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Article in The Georgia
Straight
Vancouver's Premiere Arts and Entertainment Newsmagazine
Publish Date: 26-Jan-2006
Article Link: http://www.straight.com/article/yoga-a-go-go?#
Yoga a-go-go
By Janet Smith
The first clue we’re not at a standard yoga class is the
1920s bump-and-grind jazz playing as women enter the studio.
The next is the pile of Hawaiian leis spilling out of an
open vintage suitcase. And then there is Little Woo, the
upbeat instructor greeting us at the door: she’s dressed in
a polka-dot bikini top and grass skirt instead of the usual
Lululemon wear.
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Welcome to Burlesque Yoga, a new fusion that
could only have been born in Vancouver—a city where the
underground retro-striptease scene has evolved into regular
club nights and where Ashtanga and Bikram studios are almost
as ubiquitous as Starbucks outlets. Recently launched by
Woo, a spiritual practitioner who dances at shows like last
November’s Toy Box cabaret at the Red Room, it seems like a
natural meld. But she recognizes that not all will see it
that way.
“There are people who think burlesque is a profane thing and
taboo. I wanted to do something that connected the two,” Woo
says. It’s a couple of days before the class, and she’s
relaxing in her exotic East Side den, decorated with silk
lanterns, hot-orange walls, and a leopard-print lounger.
“The vision is to teach workshops to help women feel more
sensual and connected, and that there’s no shame in it. I’d
even go so far as to say I consider it a spiritual
practice.”
Finding transcendence through the bawdy world of fishnets
and tasselled pasties? “I felt very spiritual when I did
burlesque dancing,” insists Woo, who first started
performing a few years ago and today looks every bit the
part: a small bright-scarlet marabou feather sits in her
long black hair, and she’s wearing matching matte lipstick
and a little knit cardigan over a black-satin bustier. “Yoga
really means ‘a connection with the divine’, yet now we
associate it with breath work and positions. And to a
burlesque dancer, her art is her connection to her divine
self.”
Our one-hour Burlesque Yoga “teaser” session (a preview for
people interested in Woo’s longer workshops) at the downtown
Forufera Centre starts out with relaxing, meditative
breathing. From there, participants are taught sequences of
choreographed movements, which Woo compares to yoga’s
vinyasas, or series of postures. But the class turns out to
owe a lot more to Dita Von Teese than, say, Swami Vishnu-devananda.
About 20 women learn an entire Hawaiian-themed strip routine
set to Bryan Hyland’s kitschy ’60s novelty tune “Itsy Bitsy
Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini”. No pole-dancing
here: burlesque is all about the tease—the most you’d gear
down to is a pair of pasties and your lace panties or bikini
bottoms, but here you’re welcome to just pretend, too.
Throughout the song, we playfully peel off our leis, untie
our sarongs and rub them back and forth across our asses,
and end up half-dressed with our hands in the air. Skills
acquired: how to turn around while maintaining our coy gaze
with the audience; how to knot our sarongs so they’ll
neither fall down nor get stuck when we undo them; and, most
importantly, how to add flourish to every move with fingers
seductively posed into “Barbie hands”.
Woo is unapologetic. “No disrespect to yoga, but we’re
playing here,” she says with a smile. Burlesque has a long,
colourful history of parody and biting satire—a history that
attracted Woo to the art form. It has its roots in the
Victorian era, when the lower classes would lampoon the
aristocracy through song-and-dance routines. “At first it
was a form of comedy for the disenfranchised—they would go
much further than what was acceptable at the time,” Woo
explains. Later, growing out of the vaudeville circuit of
the early 20th century and va-va-vooming into the 1950s, it
gave way to sexy stripteases by Bettie Page look-alikes. “By
performing, women were able to support themselves and to be
financially independent, and that was considered scandalous
in itself,” Woo says.
That old-style burlesque has seen a revival over the past
decade in North America, with people like Von Teese (aka
Mrs. Marilyn Manson), resurrecting the art form in
contemporary, tongue-in-cheek ways. Where the scene has
recently waned in other centres, it’s still thriving in
Vancouver: local troupes like Sweet Soul Burlesque and the
Neverland Burlesque Society continue to show that not all
strippers have to work at the Cecil. Woo seizes upon the
trend, but puts her own spin on it.
“For me it’s to lighten up spirituality, too—sometimes that
field can be so serious,” says Woo, whose day job is doing
energy work and sound therapy. “And I want to say you can
wear fun costumes, listen to fun music, and shake your
booty, and still be spiritual.”
In her longer workshops, the costumes and props become more
elaborate. Expect boas and feathers at her Classic Set;
there’s also an Exotica Set (drawing on belly dance, which
Woo has also taught), a Mythos Set (think mermaids), a Rock
Star Set (which is open to guys, too), and more.
As for Burlesque Yoga’s fitness and health benefits, Woo
says: “The movements aren’t aggressive, so I wouldn’t call
it a cardiovascular workout. Because it’s choreographed to
music, there’s a rhythm and a flow. It’s exercise in that
you’re definitely moving and stretching your body—but it’s
for people who aren’t dancers, because it’s not complicated.
“There are benefits beyond the physical. I stress you really
have to love your own body,” she adds. “Burlesque dancers
come in all shapes and sizes, but the big thing you’ll find
in common is they love themselves. My workshops are meant to
help women accept their bodies and to be more lively and
sassy, so that inner goddess can come out.”
Pasties and leis aside, the biggest difference between Woo’s
campy new hybrid and standard yoga is the laughter—not
something you hear a lot of with a studio full of people
straining to stretch into a perfect extended-triangle pose.
During our session, one woman busts a gut over the way her
sarong caught her hair as she attempted to slip it off, and
the house comes down every time we have to swing our butts
out to the song’s ridiculous tin-bell cue. We’ve found a new
religion, and its goddess wears tassels and fishnets.
The skinny on the bump-and-grind
Burlesque Yoga is holding a “teaser class” next Sunday
(January 29, 3:30 to 4:30 p.m., $5), where women can try out
the form. There’s also a Valentine’s Vavavoom Workshop on
February 12 (2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., $30, men and women) and
a Classic Set workshop on February 19 (12:30 p.m. to 4:30
p.m., $50), all at Forufera (505 Hamilton Street, mezzanine
level). Little Woo will also be teaching a course at the
upcoming Vancouver International Burlesque Festival
(February 9 to 12 at venues around town); check out
www.vanburlesquefest.com , title and location to be
announced.
Info on all the programs is at
www.burlesqueyoga.com
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