Go-Go Dancing: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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Compare [[Bikini Bar]] and [[Strip club]].
Compare [[Bikini Bar]] and [[Strip club]].


Not to be confused with [[Big Hero 6|Go Go Tomago]], [[Kill Bill|Gogo Yubari]], [[Batfink|Hugo A-Go-Go]] or [[Inspector Gadget|Go-go Gadget ''anything'']]. Or with the subgenre of [[Funk]] music that arose out of [[Washington DC]] in the 1960s-70s.
Not to be confused with [[The Go-Go's]], [[Big Hero 6|Go Go Tomago]], [[Kill Bill|Go-go Yubari]], [[Batfink|Hugo A-Go-Go]] or [[Inspector Gadget|Go-go Gadget ''anything'']]. Or with the subgenre of [[Funk]] music that arose out of [[Washington DC]] in the 1960s-70s.


{{tropenamer}}
{{tropenamer}}
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* ''[[Go Go Tales]]'', a 2007 comedy where the go-go club becomes a strip club.
* ''[[Go Go Tales]]'', a 2007 comedy where the go-go club becomes a strip club.
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WSLMN6g_Od4 The dance scene] in ''[[Pulp Fiction]]'' uses go-go dance moves.
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WSLMN6g_Od4 The dance scene] in ''[[Pulp Fiction]]'' uses go-go dance moves.
* Go-go dancer Cherry Darling is one of the main characters in the [[Robert Rodriguez]]/[[Quentin Tarantino]] 2007 exploitation film homage ''[[Planet Terror]]'', and some of the action takes place in a go-go bar where she dances.
* [[Insistent Terminology|<s>Stripper</s> Go-go dancer]] Cherry Darling ([[Rose McGowan]]) is one of the main characters in ''[[Planet Terror]]'' -- one-half of the [[Robert Rodriguez]]/[[Quentin Tarantino]] 2007 [[Exploitation Film]] homage ''[[Grindhouse]]'' -- and some of the action takes place in the go-go bar where she dances. Part of her [[Establishing Character Moment]] is her performance early in the film.
* In ''[[Iron Man (film)|Iron Man]]'', the flight attendants on Tony's private jet double as go-go dancers.
* In ''[[It's A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World]]'', Sylvester's unnamed girlfriend [[The Stoic|maintains a perfect stone face]] while go-go dancing in a bikini.


== [[Literature]] ==
== [[Literature]] ==
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== [[Live-Action TV]] ==
== [[Live-Action TV]] ==
* The Kit Kat Club, Catwoman's home base in [[Batman (TV series)|the 1960s ''Batman'' TV series]], had caged go-go dancers performing for the patrons.
* The Kit Kat Club, Catwoman's home base in [[Batman (TV series)|the 1960s ''Batman'' TV series]], had caged go-go dancers performing for the patrons.
** From the same show, there's the [[w:Batusi|Batusi]], based on typical go-go dance moves of the 1960s.
** From the same show, there's the [[w:Batusi|Batusi]], based on typical go-go dance moves of the 1960s (and named for the real-world [[Dance Sensation]] the "Watusi").
* [[Goldie Hawn]] and [[Judy Carne]] were frequently shown go-go dancing on ''[[Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In]]'', wearing bikinis with various slogans, [[Catch Phrase]]s and punch lines painted on their bodies.
* [[Goldie Hawn]] and [[Judy Carne]] were frequently shown go-go dancing on ''[[Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In]]'', wearing bikinis with various slogans, [[Catch Phrase]]s and punch lines painted on their bodies.
* In a 1966 episode of ''[[My Three Sons]]'', "Stag at Bay", a go-go dancer<ref>Played by [[Hey, It's That Guy!|Leslie Parrish]], better known as Lt. Carolyn Palamas from the ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series]]'' episode "Who Mourns For Adonais?"</ref> shows up as the entertainment for a [[Stag Party|bachelor party]] thrown for one of Steve's older coworkers. When the cops bust the party and she can't get her street clothes back, Steve tries to do the gentlemanly thing, and, well, [[Hilarity Ensues|matters get complicated]].


== [[Music]] ==
== [[Music]] ==
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== [[Video Games]] ==
== [[Video Games]] ==
* ''[[No One Lives Forever]]'' has a go-go lounge populated by a multiracial trio of go-go girls who were actually a [[Quirky Miniboss Squad]] with sniper rifles. Before you encountered them, they lounged around their dressing room moaning about how ''so very bored'' they were.


== [[Visual Novel]]s ==
== [[Visual Novel]]s ==
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== [[Western Animation]] ==
== [[Western Animation]] ==
* The ''[[Phineas and Ferb]]'' episode "Robot Rodeo" ends with an extended sequence of [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=suy0cjbFTgY Isabella go-go dancing to a song about her frizzy hair].


== Other Media ==
== Other Media ==

Revision as of 16:28, 27 October 2021

Go-go dancing happens on stage in live concerts, too.

Go-Go Dancing is Exactly What It Says on the Tin - dancing energetically on one's own, often but not always professionally, at a bar or nightclub for the entertainment of the patrons. While the outfits that go-go dancers wear are usually minimal to the point of being stripperiffic (and occasionally the dancers go topless, as at least one famously did at San Francisco's Condor Club in the 1960s), the dancers do not as a rule actually strip - go-go bars are not strip clubs.

The Other Wiki has an article about the history of go-go dancing, including a mention that as of 1991 there were more go-go boys in gay clubs than there were go-go girls in "straight" clubs.

Compare Bikini Bar and Strip club.

Not to be confused with The Go-Go's, Go Go Tomago, Go-go Yubari, Hugo A-Go-Go or Go-go Gadget anything. Or with the subgenre of Funk music that arose out of Washington DC in the 1960s-70s.

Go-Go Dancing is the Trope Namer for:
Examples of Go-Go Dancing include:

Advertising

Anime and Manga

Ballads

Comic Books

Fan Works

Film

Literature

Live-Action TV

Music

  • Pizzicato Five has a song titled "Go Go Dancer", sung from the perspective of a go-go girl from the 1960s or 1970s.

New Media

Newspaper Comics

Oral Tradition, Folklore, Myths and Legends

Pinball

Podcasts

Professional Wrestling

Puppet Shows

Radio

Recorded and Stand Up Comedy

Tabletop Games

Theatre

Video Games

  • No One Lives Forever has a go-go lounge populated by a multiracial trio of go-go girls who were actually a Quirky Miniboss Squad with sniper rifles. Before you encountered them, they lounged around their dressing room moaning about how so very bored they were.

Visual Novels

Web Animation

Web Comics

Web Original

  • Dr. Steel's live stage shows frequently featured go-go dancers dressed in PVC halters and miniskirts that matched his labcoat.

Western Animation

Other Media

Real Life

  1. Played by Leslie Parrish, better known as Lt. Carolyn Palamas from the Star Trek: The Original Series episode "Who Mourns For Adonais?"