How Rose La Rose Influenced Her Own Image
In another interview for the Byline Newspaper titled “There is a Business in Beauty”, Rose La Rose explains how burlesque dancers “put in 4-6 hours each day, 7 days per week, on the stage plus rehearsals” (Shoup). She explains that “of all show people, those in burlesque must work the hardest, with the New York City Rocketts chorus girls holding a close second” (Shoup). Rose La Rose worked to elevate the stigma of the Burlesque profession and explain to the general public how hard the dancers work to do what they do. This works well as a rhetorical strategy because when a reader learns that a dancer spends hours of hard work behind one performance their credibility as working professionals elevates. To someone who may not understand a performing career, it is logical to associate hard work and long hours with merit.
An Ohio newspaper article on the death of Rose La Rose explains how throughout her career she was friends and colleagues with newspapermen and editors. It reads “She was a friend of many newspapermen and once helped editor Irving Leibowitz of The Journal write a column Indianapolis about sex researcher Alfred Kinsey. She called Kinsey a “dirty old man” and accused him of conducting an immoral and unscientific poll of women who yearn to divulge their sex lives and myths” (The Journal 1972). Not only did Rose La Rose advocate for burlesque dancers through the press but also for average women who were proud of their sexuality. She worked with this journalist to expose someone who was allegedly misrepresenting women and their sexuality, which at that time would have been extremely controversial. Overall, there are many newspaper articles and photos before and after her death that show how much of an influence she had on her own image, the press, as well as the publics’ perception of burlesque dance as a respectable profession.
Works Cited
Lavely, Bill. “Strippers are Really Extroverts” (March 1969). Sunday Daily. Newspaper Clipping. Series 5, Box 1, Folder 5. Charles H. McCaghy Collection of Exotic Dance from Burlesque to Clubs. Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee Theater Research Institute, Ohio State University Libraries, Columbus, OH. 2 Dec. 2015.
Shout, Paula. “There is a Business in Beauty.” Byline Newspaper. (Holland,OH) Clipping. Series 5, Box 1, Folder 5. Charles H. McCaghy Collection of Exotic Dance from Burlesque to Clubs. Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee Theater Research Institute, Ohio State University Libraries, Columbus, OH. 2 Dec. 2015.
“Rose La Rose, A Queen, Dies” (July 1972). The Journal. (Loraine, OH) Newspaper Clipping. Series 5, Box 1, Folder 5. Charles H. McCaghy Collection of Exotic Dance from Burlesque to Clubs. Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee Theater Research Institute, Ohio State University Libraries, Columbus, OH. 2 Dec. 2015.