Lusty Lady
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- Lusty Lady is also a biweekly sex-related column by Rachel Kramer Bussel in the Village Voice.
The Lusty Lady is the name of two peep show establishments, one in downtown Seattle and one in the North Beach district of San Francisco. It was made famous by the labor activism of its San Francisco workers.
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[edit] History
The Seattle Lusty Lady was opened in the 1970s by two business associates, who soon after opened the other location in San Francisco. Originally, both Lusty Ladys showed 16mm peep show films only, but in 1983 live nude dancers were added and became the main focus of the businesses.[1] Until 2003 they were both owned by the same company; in that year the San Francisco franchise was bought by the strippers working there and began to be managed as a worker cooperative. The San Francisco branch had already entered the news in 1997 when it became the first (and as of 2005 only) unionized sex business in the U.S.[1] [2]
[edit] Operation
The two peep shows operate similarly: Several nude women dance simultaneously on a stage, separated by glass windows from the customers who each stand in their own booth, paying by the minute. No tipping is possible and the dancers are paid an hourly wage. (The top wage in 2001 in Seattle was $27 per hour.[3]) Some of the booths in the Seattle operation have one-way mirror glass; these were removed in San Francisco after worker protests. The dancers are also available for one-on-one shows in glass-separated private booths where tipping is possible. In addition, coin-operated booths showing porn videos are available.
Lusty Lady occasionally features "art days", exhibiting erotic photographs and paintings in the hallways. In February 2002, both peep shows featured a video art exhibition called "Peepshow 28", with one channel in all video booths devoted to showing a sequence of 64 short videos exploring voyeurism, exhibitionism and sexuality. [4][5]
Once a year, Lusty Lady organizes a "Play Day": the dancers walk around, explain the operation of the club to customers, and allow behind-the-scenes peeks.[6] [7]
In recruitment ads, the establishments often present themselves as hip and claim to be woman-owned.
[edit] Seattle
The Seattle Lusty Lady opened in the 1970s and moved to its present location at 1315 First Ave. ( Pike Place Market in 1985.[8] The club is well known for its frequently changing and often amusing marquee announcements.[9] The Lusty Lady is immediately across the street from the Seattle Art Museum and the marquee often comments on current exhibits or the Hammering Man statue.
) in downtown Seattle nearIn 2006, the Seattle Lusty Lady survived a threatened wrecking ball when the building's owner refused a multi-million-dollar tear-down offer from developers of a new Four Seasons Hotel next door. Employees celebrated by posting on their reader board: "We're Open, Not Clothed!"[8]
[edit] Books
The 1997 book The Lusty Lady by photographer Erika Langley (ISBN 3-931141-59-4) documents the work in the Seattle branch of Lusty Lady. It includes photos by Langley (who had worked there as a dancer since 1992) as well as essays by a number of Lusty Lady dancers, who vary considerably in their attitudes toward their customers and toward their work.[10] In 2000, some of the photos were exhibited in the Seattle Art Museum, across the street from the Lusty Lady.[11]
Elisabeth Eaves, who had stripped at the Lusty Lady in 1997, completed graduate school and returned in 2000 to write a book about stripping in general and her experiences in particular, Bare: On Women, Dancing, Sex, and Power, published in 2002 (ISBN 0-375-41233-6).[12]
[edit] Popular culture references
The first murder in the 1996 pilot of the TV series Millennium takes place in a Seattle peep show modeled on the Lusty Lady.[13]
[edit] San Francisco
The San Francisco Lusty Lady's address is located at 1033 Kearny ( North Beach.
), in the Broadway strip club district of[edit] Unionization
Several grievances led to the unionizing effort in 1997. The black feminist sociologist Siobhan Brooks who worked at the club had noticed that black dancers were discriminated against and filed a complaint. The precipitating event was the installation of one-way mirrors in a number of booths (which also exist in the Seattle branch), resulting in some customers taking photos and videos of the show. [14][15]
Among the leaders of the organizing drive was the stripper Julia Query who documented the efforts on video, resulting in the documentary Live Nude Girls Unite (2000), written and directed by Vicky Funari and Julia Query.
After a vote of the employees, the business was organized by the Exotic Dancers Union, an affiliate of Service Employees International Union, then a member of AFL-CIO, Local 790.[14][15]
[edit] Worker cooperative
After management cut hourly compensation at the San Francisco Lusty Lady in 2003, the workers struck and won, but the closure of the peep show was announced soon after. The subsequent efforts to turn the club into a worker cooperative were led by Donna Delinqua (stage name), a stripper and graduate student in English. Other cooperatives provided input, among them the worker-owned San Francisco sex-toy business Good Vibrations.[16]
After the club had been bought by the workers, the union was retained, but some changes in management were instituted. While dancers had been regularly evaluated by managers before, now a "peer review" process was established wherein dancers evaluate each other. The team leaders are elected from among the dancers for six month terms.
The club, open 24 hours a day, had a revenue of about $27,000 per week in the first half of 2006. [17]
A dispute began in the summer of 2006 when a male employee wrote a confidential email to the co-op board, complaining that hiring of too many heavy women drove customers away, thus lowering every employee's income. One member of the board posted the message on a message board, causing considerable consternation among dancers. The board member was dismissed.[18] Two of the male employees have argued that the union should be abandoned as not useful in a worker-owned cooperative.[17]
[edit] Books
Lily Burana, who stripped for a time at the San Francisco Lusty Lady, wrote about her experiences there and in other strip clubs in her 2001 book Strip City: A Stripper's Farewell Journey Across America (ISBN 0-7868-6790-6).[19] Sarah-Katherine Lewis, Elisabeth Eaves, and Carol Queen also write about their time dancing at the Lusty Lady, in their respective books Indecent: How I Make It and Fake It As a Girl for Hire (ISBN 978-1580051699), Bare: The Naked Truth About Stripping (ISBN 978-1580051217), and Real Live Nude Girl: Chronicles of a Sex-Positive Culture (ISBN 978-1573441667).
[edit] Sources
- ^ a b "A Brief History of the Lusty Lady Theater", Lusty Lady San Francisco website.
- ^ "S.F. Strip Club Ratifies Union – First in U.S." by Glen Martin, San Francisco Chronicle, April 11, 1997.
- ^ "Stripped 'Bare'" by Patti Jones, Seattle Times, October 29, 2002. Reports on the book by Elisabeth Eaves.
- ^ "Peepshow Gets an Artistic Implant", by Robin Clewley, Wired, January 21, 2002.
- ^ Peeping by Bethany Jean Clement, Seattle Weekly, February 14, 2002. Report on visiting the Peepshow 28 video art exhibition.
- ^ Merry XXXmas to All by Leah Greenblatt, Seattle Weekly, December 11, 2002
- ^ "Events", Lusty Lady San Francisco website.
- ^ a b The Ex-Mayor's Booby Prize. by Rick Anderson, Seattle Weekly, March 29, 2006
- ^ "Seattle's Irreverent Marquee is no Bust" by Robert L. Jamieson Jr., Seattle Post-Intelligencer, March 17, 2001.
- ^ Review of The Lusty Lady by E. J. Levy, Rain Taxi Review of Books #9, Spring 1998.
- ^ "Photographer/peep-show dancer takes 'alternate universe' to art museum", Associated Press, January 19, 2000
- ^ Bare: The Book (official website).
- ^ Millennium - The Complete First Season (1996), DVD, 2004. Commentary.
- ^ a b "Lusty Lady Dancers Ratify Union Contract", by David Steinberg, Comes Naturally #58, May 2, 1997.
- ^ a b "Lusty Labor" by Laurel Druley, Mother Jones, January 6, 1998. Report on the unionizing effort.
- ^ "Under Nude Management" by David Steinberg, Comes Naturally, September 16, 2003. – Report on the worker's effort to buy the San Francisco franchise, and the new management style.
- ^ a b "The Lusty Lady loses its innocence" by Sarah Phelan, San Francisco Bay Guardian, September 29, 2006
- ^ "S.F. strip club's hefty lady show sparks tempest" by Phillip Matier and Andrew Ross, San Francisco Chronicle, October 2, 2006.
- ^ Strip City, Salon.com, 9 October 2001. Review of Lily Burana's book Strip City: A Stripper's Farewell Journey Across America
[edit] External links
- Lusty Lady San Francisco – Official website.
- Live Nude Girls Unite – Official website.
- Live Nude Girls Unite at the Internet Movie Database
- Flickr photoset – Documenting the often amusing marquee announcements of the Seattle Lusty Lady.
- Miss Fyre by Michael Lane (September 15, 1998). Interview with a worker at the Seattle Lusty Lady.
- The Lusty Lady, ErikaLangley.com.
- Bare: The Book Official website for Elizabeth Eaves book.
- Interview with Elizabeth Eaves
- "The contortionist dance of a peep show worker" by Tracy Quan, Los Angeles Times Book Review, January 5, 2003. – critcal review of Elizabeth Eaves book.
- "Control Tower: Dancing at the Peep" by Mistress Matisse, The Stranger, 14 March 2002.
- "Naked Profits" by Tad Friend, The New Yorker, July 12, 2004.