Though written forty years ago, the first sentence of The American Burlesque Show, Irving Zeidman’s history of burlesque in the United States (primarily New York), cites a dilemma that continues to haunt burlesque.
It serves in most venues as a couples’ or women’s alternative to the more commercial, more directly sexual environment of strip clubs (although in New York there are a few venues that are decidedly more hardcore than any burlesque shows of the past).
Zeidman quotes Sime Silverman, founder and publisher of Variety, saying, “Were there no women in burlesque, how many men wold attend?” in 1909. He describes the history of American burlesque as “the history of its producers’ endless efforts to please both the censors and the audience.”
The book offers so much detail in less than 250 pages that anyone can count themselves a scholar in a matter of days. It is a seminal reference on American burlesque, and is a significant source in the bibliography of almost every book written about burlesque since its publication.
Though the history of burlesque is longer than the history of American burlesque, this book is invaluable for those who are primarily interested in the burlesque standard that began with the arrival of British burlesque to the United States in the 19th century. Zeidman describes the path of burlesque from the Black Crook to the Great White Way.
“If burlesque ever became too talented, it ceased to be burlesque. It became vaudeville or musical comedy and even…light opera.” – Irving Zeidman
He calls the Black Crook “the acknowledged forerunner of modern burlesque because here, for the first time in the history of the American stage, female nudity was exhibited not as an integral part of the plot, but frankly and with bravado for its own crass and pleasant appeal.
If the reader sets Zeidman’s commentary aside, the history presented is a story of broad comedians and saucy wenches owning the stage for nearly a century. The arrival of Lydia Thompson and Her Imported British Blondes in 1868 to New York set the standard for shows that mocked politics and popular culture while including women who put themselves shamelessly on display.
The shamelessness of the women presented a visual metaphor for the shameless attitude taken in the skits, taunting the pretenses of upstanding citizens and authorities — particularly those who worked to close the burlesque houses down, and succeeded in doing so in New York in 1937 by editing out the strippers.
As with any history, it’s hard to know how much of it is biased, but Zeidman’s facts are always backed by sources. For all of its thorough documentation, it maintains an easy and enjoyable read with plenty of photos, including many of the comics and variety artists as well as of the female dancers he describes as being central to burlesque’s appeal.
He devotes chapters to the candy butchers, the comics, and of course to the strippers, all with photos to illustrate his quotes from the entertainment media of the eras. He also includes photos of the theatres and neighborhoods.
The history of burlesque via secondary sources can be hard to verify, since so much of the material offered by the burlesque producers is colored by their desires to promote, and so much of what remained in the news media was the result of publicity stunts and press releases offered by those same producers.
However, Zeidman makes the most of this and analyzes all of it with an eye to informing and entertaining the reader while taking every claim burlesque has made about itself with a grain of salt — just as burlesque has historically taken the authorities and moral standards of every era. He studies an irreverent art form irreverently, which is as it should be.
Zeidman says, “Burlesque, unfortunately, has never been any of the fancy or sentimental things ascribed to it — neither now nor then. It has never been a lusty form of folk expression or a national forum for satire or a showplace for knockabout hilarious slapstick. If burlesque ever became too talented, it ceased to be burlesque. It became vaudeville or musical comedy and even…light opera.”
He often seems to have a quite low opinion of burlesque, albeit with affection for its shortcomings. He never admits how he came to be interested enough in burlesque to do the enormous amount of research labor this book represents. I wonder what he would make of burlesque as it is today.
– Jo Weldon
Jo Weldon is Headmistress of the award-winning New York School of Burlesque and is a regular burlesque performer. Visit burlesquedaily.blogspot.com to read her daily blog.