Getting fit with bumps
& grinds
Dorene
Internicola checks out new-age fitness classes where
young women are stripteasing, pole-dancing and stretching
sultrily
Vaudeville
may be dead, but burlesque is alive and well at the gym.
Young women are strip-teasing, pole dancing and stretching
sultrily in group fitness classes that seem to boost their
sexual self-confidence as much as their cardio.
"These
people are schoolteachers, secretaries, college kids," said
Donna Cyrus of the Crunch chain of health clubs, who has been
programming sexy workouts since she was inspired by Demi Moore’s
performance in the 1996 movie Striptease.
"It’s a
great workout. My generation did a lot of aerobics," said
Cyrus, who is in her forties. "By the time, the
20-somethings started going to the gym, they were looking for
different ways to get fit. They’re looking to express
their sexuality."
So Crunch
obliges with classes like "Strip Bar," "Belly
Moves" and "Sexy Stretch" that Cyrus says provide
fierce workouts and build self-esteem as efficiently as they
burn calories.
"Pole
dancing is about upper body strength," Cyrus said.
"They have to hold their body weight. Then, they practice
over and over to make the activity safe before going on to the
next movement."
Then the lower
body is used to climb the pole. "After that it is doing
inversions. This happens in an advanced class which Crunch,
which never met a double entendre it didn’t like, labels
"Turning Tricks," she said. There is also the male
factor.
"Our
studios are glass-enclosed so on any given night men are outside
looking in. It’s a very good meet-and-greet that’s certainly
helped our membership," she explained.
Jessica
Matthews, spokesperson for the American Council on Exercise,
says sexy classes can be great motivators. "I’m a fan of
these outside-of-the-box classes if they get people
excited," Matthews said.
"Pole
dancing, strip aerobics tend to have great aerobic benefits, and
belly dancing has a big focus on posture and core," she
said.
"People
like having a sexy repertoire," she said, even as she
cautioned those channeling their inner Gypsy Rose Lee to stick
to sneakers or go barefoot.
"I would
not encourage any class to wear six-inch heels" If not
heels, Robin Antin, choreographer of the Pussycat Dolls, hopes
those viewing her workout DVD will at least grab a feather boa
or a scarf while gyrating to the Dolls’ hits, such as
"Don’t Cha" (wish your girlfriend was hot like me).
"I wanted
to teach it like a simplified version of a dance class,"
said Antin, founder of the girl group, which started out as a
lounge act "Everybody has this fantasy of being a
dancer."
Antin, whose
upcoming book is called Finding Your Inner Doll, said,
"despite the lingerie-like costumes and spike heels, her
DVD is mainstream".
"It’s
great for moms and daughters," she said. "It’s at
Walmart."
You can take
the workout out of showbiz but you can’t take showbiz out of
the workout. Crunch stages show days so their pole dancers can
strut, or slither, their stuff. "In San Francisco, in Los
Angeles, in Miami, in New York," Cyrus said. "They’ll
all dress up and put on shoes, leg warmers, full makeup. They’ll
invite their friends and relatives. The place is packed."
The sexy
workout crowd is obsessed, she added. "If there’s no poll
available, they’ll stand there and wait their turn."
— Reuters Life!
|