Not your regular Sunday school

The Ottawa Burlesque Festival sponsors a day of workshops for performers


Sunday school: when all the young people come together in fellowship to learn how to design skimpy costumes, twirl tassels on their nipples and earn cash shaking their butts in public. That’s Sunday school, right? Well, it is now.

The Ottawa Burlesque Festival is organizing and subsidizing a day of workshops — the $5 fee per workshop goes directly to the space rental — called Burlesque Sunday School. It’s a way of giving back to, and strengthening, Ottawa’s burlesque community.

“Ottawa is between Toronto and Montreal, and you’d think we’d be on the same level, but Ottawa, despite having had burlesque for about nine years, is still a little behind,” says Helvetica Bold, who is coordinating the event. “A big part of the point of this event is to learn from each other and develop more community-minded behaviours so that we can offer Ottawa a better form of burlesque entertainment.”

Geared for both new and established performers, the six workshops cover topics ranging from costume design to business acumen to improv comedy (it helps to be able to make a few jokes to keep the audience on board and loving you even if something goes wrong with the act).

The day concludes with the Producer’s Panel, where some well-known Ottawa burlesque producers — Helvetica Bold, Jolie Stripes, Jody Haucke, Bella Barecatt and Kamie Lyann, with Rhapsody Blue as the moderator — talk about their experiences and “try to enlighten performers about how things are run, how to better contribute, and how to get more out of performing in Ottawa.”

The Ottawa Burlesque Festival’s 2014 debut was a success, Helvetica Bold says. “It was amazing. Friday sold out. Sunday sold out. Saturday’s portion was in a 900-person theatre, so it didn’t sell out, but we had 450 or 500 people there. It got amazing reviews.”

If Burlesque Sunday School is popular enough, The Ottawa Burlesque Festival may make a day of workshops a quarterly event, and the resultant more and better burlesquers in the city should help ensure the success of future festivals.

God’s day will never be the same.

Burlesque Sunday School is Sunday, March 22, 11am, at PTS, 331 Cooper St. ptsottawa.org

Jeremy Willard is a Toronto-based freelance writer and editor. He's written for Fab Magazine, Daily Xtra and the Torontoist. He generally writes about the arts, local news and queer history (in History Boys, the Daily Xtra column that he shares with Michael Lyons).

Read More About:
Love & Sex, Culture, News, Arts, Ottawa, Nightlife

Keep Reading

Mya Foxx with an up arrow behind her; PM with a down arrow behind her

‘Canada’s Drag Race’ Season 6, Episode 3 power ranking: Big Sister

Social strategy comes into play in a big way—but does it pay off?
Icesis Couture and Pythia behind podiums

‘Canada’s Drag Race’ Season 6, Episode 3 recap: Pick your drag poison

Season 6’s top 11 queens get to choose their own adventure: Snatch Game or design challenge?
The cover of Casanova 20; Davey Davis

Davey Davis’s new novel tenderly contends with the COVID-19 pandemic

“Casanova 20” follows the chasms—and—connections between generations of queer people
Two young men, one with dark hair and one with light hair, smile at each other. The men are shirtless and in dark bedding.

‘Heated Rivalry’ is the steamy hockey romance we deserve

The queer Canadian hockey drama packs heart and heat, setting it apart from other MLM adaptations