33 Racy Photos Of The Burlesque Dancers Who Took America By Storm At The Turn Of The 20th Century (2024)

Burlesque dancers like Lydia Thompson and Gypsy Rose Lee defined the art form, raising eyebrows with their scandalous moves and risqué outfits.

Vintage burlesque dancers never meant to be especially titillating. In fact, their main goal was to make the audience laugh.

In 19th-century London, the burlesque performances that crowds flocked to theaters to see were variety shows that put a comedic spin on classical plays and operas. Indeed, the term burlesque comes from the Italian burlesco, derived from burla, which means ridicule or mockery.

Burlesque shows gained popularity in the United States in 1868 thanks to English dancer Lydia Thompson and her troupe, the “British Blondes” —but their performances were controversial. One journalist described the shows as a “disgraceful spectacle of padded legs jiggling and wriggling in the insensate follies and indecencies of the hour.”

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Victorian burlesque dancer Eliza Blasina wearing a horse costume. 1867.Flickr/Ohio State University

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An American burlesque theater costume. 1879.Wikimedia Commons

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British burlesque dancer Marie Loftus. 1896.Wikimedia Commons

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Eva Tanguay, the legendary vaudeville star who gave famously enthusiastic performances. Circa early 1900s. New York Public Library Digital Collections

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An advertisem*nt for a French cabaret featuring the famed burlesque dancer Mistinguett. Circa 1931.Wikimedia Commons

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Vaudeville and burlesque star Dora Dean and her husband, Charles Johnson, in the early 1900s. This married couple achieved many firsts: They were the first to put steel on the soles on their shoes and the first African-American couple to perform on Broadway. Instagram/@burlesquehall

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Aida (Ada) Overton Walker, circa 1911. Dubbed "The Queen of the Cakewalk," Walker was an American vaudeville performer, actress, singer, dancer, and choreographer. Instagram/@burlesquehall

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Nora Bayes as the lead in a burlesque performance of Romeo and Juliet. Circa 1920.Library of Congress

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The Epler sisters, Venetia and Daphne, during a performance in Chicago. Circa 1933.Underwood Archives, Inc/Alamy Stock Photo

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Sally Rand performing "Leda and the Swan" at the Chicago World's Fair. 1933.Underwood Archives, Inc/Alamy Stock Photo

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Iconic French dancer Josephine Baker starred in The Ziegfeld Follies of 1936. Here she is donning her famous banana skirt. Wikimedia Commons

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Stripsy Roselie, a burlesque marionette designed by famous cabaret puppeteers Walton and O'Rourke, in a Los Angeles night club. She holds a cigarette and exhales talcum powder "smoke." 1939.SuperStock/Alamy Stock Photo

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Gypsy Rose Lee in her striptease stage act "The Streets of Paris" at the 1939 New York World's Fair. Pictorial Press Ltd/Alamy Stock Photo

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The cast of a 1940s burlesque performance. Instagram/@burlesquehall

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Noel Toy got her start as a chorus girl at the Golden Gate International Exposition, where she was noticed by Forbidden City nightclub owner Charlie Low. Circa 1940s.Instagram/@burlesquehall

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Noel Toy was famous for this "bubble dance" at the Forbidden City nightclub in San Francisco. Circa 1945.Wikimedia Commons

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Lili St. Cyr performing with a large, exotic bird. Circa 1946. Wikimedia Commons

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LaWanda Page as a young dancer before she appeared on the TV show Sanford and Son as Aunt Esther. Facebook/The Burlesque Hall of Fame

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Jadin Wong, a Chinese cabaret dancer. Circa 1953.Trinity Mirror/Mirrorpix/Alamy Stock Photo

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Jessica Rogers was a top-grossing burlesque dancer in the 1940s and '50s. In one notable routine, she dressed as a college professor and sang a song called "Bare Facts."Facebook/Burlesque Baby

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Kitty West, the Bourbon Street stripper known as Evangeline the Oyster Girl. Circa 1940s.Instagram/@burlesquehall

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Frances DuBay's "Lady Godiva" striptease involved a live horse helping her disrobe on stage. Circa 1950s. Edward Roth/Alamy Stock Photo

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Francis DuBay posing with her horse, whose real name was Melody Lady. Facebook/El Ateneo Cantina Film Fest

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Dixie Evans, the "Marilyn Monroe of burlesque," poses with a bird. Facebook/The Burlesque Hall of Fame

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Fabulous Fanny, also known as "The South American Cyclone," began dancing in the mid-1950s, working the chorus line at a club in New York City.Instagram/@burlesquehall

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Before her burlesque days, Dorian Dennis earned a degree in chemistry from New York University.Facebook/Famous Ladies

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Known as "China's Most Daring Dancing Doll," Coby Yee began dancing in the 1940s and soon became a mainstay in Asian nightclubs. Photo circa 1950s.Instagram/@burlesquehall

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Patti Waggin, the "co-ed with the educated torso," was also a motorcycle racer, competing in local races by the time she was 14. Later, she found working nights on the burlesque stage made her enough money to put herself through college. Circa 1950s. Facebook/The Burlesque Hall of Fame

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The dancer and erotic actress Lili St. Cyr pictured on a publicity card from El Rancho Vegas, a hotel and casino on the Las Vegas Strip.Chronicle/Alamy Stock Photo

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Ka'ena began her career in Hawaii in the 1950s, and she soon became known for her dangerous knife and fire dance. Instagram/@burlesquehall

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April March (born Velma Fern Worden) was one of the innovators of the elegant striptease.Facebook/The Burlesque Hall of Fame

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A poster for the film Teaserama, a 1955 low-budget documentary featuring Bettie (Betty) Page.Everett Collection, Inc./Alamy Stock Photo

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Dancer Jennie Lee started the Exotic Dancers' League (EDL), a labor union for burlesque performers. Here, they protest on the streets of Los Angeles, circa 1959.Instagram/@burlesquehall

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Inside The Controversial History Of Burlesque In 33 Revealing Photos

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Soon, burlesque dancers were pushing the limits of what was considered appropriate to Americans —and growing ever more famous as they did so. At a time when housewives found themselves mostly relegated to homemaking, the British group showed American women that they didn't have to stay in the kitchen. They had a place on the stage.

What Is Burlesque?

Burlesque began as an offshoot of commedia dell'arte, an early form of comedic Italian theater that emerged in the 15th century. It, too, consisted of bawdy takes on the politics of the time. Actors even satirized stories from Greek mythology.

By the 19th century, the art had transformed into the popular Victorian burlesque style. These shows began as short, one-act musical theater parodies of plays or operas. They were full of puns and featured women dancing in tights, but they were mildly risqué at worst.

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Instagram/@burlesquehallLydia Thompson poses with members of her British Blondes burlesque troupe. Circa 1870s.

Near the end of the century, they lengthened into performances with two or three acts. Many of the male roles were played by female burlesque dancers wearing breeches.

By the early 1890s, however, London had ditched burlesque shows for the new, more wholesome genre of the Edwardian musical comedy. But burlesque didn't die — it simply jumped continents.

How Burlesque Dancers Came To The U.S.

Credit for the first major burlesque show in America goes to Lydia Thompson, the ambitious entrepreneur behind the "British Blondes" dancing troupe. The women brought their musical extravaganza, Ixion, to New York City in 1868.

The burlesque dancers shocked American audiences, who weren't accustomed to seeing women play male roles. Thompson's show was so popular that it grossed $370,000 in its first season alone. That's the equivalent of $8 million today.

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Wikimedia CommonsA newspaper advertisem*nt for Ixion! by Lydia Thompson and the British Blondes.

Needless to say, Americans were hooked on burlesque.

The Feb. 5, 1869 edition of The New York Times featured an article on the burlesque craze that began: "An epidemic, which the Board of Health is powerless to arrest, has seized upon New York and infects it in every part, counting its victims by the tens of thousands. It may be called the Mania for Burlesque."

The article continued:

"The distinguishing symptom of the epidemic is a singular and easily detected appearance of masses of light and golden hair on the stage of the afflicted theatre; after this symptom the spectator is appalled by observing a tendency in the patients to dispossess themselves of their clothing, and it requires the greatest exertion to keep anything on them."

Early American burlesque shows generally had three acts: short comedic sketches, vaudeville productions or acrobatic acts featuring male performers, and a chorus number or a parody of a play. The evening then typically ended with either an exotic dance or a wrestling match.

As time went on, however, burlesque shows — and burlesque dancers — became increasingly controversial. The dancing was soon the headlining act, and it grew ever more suggestive.

The Scandalous History Of Burlesque In America

In 1908, the brothers Abe, Billy, Herbert, and Morton Minsky opened Minsky's Burlesque, a specific type of show that soon grew to be synonymous with obscenity. According to the New York Daily News, Variety once reviewed Minsky's shows as the "cheapest dirt, dirtiest coochers, and no talent. Just rotten."

The brothers hired men to stand outside their theaters and shout things like, "Watch! Like a banana, watch her peel! Watch Gypsy Rose Lee take it off, right down to the fruit!" Their comedic skits boasted names like "Anatomy and Cleopatra" and "Julius Teaser," and their shows were often raided for breaking nudity laws.

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New York Public Library Digital CollectionsGypsy Rose Lee (right) posing with fellow burlesque dancers, a Rolls Royce, and a "Curves Ahead" sign. Circa 1957.

When Minsky's moved to Broadway in 1931, New Yorkers complained that they'd brought "Coney Island to Times Square." Police were constantly raiding their 14 theaters, and eventually, the city's commissioner of licenses teamed up with Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia to refuse permits for their establishments.

In fact, it was largely the shows of the Minsky brothers that caused LaGuardia to vow to bring about "the end of incorporated filth" in the city and outlaw the word "burlesque" in any theater advertising. By the early 1940s, burlesque dancers were essentially kicked out of New York — but that didn't stop them from performing elsewhere.

Vintage Burlesque Dancers Who Skyrocketed To Fame

As the art of burlesque dancing evolved, standout stars worldwide brought their talents to the stage. Stunning choreography and elaborate costumes became the standard. Women of all different ethnicities found their spots in the burlesque world.

Eva Tanguay, billed as "The Queen of Vaudeville," reached the height of her popularity around 1904 — and stayed there for nearly 20 years. She sang suggestive songs with an average voice, but it was the enthusiasm and self-confidence with which she did so that made her a favorite.

Tanguay also appeared in movies. In fact, some say she was the first performer to truly achieve national celebrity status.

But perhaps the most famous burlesque dancer was Gypsy Rose Lee. She was best known for her signature slow stripteases. She danced for four years at Minsky's Burlesque in New York, then headed to California in 1937 to try her hand at acting. She found success in Hollywood as well, appearing in more than a dozen films.

Each successful performer had her own style and brought something unique to the genre. At a time when the public was strictly policing how women expressed their sexuality, burlesque dancers were thought to be engaging in radical behavior.

Unforgettable Moments In Burlesque History

One of the most famous moments in the history of burlesque was arguably Sally Rand's performance at the 1933 World's Fair in Chicago. Her arrival on horseback from a boat and her evocative fan dance ignited audiences.

And before burlesque was banned in New York, the wildly popular Broadway extravaganza that was the Ziegfeld Follies took the city by storm. The Jardin de Paris roof-top theater hosted the first Ziegfeld burlesque show in New York, which attracted notable performers like Josephine Baker, Louise Brooks, and Gilda Gray.

But perhaps the animated Jessica Rabbit's famously sultry performance in the 1988 film Who Framed Roger Rabbit? is responsible for introducing the art form to a new generation. Neo-Burlesque, the new wave of burlesque dancers, began picking up steam after the Blue Angel Exotic Cabaret opened in New York in 1993, per New York Magazine.

In addition, Neo-Burlesque made Dita Von Teese a star when she began performing on stage in the early 1990s. Today, there are many burlesque dancers who have large followings, like Perle Noire, Zelia Rose, and Frankie Fictitious. Each puts their own spin on the genre.

This is one popular art form that will always be able to hold a captive audience.

After learning about the history of burlesque dancers, check out these vintage photos of famous pinup models. Then, find out more about the secret life of pinup-girl-turned-recluse Bettie Page.

33 Racy Photos Of The Burlesque Dancers Who Took America By Storm At The Turn Of The 20th Century (2024)
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