LEAGUE OF EXOTIQUE DANCERS: Canadian Doc's Broadcast Premiere This February

Rama Rau's documentary League of Exotique Dancers will have its world broadcast premiere on CBC's Documentary Channel during its free preview month in February. We have a trailer for you to watch below as well as a collection of pictures of the ladies featured in Rau's doc. 
 
Back when the G-string was the point-of-no-return, live sexual entertainment was a formalized affair, with choreography, costumes and women with larger-than-life personalities and attributes.
 
They were burlesque queens, with stage-names that could be out of a James Bond movie, like Lovey Goldmine, Kitten Natividad and Holiday O’Hara. And as we discover in Rama Rau’s up-close-and-personal documentary League of Exotique Dancers, they were proud performers who chose a life more colourful and dared anyone to tell them no.
 
Airing during CBC documentary Channel’s Freeview period, Sunday night, February 19 at 9:00pm ET and 10:00pm PT.
 
The award-winning documentarian uses the Burlesque Hall Of Fame weekend in Las Vegas as a backdrop for the stories of a group of women who ruled Burlesque in their day (the ‘50s, ‘60s and ‘70s). There she discovers a collection of seasoned life-veterans who have not forgotten their moves or lost their attitude, though many had not performed in 30 or more years.
 
Some of them, like Natividad, segued into other areas of pop culture (in her case, as a leading lady of “sexploitation” filmmaker Russ Meyer), others charmed their way into other spotlights (sexy septuagenarian Marinka coyly drops names of her famous lovers), and others slid quietly into some form of “normal” life.
 
What they all have in common is a life of amazing anecdotes and experiences and joys and tragedy. The latter, never sentimentalized, includes race-barrier pioneer Toni Elling’s struggles with racism, Canadian burlesque queen Judith Stein’s court battle against frat-boys who’d assaulted her, and the brazenly-profane/hearse-driving Camille 2000’s experience with a husband who gambled away all her money.
 
“Filming League of Exotique Dancers is one of the most exciting experiences I've had in my directing career,” Rau says. “I knew I wanted to capture the glamour of the lives of the Legends, the costumes, the grandeur, the acts. But I also wanted them to be human, with their weaknesses and foibles. They are some of the strongest and most interesting women I've met and most have battled with their own private demons.
 
“It’s a film with many layers, about the glitter, the pasties, the broad sexuality but also about their style, their humour and most of all, the steel under the silks.”
 
League of Exotique Dancers was the opening night film of Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival 2016. The film won Best Canadian Feature at Northwestfest, and was part of Sunnyside of the Doc’s Spotlight on Canada, in 2016.
 
Fair warning, the trailer features the documentary's subjects at the height of their burlesque careers. Perhaps you should wait for a private moment to watch it. 
 
Likewise, while we were given a bevy of images of the women when they were at the height of their burlesque careers but we feel they are just as beautiful and powerful now. You will not find any images of them when they 'were in their prime' unless you go to the official site
 
 
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