The Performance of Masculinity
The bodies of these performers, women in breeches, were sites of paradox. The sexualized areas of the bust, waist and thighs were accentuated in the costumes, but they were coupled with the attitudes and gestures of manhood (Mullenix). These gestures of manhood were often extreme: “In the upside-down world of burlesque…[the] performer was licensed to act in a very unladylike fashion: she swaggered about the stage wearing short pants, played the banjo, danced the jig, commanded battalions of her fellows in close-order drill” (Allen 148). The female burlesquer was given a space to swagger, to exaggerate the speech and stance of men. This performance was first met with open arms and sensationalized, drawing large crowds for months on end, but then, because burlesque could not be reconciled with preceding melodramatic ideologies these performers were eventually removed from the mainstream bourgeoisie theatres. This act of pushing burlesque out contributed to the development of the emerging image of the burlesquer as a dangerously sexual low other, a character unwanted and unsupported in mainstream culture (Mullenix 376). History dealt with the paradox of women’s bodies in breeches by sweeping them to the side and then further sexualizing and de-masculinizing them. By the 1920s burlesque was synonymous with stripping—having lost the employment of masculine costumes, and gained a significant level of promiscuity.