Burlesque (genre)

Burlesque (genre)

Burlesque is a genre of entertainment also known as Travesty. Prior to Burlesque becoming associated with striptease, it was a form of musical and theatrical parody in which an opera or piece of classical theatre is adapted in a broad, often risqué style very different from that for which it was originally known.

History

Burlesque originated in the 1840s, early in the Victorian Era, when the social rules of established aristocracy and working-class society clashed. The genre often mocked such established entertainment forms as opera, Shakespearean drama and ballet. The burlesque was a logical descendant of ballad opera and other forms of comic musical entertainments.

Burlesque began with Madame Vestris' management at the Olympic Theatre in 1831. There she produced "Olympic Revels" by J. R. Planché. In the early burlesques, the words of the songs were written to popular music in the same way that had been done earlier in "The Beggar's Opera". Later, in the Victorian era, burlesque mixed operetta, music hall and revue, and was often known as Extravaganza. [http://www.peopleplayuk.org.uk/guided_tours/musicals_tour/first_musicals/burlesques.php Information about dramatic burlesque] ] W. S. Gilbert wrote several burlesques early in his career, including "Dulcamara, or the Little Duck and the Great Quack" (1866), "La Vivandière, or, True to the Corps!" (1867) and "Robert the Devil" (1868).

Burlesque became the specialty of London's Gaiety Theatre and Royal Strand Theatre from the 1860s to the early 1890s. In the 1860s and 1870s, burlesques were one-act pieces running less than an hour and using pastiches and parodies of popular songs, opera arias and other music that the audience would readily recognize. Beginning in the 1880s, composers like Meyer Lutz and Osmond Carr contributed original music, and the shows were extended to a full-length two or three act format. ["Theatrical Humour in the Seventies", "The Times", 20 February 1914, p. 9, col. D] Nellie Farren, as the theatre's "principal boy," and Fred Leslie starred at the Gaiety during that period, and Leslie wrote the libretti for many of these pieces under his pseudonym, "A. C. Torr". [Stewart, Maurice. 'The spark that lit the bonfire', in "Gilbert and Sullivan News" (London) Spring 2003.] In the early 1890s, musical Burlesque went out of fashion, and the Gaiety Theatre's focus changed to the new genre of Edwardian musical comedy.

The dialogue for many of the burlesques was written in the form of rhymed couplets, and was full of bad puns. For example, in "Faust up to Date" (1888), a couplet reads:

:Mephistopheles: "Along the Riviera dudes her praises sing." :Walerlie: "Oh, did you Riviera such a thing?" [Lubbock, Mark. [http://www.theatrehistory.com/british/lightopera001.html "History of British musical theatre",] "The Complete Book of Light Opera", New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1962, pp. 467-68]

By the 1880s, the genre had created some rules for defining itself:

* Minimal costuming, often focusing on the female form.
* Sexually suggestive dialogue, dance, plotlines and staging.
* Quick-witted humor laced with puns, but lacking complexity.
* Short routines or sketches with minimal plot cohesion across a show.

Etymology

The name "burlesque" is derived from the Italian "burla", which means "jest." The form began as comic parodies of well-known topics or people. [http://www2.yk.psu.edu/~jmj3/sna_aum3.htm Jarrett, Michael. "Music Hall, Vaudeville, and Burlesque (1843)"] ]

The term "travesty" combines the Latin words "trans-", meaning "across, over" and "vestere", "to dress or to wear". According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word "travesty" originally meant "to disguise by changing costume" specifically "in the attire of the opposite sex". [cite encyclopedia|encyclopedia=Oxford English Dictionary|title=Travesty|year=1989|edition=2nd] In modern literary theory, the word continues to hold this meaning in reference to dramatic works: transvestism onstage is referred to as "travesty". [cite journal|author=Anne Hermann|title=Travesty and Transgression: Transvestism in Shakespeare, Brecht, and Churchill|journal=Theatre Journal|year=1989|volume=41|issue=2|pages=133–154|doi=10.2307/3207855] In particular "travesty roles" are dramatic roles in which the sex of the character is opposite that of the performer.

Examples of burlesque

"Ruy Blas and the Blase Roue" made fun of the play "Ruy Blas" by Victor Hugo. [Hollingshead, pp. 57–58] The title was a pun, and the worse the pun, the more Victorian audiences were amused. Other Gaiety burlesques included "Robert the Devil" (1868), "The Bohemian G-yurl and the Unapproachable Pole" (1877), "Blue Beard" (1882), "Ariel" (1883, by F. C. Burnand), "Galatea, or Pygmalion Reversed" (1883), "Little Jack Sheppard" (1885), "Pretty Esmeralda" (1887), "Frankenstein, or The Vampire's Victim" (1887), [Hollingshead, pp. 14 and 55] "Mazeppa", "Carmen up to Data" (1890), [ [http://www.arthurlloyd.co.uk/Archive/August/prog1detail1.htm Programme for "Carmen up to Data"] ] [Adams, pp. 254–55] "Cinder Ellen up too Late" (1891), and "Don Juan" (1892, with lyrics by Adrian Ross). [Hollingshead, pp. 63–64] [http://www.arthurlloyd.co.uk/Gaiety.htm Arthur Lloyd Music Hall site (on Gaiety) "Cuttings"] accessed 01 Mar 2007]

Well known ragtime travesties include "The Russian Rag", by George L. Cobb, which is based on Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C-sharp minor, and Felix Arndt's "Lucy's Sextette" based on a sextet from Lucia di Lammermoor by Donizetti.

To compete with vaudeville and revues like the "Ziegfeld Follies", burlesque became increasingly racy after 1900.

In more recent times, the score for the film The Cool Mikado is a travesty on the original Gilbert and Sullivan music. Comedic musician "Weird Al" Yankovic writes songs, specifically songs such as the "Angry White Boy Polka" and "Polkrama," that can be considered travesties, as they take the lyrics and music of popular songs and re-arrange them into the style of Polka.

ee also

*Burlesque (literary)
*Burlesque (disambiguation)
*Burlesque
*Extravaganza

Notes

References

*Adams, William Davenport (1904) [http://books.google.com/books?id=tjwOAAAAIAAJ&dq=%22faust+up+to+date%22+stone+florence+lonnen&source=gbs_summary_s&cad=0 "A dictionary of the drama"] Chatto & Windus
*Hedin, Thomas F. (2001) "The Petite Commande of 1664: Burlesque in the gardens of Versailles", "The Art Bulletin"
*Hollingshead, John. (1903) "Good Old Gaiety: An Historiette & Remembrance" London:Gaity Theatre Co
*Frye, Northrop. (1957) "Anatomy of Criticism: Four Essays." Princeton: Princeton University Press
* [http://www.musicals101.com/burlesque.htm Description of early burlesques in America by historian John Kenrick]

External links

* [http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Burlesque "Encyclopaedia Britannica" 1911: "Burlesque"]
* [http://www.peopleplayuk.org.uk/guided_tours/musicals_tour/first_musicals/burlesques.php Information about Burlesque from the PeoplePlay UK website]
* [http://www.peopleplayuk.org.uk/collections/object.php?object_id=1597 Further information from the PeoplePlay UK website]


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