Image Credit : http://www.worldpoledance.com/
World Pole Dance Championships: Erotic display or serious
sport?
Erotic display or serious sport? At the World Pole Dance
Championships finals in Beijing on Sunday, competitors in skin-tight suits
insisted that their discipline deserves Olympic recognition.
More than 50 limber and lithe athletes representing over ten
countries on four continents -- some dressed as Roman centurions, wolves and
sharks -- hoped their routines could help sever the sport's association with
seedy strip clubs.
"We call it 'pole fitness' to get away from the
negative connotations... it's more part of the sports industry than stripping
industry," said Kat Bailey of Britain.
Before jerking her way up a steel pole in a spangly silver
and red polka-dot leotard to thunderous applause, she added: "I would
totally support pole as an Olympic sport."
Chilean contestant Felipe Mendoza Perez -- one of more than
a dozen men competing -- wowed the audience by threading his legs around the
pole like a dressmaker working a needle over cloth, in a musical routine
lasting several minutes.
In a stroke of pure showmanship he ripped off a black cloth
mask, before hanging off the pole with his legs in a wide splits position.
"People think it's so easy but it's so difficult,"
he said after catching his breath backstage.
Emmanuel Ignacio of the Phillipines, who wore a floppy
top-hat over his black-and-white painted face, added: "Pole fitness has
evolved so much... in a few years who knows, it could become an Olympic
sport."
Russian competitor Kristian Lebedev took to the stage in
crimson cape and Roman-style outfit complete with a toy sword and red-crested
helmet.
Most competitors held themselves upside down or horizontal
in poses demanding near-impossible displays of strength, but Lebedev's
backwards somersaults from the pole to the ground stole the loudest gasps from
the audience.
'Learned it secretly'
Contestants competing in three categories -- men's and
women's singles, and doubles -- said attitudes to pole dancing were shifting.
"Two years ago people would react like 'you're a
stripper," said Russian Dimitry Politov.
"But its a hard sport, an extreme one. Now people
understand that."
China has emerged over the last decade as a center for the
discipline, but Chinese competitors said they had faced cultural conservatism
while chasing their pole dance dreams.
"My parents are farmers in the countryside... I learned
for four years, and the first three years they did not know, because I was
working in a gym and I learned it secretly," said 2013 Chinese Pole Dance
Champion Fang Yi.
But now "many people see it as an sport. We are working
hard at it, and hope one day it will be in the Olympics," the 29 year-old
added.
Pole dancers have launched several petitions calling for
Olympic authorities to add their sport to the next Games -- so far without
success.
Serious competitors insist that the sport be referred to as
"pole fitness" or "vertical fitness" rather than pole
dancing, and claim that the discipline has ancient roots in Chinese and Indian
acrobatics.
"In recent years, dancers have to be more athletic... A
few years ago, it was more of a sexual thing, but now it's more of an athletic
thing," said Chinese dancer Sun Wenzhu, as she painted a wolf mask, part
of a get-up which won "best costume," on Sunday.
As part of her doubles performance, she ripped off the
costume to reveal a pink bikini, before pulling her partner into the air while
hanging from the pole.
'Everything in one'
The scale of the competition reflected the growing appeal of
pole dancing as a fitness aid over the last decade -- with thousands of clubs
estimated to have opened worldwide, including more than 500 in the United
States alone.
Competitors who made the journey to China this year included
the British current World champions 'Bendy' Kate Czepulkowski and Sam Willis,
the event's organisers said.
Hotly tipped for this year's championship was the
aptly-named Russian female contestant Polina Volchek, who goes by the moniker
"Pink Puma", they added.
Perez of Chile summed up the general mood, observing:
"To me pole is the number one sport. It's gymnastics, art, yoga, Pilates,
everything in one discipline."
News Credit : http://www.hindustantimes.com/art/
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