UPCOMING EVENTS

Friends of Chamber Music presents:
Konstantin Lifschitz

November 21
8 pm

Folly Jazz presents:
Stefon Harris Quintet

November 22
8 pm

Heartland Men’s Chorus presents:
Bless My Family

December 5 -7
8 pm

KC Jazz Orchestra presents:
A Nat King Cole Christmas

December 12
8 pm

Folly Jazz presents:
Roberta Gambarini

December 13
8 pm

Harriman-Jewell presents:
Home for the Holidays: Irvin Mayfield & The New Orleans Jazz Orch

December 18
7:30 pm

Tonic Sol-fa Holiday Show
December 22
7:30 pm

 

More events in January 2009

 

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Folly Theater History

Folly Burlesque (1941-1974)

The United States had been steeped in the Depression for more than a decade when another World War broke out in Europe and Asia. The world mobilized against a Nazi dictator, and American isolationism after World War I began to fade. December 7, 1941, changed national feelings about entering the war when a foreign country bombed American soil for the first time in history. The war began jumpstarting the economy as even the Works Project Administration had been unable to do. Women’s roles changed forever as Rosie the Riveter headed to work in factories to support war efforts. Soldiers traveled across the country with thousands stopping at Kansas City’s Union Station on their way to war. On their layovers there was a splashy new form of entertainment with an old name just waiting to catch their attention: Burlesque. Gone were the days of “burlesque” as blue comedy and troupes of dancing girls. Burlesque had become striptease.

The popularity of the Ziegfeld Follies in New York (and its subsequent national tours), the abandonment of vaudeville and traditional burlesque in favor of movies, and a changing national consciousness in the wake of a decade of poverty had paved the way for less artistic skin shows across the country. Re-opened in 1941 after a decade of darkness, the Folly Burlesque, the theater on the corner of 12th and Central, was a hot spot for men from all walks of life. Five shows a day, burlesque queens on “the wheel,” the touring circuit that included theaters in several states, performed their routines. Burlesque shows featured well-known male comics, skits and a lead showgirl called “the talking woman,” because she was the one allowed to speak, and of course, the ecdysiasts, commonly known as strippers. Each girl had a gimmick. Some were simple: the World’s Tallest Exotic or Miss Perpetual Motion. Others had elaborate costumes, everything from Marie Antoinette to a Hawaiian Princess to a Russian Cossack.

The most famous burlesque queens had class and commanded respect for their talents, mastering the art of suggestion rather than employing blatant nudity. And each took a turn at the Folly Burlesque. Missouri girl Sally Rand’s famous fan dance kept her moving through Debussy’s “Claire de Lune,” her ostrich plumes covering and uncovering parts of her nude body. The fans weighed a whopping eight pounds apiece. Gypsy Rose Lee, probably the most famous ecdysiast of all, was far more tease than strip. Known for her quick wit and intellectual banter, Gypsy talked her way through her routine, taking a powder puff to a bald audience member’s head in each show and ruling the crowd with a majesty not seen before or since. She was welcomed into the Hollywood elite, was a frequent guest on talk shows, and became a best-selling author even before her autobiography was turned into the Broadway musical “Gypsy.”

Local laws and a group of censors who monitored the happenings in burlesque theaters quickly regulated this new bedroom art form. Kansas City had some of the strictest laws in the country regulating decency. The line-up on the bulletin board at the Folly Burlesque noted the following: “Women MUST Wear Net Pants & Brassieres – Brassieres Must Have Cover For Nipples – No Bumps Or Grinds Direct to Audience – No Hanging on Curtains – Do Not Touch Body – No Extreme Flash – Wear Panels – No Suggestive Lyrics in Any Vocal Numbers! This is Local LAW and they are VERY STRICT.” Showgirl Sherry Shannon was quoted in the Kansas City News – Press as saying, “This is the strictest town in the circuit. Positively the strictest. We watch ourselves pretty closely, I can tell you!” Traditionally, burlesque houses kept a red light in the footlights to advise their dancers of a censor’s presence in the house. If things were taken too far, the theater was raided and the exotic dancers arrested for indecency. The Folly Burlesque was raided on and off for years. Favored talent Rose La Rose was continually arrested around the country because she took the red light as her personal cue to take things too far.

Henry Hogan, a former vaudeville comedian, worked at the Folly for decades, taking tickets, selling refreshments and scaring away boys too young to attend the girly-shows. He became a popular newspaper interviewee in the mid-1970s as the Folly Burlesque’s centenarian concessionaire/handyman. He even celebrated his 106th birthday on the stage of the theater alongside his 40-year-old wife of 21 years. Hogan is still a local legend.

As society began to change and the age of free love arrived, the restrictions were lessened and burlesque became increasingly dirty. By the late 1960s, body-stockinged strippers were no longer able to compete with a Woodstock society, and the burlesque houses ceased to be profitable. The owners of the Folly Burlesque, in order to remain competitive, needed to take a more serious approach to selling sex.

On the morning of December 28, 1969, the Kansas City Star’s headline read: “Old Grind Gets Bumped at Folly Theater Here.” The article reported that “the plan is to replace the show girls with showings of adult art films.” New manager Stuber was quoted as saying, “These girls they have around here all the time are vulgar, they’re cheap. They have cheapened the name of burlesque. We’re still going to try to bring in some big names for burlesque about once a month or so.”

The next morning, December 29, 1969, the Kansas City Star reported “Folly Theater Blast Is Cause of Breakage.” An unknown arsonist placed a stick of dynamite in a drainpipe on the west wall of the theater, exposed after the demolition of the Hotel Missouri. The blast broke windows in 18 businesses in the area. In a true testament to the soundness of Louis Curtiss’s architecture, the wall was not blown completely through. The plaster was knocked off the inside wall from the force of the explosion, and an outer covering of bricks blasted out on the outside, but the wall remained intact. The arsonist never claimed credit, although it was widely speculated that Stuber’s remarks in the Kansas City Star the previous day sparked the attack. The Folly played adult films until January 23, 1974, when she “died a quiet death.” (Kansas City Star, January 24, 1974)

After a last forgettable X-rated movie, the theater closed its doors, presumably for the last time. Sold to a New York property management company and slated to become a parking lot for the new convention center across the street, she was destined for the wrecking ball.

To learn more about burlesque, go to www.burlesquehistory.com

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