The Enigmatic Miss Mew
Monday, June 24, 2019
One of my favorite photographs. This is the first costume I ever wore. For my first ever dance. My audition at the NO5 Orange for the Matriarch Brandolini. First song ‘Black Magic Woman’ |
In the early 80s Vancouver was known internationally for the quality of its ecdysiasts (look up the word).
My writer friend Les Wiseman, who wrote a rock column for Vancouver Magazine called In One Ear, and
I had to go to late night concerts to review bands and to interview
them backstage. Wiseman was not only a connoisseur of ecdysiasts but
also of fine brews. This meant we ended up in many of our city’s pubs
that featured that high and fleeting art called dance. We had our faves.
Looking back I now see them as roses in my garden. My favourite on any
day is the one in bloom on that day.
Because
both Wiseman and I were musical snobs (he trained me into that) we were
conscious of the music that these lovely women chose for their
routines.
This brings me to Miss Mew.
She
was not called Miss Mew. I gave her that name. Her stage name was Topaz
and those who knew her well called her Fleen. She is filed in my
collection of negatives and slides as Fleen.
There
was something cat-like about her slow dancing and that enigmatic stare
of hers that would break out into a tiny almost indiscernible smile. Her
skin was a luminescent white and it wasn’t until one day that she
visited us at our Railway Club lunch soirées that I found out that her
face was all freckles!
Her
music was mostly Lou Reed. That was enough for both Wiseman and this
poor photographer. And I was a poor photographer not only financially in
those years but also in my skills. Notice
the chopped hands and legs of these shots. I had to remove strands of
hair from her face that I had not noticed in my Burnaby basement studio.
But in spite of it all Miss Mew shines in a way that any time I post a picture of her in social media she is noticed.
My
friends used to laugh at me for my obsession on going to see Miss Mew
perform. I may have been a poor photographer then but I knew enigmatic
beauty when I saw it.
Best of all Miss Mew is proud of her former profession.