, she's a stripper.
40* ''Film/TheNightTheyRaidedMinskys''.
41* ''Film/LadyOfBurlesque'' was a 1943 murder mystery involving Burlesque performers.
42* ''Film/TheRightStuff''. The astronauts attend a Burlesque show where an actress playing Sally Rand performs her iconic fan dance.
43* In ''Film/StarTrekVTheFinalFrontier'', Uhura performs a Burlesque-style fan dance to distract a patrol.
44* There is a 2010 film called ''Film/{{Burlesque}}'' that features a club with such performances. Music/ChristinaAguilera and Cher star in the movie.
45* ''Film/MoulinRouge'' is set in the titular brothel-cum-theatre in Paris, famous for its Burlesque shows.
46[[/folder]]
47
48[[folder:{{Literature}}]]
49* In ''Literature/TheGirlFromTheMiraclesDistrict'', Nikita has several friends and allies in a Thirties-style burlesque theatre called The Music Box.
50[[/folder]]
51
52[[folder:Live-ActionTV]]
53* In ''Series/GossipGirl'', Chuck Bass owns a burlesque club called Victrola. Blair gets up on stage in one episode and does a strip tease.
54* In an episode of ''Series/{{Scrubs}}'' there's a subplot about the women being uncomfortable having a co-ed changing room and when Elliott is forced to change in front of the guys JD has an ImagineSpot of her as a burlesque dancer.
55* In ''Series/TheHoneymooners'', Ed Norton's wife Trixie is a former burlesque performer, with a heavy implication she was a stripper.
56* ''Series/ElleryQueen'': In "The Adventure of Veronica's Veils", the VictimOfTheWeek is an impresario re-opening a burlesque theatre, and the suspects include several burlesque dancers. There's some comic suspense over whether the title dancer will take it too far. [[spoiler: She does, but offscreen.]]
57* ''Franchise/CSIVerse'':
58** ''Series/{{CSI}}'': Catherine Willows is a former burlesque dancer. In one episode she meets up with a cop who used to watch her dance and who became her mentor after encouraging her to switch careers.
59** ''Series/{{CSINY}}'': "[[Recap/CSINYS09E10 The Real [=McCoy=]]]" revolves around a bar of the same name, which features a burlesque dancer who is also the girlfriend of one of the owners. Jo reveals to Mac that she worked in a burlesque club during college and lets him think for a good while that she danced, before revealing that she kept their books.
60* ''Series/TheMarvelousMrsMaisel'': Midge starts doing comedy in between acts at a strip club, many of which are elaborate costumed performances.
61[[/folder]]
62
63[[folder:Professional Wrestling]]
64* ''Wrestling/{{SHIMMER}}'' wrestler Rayna Von Tosh had the gimmick of a burlesque pin-up girl. Since ''SHIMMER'' is a family-friendly show all she really did was peel off her gloves during her entrance.
65[[/folder]]
66
67[[folder:{{Music}}]]
68* One music video for "Mr. Brightside" by Music/{{The Killers|Band}} (which stars Creator/EricRoberts) takes place in a Victorian-era burlesque theater, where dancers perform during the chorus.
69* ''Music/PanicAtTheDisco'' used burlesque style dancers in shows on their first tour. Said dancers actually DID stick to innuendo rather than stripping, although some of their outfits didn't have much to take off anyway... In many cases the dancers, both male and female, served as caricatured representations of the dysfunctional individuals described in the band's early songs.
70* Music/{{Zucchero}}: The song "Vedo Nero" (I See Black) tells about Zucchero going to a Burlesque stage where he is metaphorically seeing everything black (referring to the women who are sensually dancing while being barely dressed in black). The song's video even shows how the women rise to the stage of a bar while bearing black robes, only to put them away (which surprises everybody in front of them) and then begin dancing alluringly, before eventually approaching the audience to dance with them. [[EvenTheGirlsWantHer Even the elderly woman (accompained by her husband) is enjoying the show]].
71[[/folder]]
72
73[[folder:{{Theater}}]]
74* The musical ''Theatre/{{Gypsy}}'' (and the 1962 [[TheFilmOfThePlay film adaptation]] starring Creator/NatalieWood) is the story of Gypsy Rose Lee. She started out working in Vaudeville, but moved to Burlesque because of the better money-making opportunity; and became one of the most well known strippers of the era. The word 'ecdysiast' was coined in her honor.
75* In the United States Burlesque houses were a training ground for many comedians.
76* ''Theatre/{{Oklahoma}}'': "They've got a big the-ay-tur, they call it burlycue..."
77* ''Top Banana'' was a 1951 musical starring comedian Phil Silvers, which featured many classic Burlesque comedy routines and conventions. It was believed to be a thinly veiled parody of Milton Berle, who, like Silvers, got his start in Burlesque before moving to television.
78* ''Theatre/{{Cabaret}}'', both the stage musical and its film adaptation. How the Kit Kat club is portrayed (burlesque, vaudeville, fetish club, etc.) seems to depend on the adaptation.
79* ''[[https://empirestripsback.com/ The Empire Strips Back]]'', a burlesque show take on ''Franchise/StarWars''.
80* ''Sugar Babies'' was a 1979 tribute to burlesque, starring Mickey Rooney and Ann Miller.
81* ''Seattle Vice'' is set in the 1960's, the twilight years of traditional burlesque.
82[[/folder]]
83
84[[folder:VideoGames]]
85* The video for "Last Surprise" in ''VideoGame/Persona5DancingInStarlight'' is burlesque-themed, featuring the female members of the Phantom Thieves wearing costumes not out-of-place for a Pussycat Dolls performance.
86[[/folder]]
87
88[[folder:WesternAnimation]]
89* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'': The Maison Derriere from "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS8E5BartAfterDark Bart After Dark]]". Bart ends up working there to pay off a debt for destroying the owner's gargoyle, and it attracts initial public outcry when exposed to the public.
90* ''WesternAnimation/TheGreatMouseDetective'' had a rather [[BigLippedAlligatorMoment inexplicable scene]] involving burlesque, to the delight of [[UsefulNotes/FurryFandom furries]] everywhere.
91* Creator/TexAvery used this trope in much of his work.
92* ''WesternAnimation/WildWestCOWBoysOfMooMesa'' in "Thoroughly Moodern Lily" had a burlesque competition between Lily Bovine and Sadie Wowcow.
93[[/folder]]
94
95[[folder:RealLife]]
96* Pretty much the entire reason for Creator/DitaVonTeese's existence. And the Music/PussycatDolls'.

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