“We bring our signature New York City-style burlesque, which is a lot of comedy, rock and roll, classic glamour and sexiness,” she says.Whether you are looking for balayage or a bob, our hairstylists show a heightened level of skill and attention to detail that will leave you with showstopping hair. Without uncovering too much, Tonka sums up what Albuquerque can look forward to Thursday. Tonka and co-producer Darlinda Just Darlinda will bring solo acts while also appearing in their duo incarnation as The Schlep Sisters, a saucy pair of vaudeville-inspired Jewish siblings. All five New Yorkers have won Golden Pastie awards, the coveted prizes of the lauded New York Burlesque Festival, and each of them has shimmied across the stages of the Burlesque Hall of Fame Weekend (formerly Miss Exotic World) multiple times, three of them coming away with titles. What is guaranteed in Thursday’s show is prime-time stripteasing from nationally recognized artists. “When you’re on the road, you’ve got to pack light,” Tonka says. She divulges they’re not bringing any big props, like the built-in oven used in a housewife number by Minnie Tonka, one of the tour’s producers. You know, you don’t feel locked down with something you don’t want to perform.” “It just makes the performance that much better. “I feel like we’re able to just be like, Oh, today I feel like this, I want to do this number,” says tour member GiGi La Femme. Even Rebelle is still in the dark, but the New Yorkers assure us there’s a good reason. Burlesque Noir will perform its “Stripping Broadway” routine that won in Austin, but as far as what the girls from New York will show up with, it’s going to be a big surprise-for everybody. Photo by Clint HildFive performers from Burlesque Noir, along with a handful of local guests like RiRi SynCyr and Kitty Irreverent, will flesh out Thursday’s showcase of 20 solo, duo and group numbers. The downside to performing in theaters is that the payout is usually less because they charge an up-front rental fee that bars typically don’t. The nice thing about a theater is you get lights, you get good sound, you get a good dressing room,” as opposed to building a makeshift one in the bathroom, she says. “I don’t know that anybody feels one is better over the other, but there’s a discussion about it in the community. “There’s this big debate burlesque that happens in a theater and burlesque that happens in a bar,” Rebelle explains. The move is either a happy or disappointing change of pace for burlesque in Burque, depending on who you ask. Rebelle says that because she was only given three months’ notice to put the show together, she wasn’t able to book a bar or club-like the Launchpad, one of the troupe’s customary venues-but was fortunate enough to squeeze into the intimate Aux Dog. That act last came through town in 2010 and is now on its fourth national tour. Rebelle’s homegrown neo-burlesque troupe, Burlesque Noir, which also nabbed Best Ensemble in Austin, is scrambling together for a somewhat last-minute one-off to welcome the five award-winning New York burlesque artists embodying the touring show Dangerous Curves Ahead: Burlesque on the Go-Go. But Albuquerque audiences have at least one last chance to catch that risqué display Thursday at Aux Dog Theatre. It’s the performance-art nature of the piece that has made it so popular, says Rebelle, who admits she might be retiring it soon in order to avoid becoming a one-trick pony. The eight-minute routine capitalizes on the classic burlesque convention of storytelling through movement, costuming and music while reaching for the neo-burlesque heights of profound thought and emotional impact. “It’s Jacqueline Kennedy after JFK was shot,” she explains. “The Jacqueline Kennedy act has gotten me some interesting attention in the burlesque scene,” says Rebelle, who recently took home the trophy for Best Soloist at the Austin competition for her new balloon dance, “Rain Cloud,” set to music from the Disney cartoon film Bambi.īut it’s the grieving first widow act, in which Rebelle starts out in a pink suit covered in blood, that she says has become her signature number. West PhotographyWhen Albuquerque-based stripteaser Holly Rebelle was thinking about performing in this year’s Texas Burlesque Festival in Austin, one of the show’s producers dissuaded her from bringing her Jackie O.
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