Esther M. Zimmer Lederberg
Théátres Clandestins

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XXX
Clandestins
"The Styles of Eighteenth-Century Ballet",
Edmund Fairfax, Scarecrow Press, Oxford, 2003, p. 295
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For men (or women) seeking sexual gratification at the opera or ballet, issues concerning aestheics found in different forms of theatre is not an issue. Any theatre, any women (or men), just as in our own times.

"In some less progressive parts of Europe, women dancers were even constrained by law to be more moderate in their movements, even in the latter part of the eighteenth century. One such place was Barcelona, where women theatrical dancers were fined if they exposed their drawers while dancing, as the undistinguished figurante Nina Bergonza, an acquaintance of Casanova, had the misfortune to discover in 1767:" 1
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"Hardly had she arrived in Barcelona two years ago, having come from Lisbon where she left Bergonzi, her husband, when she was taken on as a figurante in the ballets thanks to her fine figure, for as for talent, she could not do a step. All she knew how to do was a turning jump called the révoltade. In doing this jump, she had the pleasure to hear herself applauded at the pit, because they saw her drawers [culottes] right up to the waist. Now you must know that there is a law in the theatres here which fines every woman dancer an écu who reveals her drawers to the public when gamboling. Nina, who knew nothing about it, did her révoltade; the spectators clapped, and she did an even finer one. At the end of the ballet, the inspector told her that at the end of the month, she would have two less écus because of her impudent gambols. She swore and cursed, but she was unable to take on the law. Do you know what she did two days later to revenge herself? She appeared without drawers and did her révoltade with the same force, which caused a tumult of merriment in the pit, the likes of which had never been seen before in Barcelona. Count Ricla, who was in his box on the main floor, on the very stage, had seen everything better than anyone else and seized by horror and admiration at the same time, sent off the inspector first to find out if an exemplary punishment other than fines ought to be meted out to this daring woman resistant to the law."
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"'While we wait,' he said to him, 'have her come before me.'
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"Then Nina made her appearance in the viceroy's box with an affronted air and asked him what he wanted with her."
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"'You are an impudent woman who has shown a lack of respect for the public and its laws and who deserves severe punishment.'"
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"'What did I do?'"
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"'The same jump that you did two days ago.'"
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"'That's right, but I have not broken your Catalan law, for nobody can say that they saw my drawers. To be sure that no one would see them, I didn't wear them. What more can you do on behalf of your damned law, which has already cost me two écus without my knowing it. Answer me that!'"

1 Fairfax, Edmund; "The Styles of Eighteenth-Century Ballet", Scarecrow Press, Maryland, 2003, pp. 236-237

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