I have a
lot of catching up to do. Since the
beginning of March, I've been preoccupied with shows, conventions, lab teching,
and a nasty injury. I'm mostly healed,
but I still can't type with two fingers so blogging has been very low on my list
priorities. However, now that I have
some down time, I decided that it was time to start catching up here.
By Robert Hold www.roberthold.com |
Remember
when I said that I was going to focus on refining old routines rather than work
on new ones? Well, that plan went out
the door pretty quickly. Sometimes
inspiration and opportunity come together in a perfect storm that you can't
escape. It's what happened with my
"I'll Make a Man Out of You" act for Panty Raid's Bare Necessities
show.
I had
gotten the idea a few months ago for another show. Although I'd never really wanted to do Disney
burlesque, the song was too catchy to resist.
However, the popularity meant that I really had to think this routine
out. It sat in the back of my mind until
I saw that Panty Raid was looking for Disney acts. I'd been wanting to return to Sue Ellen's so
the timing was perfect.
Sort
of. Because I wanted to pay tribute to
the training scene, I needed to brush up on both my drag and martial arts
skills. Although I had done drag only
once, I wasn't too unfamiliar with adopting a masculine persona due to my
crossplay background. However, this time
I wasn't portraying a youthful pretty boy—I needed to be a man. Thank goodness for on-line tutorials.
By Robert Hold www.roberthold.com |
The show
changed my mind about Disney burlesque.
I'd always had an irrational fear of corrupting childhood memories, but
now I know that burlesque just created new ones. I gained a new fan with my martial skills so
I was happy that the training paid off.
Doing this
act gave me insight on who Hana Li was as a performer. It felt so natural to be in drag at first,
and I enjoyed presenting dichotomies of masculine and feminine, serious and
silly. Panty Raid was the perfect place
for me to explore this, and I'm thankful for that opportunity.
I also acquired a new sense of creativity from combining the two different forms of movement. While I might not have been able to do a flying front kick stocking peel (things in your head don't always translate into real life once you consider skill level and physics), I came up with some new tricks that I hope to bring into other acts. And I did learn a flying front kick, which is a great way to keep the audience members alert.
Check out some highlights by Kevin Huckabee:
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