{"id":2520,"date":"2011-03-31T15:49:43","date_gmt":"2011-03-31T22:49:43","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/?p=2520"},"modified":"2011-03-31T16:17:16","modified_gmt":"2011-03-31T23:17:16","slug":"rebaba-on-the-road-greece","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/2011\/03\/31\/rebaba-on-the-road-greece\/","title":{"rendered":"On the Road"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"topphoto\">\n<h6 align=\"center\"><img decoding=\"async\" loading=\"lazy\" src=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/art53\/graphics53\/rebaba\/stageshootboy.jpg\" alt=\"Stage shoot with boy\" width=\"300\" height=\"460\" \/>This photo was taken during a photo shoot on the  stage of Le Beyrouth, by our &quot;in\u00adhouse&quot; photographer, who also became  my good friend, Freddie. I had Freddie take this series of photos after I had  accepted my first contract with my new agent. She needed current photos to send to my  prospective employers. The owner of the Beyrouth allowed us to use their stage  one afternoon to take these photos. The young man was Freddie&#8217;s assistant who  jumped up and joined me for an impromptu dance! <br \/>\n<\/h6>\n<\/div>\n<h2>Queen of Denial, Part IV<\/h2>\n<h3>by <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/aboutuspages\/RitaRebaba.htm\"><strong>Rebaba<\/strong><\/a><br \/>\n<span class=\"footnotes\">posted March 31, 2011<\/span><\/h3>\n<p>The owner of the newest supper club\/cabaret in Athens\u2019  Constitution Square looked like \u201cthe Godfather\u201d or Marlon Brando in the  Godfather film!\u00a0 Very grim-faced as if he  were cut of stone and his face would crack if he dared change his expression! I  was rushed through customs at the Athens airport and driven into town in a huge  Mercedes sedan making me feel like a star arriving for an engagement at some  swanky supper club! <\/p>\n<p class=\"highlight\">That night, I would find out that my arrival and subsequent  feelings of having \u201cmade it to the top\u201d couldn\u2019t have been farther from the  truth!<\/p>\n<p>One night, after work at <span class=\"company\">Le Beyrouth<\/span>, a genuine \u201cswanky\u201d  supper club in Paris, France, (where I had been performing for the last four  months), a woman approached me as I was leaving and gave me her business card.  We met the next day and she thrilled me with tales of traveling around the  world, dancing on the <em>cr\u00e8me de la cr\u00e8me<\/em> of stages while performing on  the African and Middle Eastern Cabaret circuits.\u00a0 She was a retired entertainer who along with  her husband owned a small theatrical agency in Paris, devoted to cabaret  entertainers. She and her husband became my first theatrical agents.\u00a0 <\/p>\n<p>The year was 1980, and I was then performing at one  of the top supper clubs in Paris for Middle Eastern entertainment, \u201cLe Beyrouth\u201d.\u00a0 However, I was far from the only Belly dancer  in Paris, and after being the featured dancer at Le Beyrouth there were a  limited number of venues to move to in Paris (as dancing at Le Beyrouth was, in  fact, \u201cmaking it to the top\u201d in Europe at this time). Therefore, the idea of  traveling was sounding like the very thing I needed to keep myself a commodity  in this very competitive business.<\/p>\n<p class=\"highlight\"> I decided to accept my agent\u2019s first contract  to dance seven nights a week in Athens, Greece: one show a night, all  accommodations paid, a food stipend, and round-trip airfare to and from Paris  along with a nightly salary that was more than I had earned to date.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0 The venue was a brand-new nightclub in the  so-called \u201cupscale nightclub district\u201d of Athens (as compared to the \u201ctouristic\u201d  Plaka district), Constitution Square. I was going to be performing for the  upper crust of Athens society, or so I was told.\u00a0 There would be no backpacking tourists for  me, only well-heeled Athenians who could afford to go to the restaurants and  nightclubs in Constitution Square!\u00a0 It  would be nothing but the best for a veteran dancer like myself who had been the  featured Belly Dancer at Le Beyrouth in Paris!\u00a0  While my agent did her job of successfully filling my (slightly bloated)  head with all these silly notions of stardom, little did I know that my worst  performance nightmare was about to come true\u2026<\/p>\n<p>I was escorted to my very own furnished apartment,  which was walking distance to the restaurant\/nightclub.\u00a0 The owner said he would swing by and pick me  up my first night since I didn\u2019t know the area, and I was the \u201cStar\u201d of his new  show!\u00a0 Boy! I was feeling as if\u00a0 I were in a dream, with this darkly suited-up  man, looking every inch like a mafia boss, telling me I was his \u201cStar\u201d  dancer!\u00a0 He said all the other dancers  were so excited that a \u201creal artist\u201d from Paris was joining the show.\u00a0 <\/p>\n<p class=\"highlight\">Now I should have gotten a clue when he said \u201call\u201d  and \u201creal\u201d. (Like, what were they?) Nevertheless, my head kept swelling with  pictures of me, dancing in front of the huge Bouzouki Band that he had hired to  play just for my show.<\/p>\n<p>Evening couldn\u2019t come soon enough, and I was ready,  dressed to the nines with my costume for the evening carefully packed and ready  to go.\u00a0 When we pulled up to the front  door of what looked more like an upscale Chinese Restaurant than an exciting  new evening venue, I still held my hopes high, looking at the large picture of myself  lit-up in the window at the entrance.\u00a0 I  was escorted in through the front doors; hmm, no stage door! Oh, well! I had  worked plenty of places without stage doors or back doors for that matter. We  continued on to my private dressing room through the kitchen, and into a  converted liquor closet!\u00a0 Oh, my God! Was  I back at <span class=\"company\">Khayam<\/span>\u2019s or <span class=\"company\">Ali Baba<\/span>\u2019s in Hollywood?\u00a0  This was the first of many details leading up to the show that I would  remember for many years as the worst performance I had ever done, and it wasn\u2019t  because of my dancing I can assure you!<\/p>\n<p class=\"highlight\">I started getting nervous when my new boss came in  and asked me to join a party of his \u201cbest\u201d customers for champagne to celebrate  my opening night.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0 Now, I should  interject that there was a \u201cNo, fraternizing, no B-Girl\u201d clause in my contract,  meaning no sitting with customers, and especially no sitting with customers to  sell them drinks; however, to this Greek gentleman, I was his employee and  expected to do him this one time \u201cfavor\u201d because he hoped the party of wealthy \u201cbusiness  men\u201d would become regular customers.\u00a0  When I refused, telling him as politely as I could that I didn\u2019t sit  with customers, and that he knew there was a clause to this affect in my  contract, and that if I was the \u201cstar\u201d that he kept telling me I was, it  certainly wouldn\u2019t look right for me to join the audience, especially before  opening show!\u00a0 Needless to say, he looked  me dead in the eyes and told me that I should do him this \u201cvery small favor\u201d as  he had just spent more money bringing me from Paris than he paid all the other dancers  put together!\u00a0 Warning signs lit up in  front of my eyes, but to tell the truth, he rather scared me, and at this point  in my 26 years, I hadn\u2019t had a similar encounter to call upon for aid.\u00a0 So, I relented and said, \u201cOnly this once, as  a special favor to you\u201d!\u00a0 He made a big  deal about bringing me to the table of more mafia-looking guys, making big hand  flourishes and talking a million miles an hour in Greek. I was scooted forcibly  into the middle of the booth where they were all sitting.\u00a0 As I remember it, they were all very polite  and didn\u2019t speak a word of English between them&#8211;apart from \u201chello\u201d, the usual \u201cpretty  lady\u201d, and \u201cAmerican\u201d.\u00a0 At this point, I  noticed there wasn\u2019t an actual raised stage, but instead, there was a space  left at the end of the bar where I saw a couple of instrument stands and no  musicians.\u00a0 Oh no, another bad sign! Oh  well, I had worked in restaurants back home without stages where you had to  dance around tables and\/or there was an open area left for the dancer to  perform in in front of the musicians.\u00a0  Once again I sighed at the thought of the nightclubs I had been working  in since coming back to Paris to dance. They were all first-class, and they all  had stages!\u00a0 I kept making excuses to  myself,\u00a0 such as: \u201cThink of how much  money you are making\u201d, and \u201cyou are in Greece, for goodness sake\u201d, and \u201cwho  cares about a little thing like a stage?\u201d While I was having this internal  conversation with myself, a waiter came with the champagne buckets and  flamboyantly opened the champagne which didn\u2019t pop.\u00a0 Hmm, another warning sign went off in my  head&#8230;It couldn\u2019t be flat; \u201cthe waiter must be so adept at opening champagne,  and held the napkin just so that I couldn\u2019t hear it pop, right\u201d?\u00a0 Wrong! It didn\u2019t pop because it wasn\u2019t  champagne!\u00a0 What came out of that bottle  was some kind of mixture of 7-up and coca cola, and even crystal champagne  classes couldn\u2019t disguise the fact that there wasn\u2019t one drop of even the  cheapest wine in the yellowish colored liquid that was poured into crystal champagne  glasses, and served with all the dignity of the real thing!\u00a0 \u201cOkay; it\u2019s just as well,\u201d I told myself. I  didn\u2019t want to drink before my show anyway, but bad went to worse very quickly\u2026<\/p>\n<table width=\"300\" border=\"0\" align=\"left\" cellpadding=\"10\" cellspacing=\"0\">\n<tr>\n<td>\n<h6 align=\"center\"><img decoding=\"async\" loading=\"lazy\" src=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/art53\/graphics53\/rebaba\/stageshoot.jpg\" alt=\"stage shoot\" width=\"303\" height=\"446\" \/><\/h6>\n<h6 align=\"center\">The two photos (including the one at top of the page) were taken during a photo shoot on the  stage of Le Beyrouth, by our &quot;in\u00adhouse&quot; photographer, who also became  my good friend, Freddie. I had Freddie take this series of photos after I had  accepted my first contract with my new agent. She needed current photos to send to my  prospective employers. The owner of the Beyrouth allowed us to use their stage  one afternoon to take these photos.<\/h6>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/table>\n<p>At the same time, I was coming to terms with the fact  that the champagne wasn\u2019t champagne although hundreds of Drachmas had passed  hands for the bottle of soda pop, I started taking a better look around the  nicely appointed room.\u00a0 There seemed to  be an awful lot of Asian women for a Greek Nightclub, or any nightclub that  would feature a Belly Dancer.\u00a0 Now, I  should say at this point that while working in Paris and other European venues,  I had become used to the amount of \u201cladies of evening\u201d in all the fanciest of  nightclubs, discos and restaurants where I had performed as well as others I  had frequented as a guest. This was true all over Europe, but it was most  evident in Paris where prostitution is legal and there are multitudes of  beautiful women plying their trade amongst the rich Middle Eastern tourists and  locals.\u00a0 Keeping this in mind, to see a  salon full of beautiful Asian women was still very unusual, and I quickly  started to realize that I wasn\u2019t in your normal European supper club or, at  least, nothing like those I had been to up until this point in time. My agent  had told me that the show was a \u201cvariety show\u201d with international acts, and I  would be representing the \u201clocal color\u201d.\u00a0  Even though I am not Greek, I was still going to be the \u201chouse Belly  Dancer\u201d in this up-scale Athenian nightclub.\u00a0 <\/p>\n<p class=\"highlight\">Once the show started (I was to be the finale), I  just about had a heart attack at 26 years of age!\u00a0 International acts, my eye! Strippers,  Strippers and more Strippers, that\u2019s all I really remember: <strong><em>strip-pers<\/em><\/strong>!\u00a0<\/p>\n<p> There were strippers dressed as cowgirls,  strippers dressed as French maids, strippers dressed as Hawaiian dancers,  strippers with feathers, strippers without feathers; all were dancing and  lip-sinking their way through a crazy <em>m\u00e9lange<\/em> of musicals from every end  of the planet.\u00a0 At some point in my  mounting hysteria, I came to terms with the fact that <strong>I was the finale of  the show and I was going on-stage after 9 strippers!\u201d<\/strong>\u00a0 (Me, Rebaba, Rita Schwartz, a born and bred  San Franciscan, and liberated woman of the \u201cLove Generation\u201d!)\u00a0 It wasn\u2019t bad enough that I had grown up  having to defend my career choice to family and friends, and almost every male  I had ever encountered, and constantly explain that Belly dancing was a  legitimate art form, etc. (You know the drill if you are over 40 and have been  Belly dancing for 20 years or more), and \u201cnot the hootchie-cootchy dance\u201d that  most Americans believed Belly dance was in the \u201860s and \u201870s.\u00a0 Here I was: the last dancer in a never-ending  show of tits and ass.\u00a0 Seriously folks, I  thought I was going to faint!<\/p>\n<p class=\"highlight\">Once the show started, I went into some kind of  shock. I managed to get up and find the Mafia boss owner and asked him if I  could have a word.\u00a0 He took me into his  office and as I tried my best to make sentences that he could understand, I  broke down sobbing, body wrenching tears, hysterical, and unable to continue  talking.<\/p>\n<p> He summoned one of the  waitresses who spoke English and Greek as he was horrified and thought I was  sick or something.\u00a0 When he finally  understood that I was telling him I couldn\u2019t possibly go on after nine  strippers, what followed was nothing less than an explosion of Greek yelling,  and even though I didn\u2019t speak a word of Greek, I knew he was furious to the  point of violence!\u00a0 He backed me (as well  as the poor waitress) into a corner and finally spit out&#8211;in broken English&#8211; \u201cYou  dancing or you fired and in street\u201d!\u00a0 I  was shaking and started crying all over again as he stormed out of the  office.\u00a0 The waitress was really nice to  me, even though I could tell that she thought I was being a big baby, but my  tears and anguish had been real enough for her to recognize the fact that I was  a fish totally out of water!\u00a0 <\/p>\n<p>I was too scared of him at that point to do anything  else and terrified that he would literally throw me out on the street. So, I  pulled myself back together and somehow managed to change into my costume and  actually do the show.\u00a0 While dancing in a  kind of dream state, I kept having to remind myself to look at the audience and  smile, keep smiling, or I would start crying again.\u00a0 I was totally convinced that the audience  (made up of well dressed men and beautifully dressed women. Women that I had  believed were the other dancers, and now knew were professional \u201cB-Girls\u201d and  prostitutes) would at any minute now start shouting for me to \u201cTake it off!\u201d.\u00a0 To my real surprise, the audience was very  appreciative and seemed to really enjoy my show. (I guessed they must have had  their fill of tits and ass by the time I went on and were happy to watch  something else.)\u00a0 <\/p>\n<p>I remember vaguely the owner driving me home that  night and asking something like \u201cOkay?\u201d He\u00a0  thought obviously that because I did my show that I was going to be  okay!\u00a0 That couldn\u2019t have been further  from the way I was feeling, more like I had been sent into white slavery!\u00a0 As soon as I got back to the apartment I  called my agent, and fortunately she answered almost immediately.\u00a0 I started screaming when she answered, and  honestly, I don\u2019t remember what I said exactly, but, at the end of our  conversation, she promised me she would be on the first plane to Athens the  following day.\u00a0 I told her point-blank  that I wasn\u2019t going on again and that I would pay the owner back the airfare  and vacate his apartment and check myself into a hotel first thing the next  morning.\u00a0 I was determined never to have  to repeat such a shameful performance ever again! Since I wasn\u2019t going on  again, I wanted to hide from my soon-to-be \u201cformer\u201d employer. The biggest shock  to me was that she had booked me, a dancer and artist whom she had \u201cdiscovered\u201d  working in the best nightclub in Paris, into a Strip Club (albeit a fancy Strip  Club) that was paying me a good deal of money but a Strip Club nonetheless!<\/p>\n<p class=\"highlight\">Suffice it to say that she kept her word and arrived  the following afternoon and came directly to my hotel room. \u00a0I really was a baby lost in the woods, and  once again, hysterically crying when I met her at the door. Upon seeing me, she  finally understood how devastated and humiliated I was.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0 According to her, the owner had deceived her  in that he never once mentioned the fact that <strong><em>all<\/em><\/strong> the other acts  were strippers. However, she had sent me there without having ever stepped foot  in the place because of the high sum the man was willing to pay me, and in  turn, pay her a very good commission. She had to negotiate with an extremely  pissed off club owner, and in the end, she was able to talk him into not \u201cBlack-Balling\u201d  me from performing in Greece ever again or suing me for lost revenue, which he  had the legal right to do, as I was breaking a signed legally binding 2-month  contract.<\/p>\n<p>She won my trust back by fixing the situation so that  I didn\u2019t lose too much money, and I was able to walk away without losing my  right to perform in Greece again.\u00a0  However, the fact that I had given up my coveted position in Paris to go  on the road, and the idea that I didn\u2019t have that job or any other job to which  I could return in Paris was the biggest loss for me.\u00a0 Considering all that could have happened to  me, I really was lucky and fortune showed up in the form of a two-week engagement  that my agent was able to book in one of the Bouzouki Clubs (no strippers&#8211;just  Greeks, Greek music and dance) that surround Constitution Square while she  worked out the details of my next contract dancing in Zimbabwe, Africa.<\/p>\n<p>In retrospect, it was a wonderful life lesson for me  because I experienced the worst first, or at least, the worst scenario I could  not have imagined at that point in my short life, and showed me that I could  survive it&#8230;\u00a0 I performed after nine  strippers and still managed to hold my head up and dance with dignity (a  dignity that I wasn\u2019t feeling at all believe you me!).\u00a0 I learned that I could stand up for my rights  and make certain professional demands that, prior to this experience, I would  have never even considered.\u00a0 All in all,  for me, this experience was a kind of \u201ccoming of age\u201d as a dancer and laid the  path for the many wonderful, scary, and incredible experiences I was going to  have over the next few years while on the road, dancing!<\/p>\n<p><em>To be continued\u2026<\/em><\/p>\n<table width=\"520\" border=\"0\" align=\"center\" cellpadding=\"0\" cellspacing=\"0\">\n<tr>\n<td width=\"520\">\n<h6 align=\"center\">Unfortunately, due  to the circumstances of my trip to Athens, Greece, I don&#8217;t have any dance  photos. However, these photos represent my preparation to go there and what I  walked away from when I committed to my first contract.<br \/>\nAfter Greece, things turned to my  benefit and the stories that follow in my next chapters will chronicle some of the best years of my  dance career and my life. <img decoding=\"async\" loading=\"lazy\" src=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/art53\/graphics53\/rebaba\/LeBeyrouth.jpg\" alt=\"Arabscopinside\" width=\"500\" height=\"402\" \/><\/h6>\n<h6 align=\"center\">The front page of the &quot;Arabscop&quot; which is a  tourist guide published each month (or was, though I&#8217;m sure there is still  something like this guide still being printed for tourists). This guide was  published the third month I was in Paris in the beginning of 1981, January to  be exact. At this time I was performing nightly at Le Beyrouth, located just  off the Champs E&#8217;Lysee, in Paris, France. The opening two pages of the Arabscop, with the  advertisement for Le Beyrouth, featuring the famous singer and composer Wadia  Safi, along with the acts pictured including me. <\/h6>\n<h6 align=\"center\"><img decoding=\"async\" loading=\"lazy\" src=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/art53\/graphics53\/rebaba\/nov80.jpg\" alt=\"Nov 1980\" width=\"488\" height=\"376\" \/><\/h6>\n<h6 align=\"center\">November  1980, at Le Palmyr, a smaller restaurant also located off the Champs E&#8217;Lysee on  the same street as Le Beyrouth, and owned by the same man. I started working in  Le Palmyr in November 1980, and then switched to Le Beyrouth in January of 1981.   I actually followed <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/aboutuspages\/YasmineSerpentine.htm\">Yasmin<\/a>, who left to go study in Cairo. <\/h6>\n<h6 align=\"center\"><img decoding=\"async\" loading=\"lazy\" src=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/art53\/graphics53\/rebaba\/teadance.jpg\" alt=\"Tea Dance\" width=\"300\" height=\"391\" \/><\/h6>\n<h6 align=\"center\">Taken at a  weekly afternoon &quot;Tea Dance&quot; that I performed at fairly regularly  during my stay in Paris. I benefited from and played up my Jewish heritage when  I met and started working with the Meimoun family orchestra. Maurice Me.imoun &amp; his family were Tunisian Jews who performed with his  orchestra all over France, Tunisia, and Israel. Sephardic Jews most always have  music and dancing at their parties, communions, wedding receptions, etc., just  as commonly as people of Middle Eastern and North African heritage of the  Islamic faith. The Meimoun family became my own family away from home and I&#8217;ve  cherished their friendship for many years. <\/h6>\n<h6 align=\"center\"><img decoding=\"async\" loading=\"lazy\" src=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/art53\/graphics53\/rebaba\/callingcard.jpg\" alt=\"calling card\" width=\"300\" height=\"496\" \/><\/h6>\n<h6 align=\"center\">The final picture is the photo that my agent selected  to use as my &quot;calling card&quot; photo to send out along with my signed  contracts to use for advertising my arrival and performance schedule. <\/h6>\n<h6 align=\"center\">&nbsp;<\/h6>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/table>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/graphics\/acommentbox.jpg\" alt=\"use the comment box\" align=\"right\" \/><\/p>\n<div class=\"ready4more\">\n<p>Have a comment? Use or comment section at the bottom of this page or <a href=\"mailto:editor@gildedserpent.com\">Send us a letter!<\/a> <br \/>\nCheck the &quot;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/let2ed.htm\">Letters to the Editor<\/a>&quot; for other possible viewpoints!<\/p>\n<p>Ready for more?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p><!--end ready4more --><\/p>\n<div class=\"articlelist\">\n<ul>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">10-1-08<\/span> <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/art45\/RebabaRemembersNB.htm\">North Beach Memories- Casbah Cabaret, Part I Circa 1973<\/a><span class=\"articleauthor\"> by Rebaba<\/span><br \/>\nWe performed what I have dubbed &#8220;conveyer belt dancing&#8221;, that is three dancers doing three shows each, starting promptly at 8:30 p.m. without stopping until 2:00 a.m., whether we had an audience or not.<\/li>\n<li><strong>5-6-10 <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/2010\/05\/06\/rebaba-queen-of-denial\/\">Queen of Denial, A Tale about Life and Belly Dancing, Part 1: The Safety of the Stage<\/a> by Rebaba or Rita Alderucci<\/strong><br \/>\nFor many years, the most secure and safe place for me was on stage&ndash;dancing and acting.  Performing gave me the security and love for which I yearned  (both with and without drugs). <\/li>\n<li><strong>7-15-10<a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/2010\/07\/15\/rebaba-queen-denial-paris\/\"> Queen of Denial, Chapter 2: Dancing in the &ldquo;City of Lights&rdquo;<\/a> by Rebaba<\/strong><br \/>\nI&rsquo;m breathing very hard, and can tell I&rsquo;m very, very shiny and red, even under the stage lights, but I think he likes me. And he is completely dumbfounded that an &ldquo;American&rdquo; girl is auditioning for a job as a &ldquo;Danseuse Oriental!&rdquo; I know I&rsquo;m way too fat, but thank God I&rsquo;m a belly dancer, and apparently a novelty, because I couldn&rsquo;t get away with this in any other dance form! Fortunately, I&rsquo;m only 19 years old and my excess flesh is young, tan and firm!&rdquo;<\/li>\n<li><strong>10-26-10 <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/2010\/10\/26\/rebaba-queen-denial-3-hollywood\/\">Queen of Denial, Chapter 3: Hooray for Hollywood!<\/a> by Rebaba<\/strong><br \/>\nAs for Khayam\u2019s, it was the extremely popular nightclub and restaurant that was known for having the best live music show in town, with good dancers, good food; a constant supply of good drugs, and in particular the more and more fashionable cocaine.<\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">2-5-02<\/span> <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/articles16\/strippersbyshira.htm\">Are Strippers Our Enemies?<\/a><br \/>\nMany belly dancers are openly hostile toward strippers<\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">9-8-05<\/span> <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/art32\/PFBurlesqueBD.htm\">Belly Dance, Burlesque and Beyond: Confessions of a Post Modern Showgirl<\/a> <span class=\"articleauthor\">by Princess\tFarhana (Pleasant Gehman) <\/span><br \/>\n&#8220;BUT WAIT!!!&#8221; I can hear you screaming, &#8220; BURLESQUE\tIS STRIPPING&#8221;<\/li>\n<li><strong>3-25-11 <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/2011\/03\/25\/leyla-lanty-term-cabaret-nightclub\/#axzz1HeoGFewJ\">Is &quot;Cabaret&quot; a Dirty Word? Using the Terms Cabaret vs. Night Club<\/a> by Leyla Lanty<\/strong><br \/>\nSo, is \u201ccabaret\u201d a dirty word?  It depends on whose definition you want to use!  In Arabic, the name \u201ccabaret\u201d is interpreted differently from what it is in English, leading to the confusion about nightclubs and cabarets.  Here in the U.S., we think of a cabaret as a synonym for nightclub. <\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">7-5-04<\/span> <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/articles27\/pipercabaret.htm\">Cabaret: Is it a dirty word?<\/a><span class=\"articleauthor\"> by Piper Reid Hunt, PhD<\/span><br \/>\nAmerican Cabaret, the original fusion belly dance, is accessible and fun for everyone, regardless of one&#8217;s dance education. <\/li>\n<li><strong>3-30-11 <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/2011\/03\/30\/joweh-guatemala-trip-part2\/\">Joweh\u2019s \u201cCall to Dance\u201d in Guatemala, Part 2 of Dream Trip to Guatemala<\/a> by Chloe<\/strong><br \/>\nWaiting in the wings of the nearly completely darkened stage, holding fire-colored fan-veils aloft, listening to the first strains of Egyptian orchestral music, I couldn\u2019t help thinking that this experience was both familiar and foreign, in the literal and figurative sense. <\/li>\n<li><strong>3-29-11 <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/2011\/03\/29\/sausan-grapeleaf-restaruant\/#axzz1I0flXC3E\">The Magic of &quot;The Grapleaf&quot;, 1976-1997<\/a> by Sausan<\/strong><br \/>\nBack in the early \u201880s when I was performing at the Bagdad Cabaret on Broadway, a customer strolled into the Northbeach nightclub and told me about a little known restaurant<\/li>\n<li><strong>3-24-11 A <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/2011\/03\/24\/sadiyya-jillina-weeklong-intensive\/\">Transformational Week, A Fan\u2019s View of Jillina\u2019s Weeklong Intensive Report<\/a> by Sa\u2019diyya of Texas<\/strong><br \/>\nI think that\u2019s another benefit of having scholarships in the world of Bellydance because it gives dancers another goal to work towards: \u201cWhat do I have to do to rise to the occasion, to receive this other kind of award?\u201d <\/li>\n<li><strong>3-17-11 <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/2011\/03\/17\/jasmine-samar-women-india-belly-dance\/\">Empowering Women in India through Belly Dance<\/a> by Jasmine June and Samar<\/strong><br \/>\nThe company works with less fortunate and troubled families and women, and pays the women a decent sum for their crafts as a way of helping them out.<\/li>\n<\/ul><\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>This photo was taken during a photo shoot on the stage of Le Beyrouth, by our &quot;in\u00adhouse&quot; photographer, who also became my good friend, Freddie. I had Freddie take this series of photos after I had accepted my first contract with my new agent. She needed current photos to send to my prospective employers. The [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":7,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[1],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2520"}],"collection":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/7"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2520"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2520\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2520"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2520"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2520"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}