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- LIVING, Page 103They're Puttin' On the Vogue
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- For the hip, a campy dance craze with fashion-model poses
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- Don't you love it? At Tracks, a trendy New York City
- nightclub, the crowd gathers around the dance floor to watch a
- group called the House of Extravaganza do its stuff. The
- dancers, dressed in outrageous outfits, wave their hands
- languorously in time with the music, suck in their cheeks, stare
- icily into space and strut as if they were high-fashion models
- on the runways. Forget break dancing. So long to hiphop. At the
- hottest clubs in Manhattan, on MTV and at Paris fashion shows,
- the ultra-hip are into vogueing.
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- Named after Vogue magazine, the underground craze now seems
- posed -- er, poised -- to break into the mainstream for its 15
- minutes of fame. Fashion designer Thierry Mugler imported two
- voguers from New York to camp it up on the runway at his recent
- Paris show, and teens are getting glimpses of vogueing in a
- music video playing on MTV, singer Taylor Dayne's Tell It to My
- Heart. The craze has already spread to Chicago. Predicts New
- York City video producer David Bronstein: "I see a lot of
- choreographers who could be influenced. I see a big crossover
- there for stage, for TV, for film."
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- Even so, the kids will probably not be doing it at the prom
- this year. Vogueing is an attitudinal affectation that mixes
- model-like poses with the athleticism of break dancing and the
- wry sophistication of gay humor. Until now it has been performed
- mostly by male transvestites, although hip straights make
- appreciative audiences in the clubs. Some are joining in.
- Danielle Leyshon, a waitress who vogues at the Smart Bar in
- Chicago, says enthusiastically that the dance can easily slip
- into "a battle of who looks more hip."
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- Vogueing began in the 1960s in Harlem, where transvestites
- parodied Seventh Avenue by calling their social clubs houses
- and holding annual balls that featured the dance style. Voguers
- from clubs like the House of Dupree practiced their steps in
- downtown discos, spreading the craze. Myra Christopher, a
- salesclerk in designer Patricia Field's New York City boutique,
- helped vogueing flourish after she went to a ball in the winter
- of 1987. Says she: "Here were these kids getting prizes and
- trophies for things they get made fun of for in the real world."
- She persuaded her boss to start a vogueing group called the
- House of Field.
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- Vogueing pranced a step or two nearer the mainstream last
- week. The houses of Extravaganza and Magnifique, among others,
- strutted their stuff at the venerable Roseland Ballroom for a
- show sponsored by the Design Industries Foundation for AIDS.
- Among the crowd present: the Talking Heads' David Byrne, actress
- Gwen Verdon and real fashion model Iman. Said the evening's
- master of ceremonies, David Ian Extravaganza: "I never thought
- I'd see the day when we'd be doing this downtown." Well, no;
- but, then again, don't dance off to California either, David.
- Vogueing has not yet arrived on the West Coast. Says a disk
- jockey at 2nd Coming, one of Los Angeles' hottest clubs: "L.A.'s
- too cool to vogue." Sure.
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