6B-The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 12, 2006 the b-side, 4 Tassels, top hats and temptation CandyPants Burlesque teases, titillates Detroit By Kimberly Chou Associate Arts Editor Tootsie Pop stands with one hip cocked, smoking a cigarette in the eaves of the Furniture Factory The- ater, an inauspicious Detroit building idling at the corner of3rd Avenue and Alexandrine. It's early Tuesday eve- ning - a full dress rehearsal for the CandyPants Burlesque troupe, and Toots - clad in shiny white panties, peroxide curls piled high - has just swung the makeshift dancer's pole into the floor. "I thoughtI told you not to swing!" choreographer Christopher Leadbit- ter says. "I didn't put that much weight on it!" she retorts. Two minutes earlier, just as the pants came off, just as Tootsie Pop pressed her ample, dimpled ass against the metal, subsequently launching into her first swing, the pole gave way from its hastily bolted base. But rehearsal mishaps aren't a big deal - by this time on Tuesday night, someone has already spilled the lighter fluid from the fire-eating act. Twice. After leading a similar produc- tion called Lil' Beaux Peep in New Orleans, native Detroiter and longtime performer Kevin Lepine returns to Michigan with his new CandyPants Girls Burlesque show. Opening tomorrow night and run- ning for the next six weekends, it's an experience unlike anything Detroit has to offer, Lepine said. "Burlesque is about fun' he said. "It's about a wink and a nod and a smile." Bringing back this wink, nod and smile is his burlesque mantra, something he repeats frequently and almost all too often. It's an appropriate time to pitch such a concept to a city once know for the burlesque revues at the Lower East Side clubs like The Brass Rail and The Twenty Grand in the Para- dise Valley entertainment district. The entertainment form has experienced a recent resurgence in popularity with new burlesque productions like the Velvet Ham- mer in Los Angeles and personali- ties like Dita Von Teese. It's finally trickled eastward from conventions like San Francisco's Tease-O-Rama and the Miss Exotic World competi- tion. The mainstream American pop demographic has also been forced to take notice, with the Las Vegas- act-cum-pop-group Pussycat Dolls as the most famous factor. The bur- lesque-inspired troupe features an ever-changing cast of dancers and celebrity guests; its success has also been parlayed into an novelty music act of the same name. Aside from the strip-club chore- ography and Barbie figures of the current dolls, there are notable pres- ent-day performers who attempt a more traditional representation of the burlesque like the brassy Dirty Martini. There's a conception that burlesque revolves solely around the striptease, but traditional productions also relied heavily on variety acts. Even the dance is commonly mis- construed - the emphasis should be more on the tease, and less on what's actually revealed. "(Burlesque) is glamour - I love it," said Michiee DeVale, the Can- dyPants Girls wardrobe designer. "I think it brings the femininity back to women." The style established by past exot- ic dancers no longer exists, he said, instead replaced by the louche gratu- itousness of strippers. "Burlesque girls will bring that class back and let those ladies know it's OK to be a lady," DeVale said. The CandyPants show is very much in the vein of traditional bur- lesque: There's an opening number and corresponding finale with all five dancers, a recurring, somewhat off-putting puppet act and a number of magic tricks. In addition to Tootsie Pop's reverse-drag pole-dance, Sugar Baby opens the solo dances with a classic striptease. Most of the girls also dance burlesque outside Can- dyPants, and Sugar Baby performs outside Lepine's production as Peachfuzz Von Dutch. Lemon Drop, who resembles a more delicate Meg White, tap dances with a strategi- cally placed top hat. Bit O' Honey's performance is perhaps the most eye-catching: Almost identical to a popular Dirty Martini routine, Bit O' Honey shimmies around the stage, coquettishly popping the daffodil yellow balloons covering her body until she's in little more than star- shaped pasties at performance's end. One of the two male dancers in Sparkly Devil's feather-fan number is the show's choreographer/direc- tor Leadbitter. Since returning to Detroit after a seven-year stint with the all-male Les Ballets Trockadero 01 de Monte Carlo, Leadbitter has been comfort with their bodies (see Lemon running his own cabaret-inspired Drop with makeshift duct-tape pas- Causing a Scene Productions. ties in rehearsal, still as vampish as if The CandyPants troupe's adher- she wasn't tapdancing in girlish blue ence to traditional burlesque is ankle socks) inspires envy. refreshing, but it's the group's ambi- Lepine balks at comparing Can- tion and general good humor that's dyPants to anything else on the most notable. CandyPants is a decid- Detroit or national scene, or to cite edly low-budget affair, and its mem- specific influences. bers truly seem to take pleasure in "It's better to look at the talent you what they're doing. It's about having have and accent that - (showcase) fun - about that wink, smile and the people that they are," he said. nod, if you will. None of the dancers Especially when the people in fit the Pussycat Doll mold, but their your act don't mind showing off. 4 ALEX DZIADOSZ/Daily CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: Lemon Drop's rear view, Bit 0' Honey peeks from behind a curtain during an ensemble number, Lemon Drop about to strip off her gloves during her solo act, Bit 0' Honey lets it pop, an ensemble performance opens the show and Bit 0' Honey prepares for rehearsal with producer Kevin Lepine. 4 TH YELLOW UMBRELLATOUR Sunday, October 15, 7:30 p.m. Attention Nickel Greek Fans! Chris Thile & the How to Grow a Band Friday. October 27, 8 p.m. DAILY ARTS. BIG FANS OF THE POLE. EVEN THOUGH NO ONE DOES IT BETTER THAN DEMI. A1M[(OS ILIEE I