FILM REVIEWS
TRUE CONFESSIONS OF A GO-GO GIRL - KC Fringe Fest | TRUE CONFESSIONS OF A GO-GO GIRL - KC Fringe Fest |
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| Written by Deborah Ground Buckner | |
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Title: True Confessions of a Go-Go Girl Written by: Jill Morley
Date saw the show: July 28, 2007
Director: Steven Eubank Reviewed by: Deborah Ground Buckner Writer and filmmaker Jill Morley (www.jillmorley.com) provides an inside glimpse of the world of women dancers in some of the sleaziest clubs of New Jersey. True Confessions of a Go-Go Girl was published in Women Playwrights: The Best Plays of 1998 and has been performed in Manhattan, San Francisco, the Texas Fringe Festival and Los Angeles. This latest staging, at the Kansas City Fringe Festival, gives a hard and realistic look at the sex industry, “the only industry where women get paid more than men.” Jill (Ashley Otis) tells of her change from a homely tomboy in a “lifetime of Catholic school” and four years in college to “Dylan,” a pole dancer. “I was fascinated with the sleaziness—a whole nother world of women.” She introduces the audience to Edna (Vanessa Severo), willing to break the rules and “flash” customers for better tips, Nina (Bonnie Johnson), a blond dancer whose work has earned her a sugar daddy buying her a Mercedes (but she complains because it is silver and not gold), and Halley (Mandy Mook), the seen-it-all, done-it-all girl Dylan is afraid of becoming. There are some amazing performances of pole dancing, including upside-down spins, and enough “come-hithers” to keep an audience on edge, without crossing the lines as Edna did. Dylan talks tough in the beginning, bragging of the little tricks she can use to increase her tips (“I learned how to look deeper into a man's eyes and not look away.”). But there is a vulnerability to the character that begins to emerge. First, she displays a protest of bravado: “Who are you to judge me? I work here. You hang out here!” She begins to turn to scotch to bolster the nerve to go out on stage (“You have got to drink to get this job.”). She reaches a point where “what made me different from a prostitute was no longer clear.” The play takes the audience to the backstage dressing rooms (often no more than a cluttered table with a small mirror), on to the stages of smoky dives, and into the lonely homes of the women who are portrayed. This is a realistic glimpse of a world many know nothing about, a world of humor, dance, sex and heartbreak.
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Nelson Mandela turns 90!
Hyde Park in
London (England) was host to the 46664 AIDS/HIV charity event to both celebrate
the heroes birthday, and promote awareness of his charity named after the
number he was gave for his 27 year socially unjust prison sentence on Robin
Island (South Africa). July 18th welcomed the `big stars`from Will Smith (who
hosted), to attendees Oprah, and Uma (Thurman) the event had `Birthday
Bash`wrote all over it. The performers list was endless, such as Annie Lennox,
and Josh Groban who both gave delightful tributes to Mandela`s legacy.
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