{"id":13002,"date":"2013-01-09T07:10:46","date_gmt":"2013-01-09T07:10:46","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=13002"},"modified":"2013-01-09T07:15:53","modified_gmt":"2013-01-09T07:15:53","slug":"guest-post-found-feminism-rewatching-dirty-dancing","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2013\/01\/09\/guest-post-found-feminism-rewatching-dirty-dancing\/","title":{"rendered":"[Guest Post] Found Feminism: Rewatching Dirty Dancing"},"content":{"rendered":"
I’m not a fan of stereotypical femininity, so when my sister
decided to organise a trip to see the stage version of Dirty Dancing<\/strong><\/a> for her hen night \u2013 with
compulsory \u201cprom dress\u201d costumes \u2013 it sounded like my
idea of pink, fluffy hell.<\/p>\n
<\/a>But I was pleasantly surprised to
discover that when you get past the neon pink<\/a> advertising and the frilly dresses<\/a>, there are some surprisingly
serious and complex themes woven into the plot. By the time we
reached the interval I had been converted, but since it can be
difficult to find anyone to discuss intersectional feminism with
you on a hen night pub crawl, I’ve had to save my
observations for the internet.<\/p>\n
In case it’s been a while since you’ve seen the 1987
film, here’s a quick recap of the plot: in the summer
between high school and college, Baby spends a few weeks with her
well-off family at a holiday resort in the Catskills, where she
meets Penny, a working class dance instructor who has recently
become pregnant and then been dumped.<\/p>\n
Penny desperately wants to have an abortion, but it’s
illegal and therefore expensive and risky. On top of that, she
can’t afford to take time off from her second job,
performing at a neighbouring resort with her dance partner and
platonic best friend Johnny.<\/p>\n
Baby steps in to help her, first talking her father into lending
her the money to pay for the abortion, then learning the dance
routine so that she can take Penny’s place on stage. In the
process of learning to dance, she has to spend lots of time with
sexy dance instructor Johnny, in situations which conveniently
provide excuses for him to be wet and\/or shirtless, and they end
up having a hot summer fling.<\/p>\n
Although it’s easily overlooked in favour of her romantic
relationship with Johnny, it’s Baby’s friendship with
Penny which sets up the film’s feminist credentials: the
main catalyst for the plot is one woman helping another woman to
obtain an abortion. Unlike more recent American films about
unplanned pregnancy, such as Juno<\/strong><\/a> or Knocked Up<\/strong><\/a>,
Dirty Dancing<\/strong> approaches abortion from an openly
pro-choice perspective. At no point does Penny face any
moral judgement for her decision, but there’s plenty
of criticism for the man who abandoned her, and the
abortionist who charges her hundreds of dollars for a
procedure that leaves her seriously ill.<\/p>\n
But even before she makes her grand gesture of sisterly
solidarity to Penny, Baby is presented as a feminist
character. When she is first introduced, we learn that she
is about to go to college (it’s later explained that
she plans to study economics at a prestigious women’s college<\/a>)
and wants to join the Peace Corps after graduating. This
stands in stark contrast to her sister Lisa, whose main
ambition appears to be finding a husband. Lisa and the
other female guests at the resort demonstrate the kind of
comfortable yet uninspiring lifestyle that Baby has
decided to reject in favour of having adventures and
trying to save the world.<\/p>\n
Baby’s determination to make a difference could have
been presented as a straightforwardly positive trait, but
her ability to help Penny is closely tied to her
family’s wealth, and the writers use Johnny’s
reaction to comment on her privilege. Johnny initially
resents her involvement, and makes the scathing comment “it takes a real saint to ask
Daddy”<\/a> when Baby hands over the money for the
abortion.<\/p>\n
<\/a>As they grow closer and
Johnny begins to talk about his life and his precarious
employment situation, Baby looks na\u00efve and sheltered
in comparison, but by the end of the film she has started
to understand her own privilege and question her father’s
assumptions about Johnny<\/a>.<\/p>\n
Baby’s class privilege affects the dynamic of her
relationship with Johnny, giving her power and agency that
goes against traditional gender roles. As a guest at the
resort, Johnny relies on Baby’s cooperation for his
continued employment, and he feels further indebted to her
because she is paying for Penny’s abortion.<\/p>\n
Baby’s background means that she’s used to
getting her way, so she isn’t shy about talking back
to Johnny during their early dance lessons, and she
remains assertive when they grow closer, eventually being
the one to initiate the sexual aspect of their
relationship<\/a>.<\/p>\n
Women’s sexuality is a major theme in the film, and
it’s actually kind of refreshing to see a film
address women’s interest in sex without trying to
dress it up in a desire for True Love. There are frequent
nods to the female gaze, whether it’s through the
blatant fanservice of Patrick Swayze’s shirtless
scenes (set to music like Hungry Eyes<\/strong><\/a>), or the resort owner,
reminding the nice, respectable college boys he has
recruited as waiters that part of their job is to
provide holiday romances for the younger female
guests.<\/p>\n
There are also comments about the “Bungalow
Bunnies”, middle-aged women who stay at the
resort all summer and are only joined by their
husbands at the weekends, who use Johnny for sex<\/a> in a reversal of
the older-man-exploits-young-woman trope.<\/p>\n
As a coming-of-age movie, the script also touches on
the idea of sexual awakening, contrasting Baby’s
experience with her sister Lisa’s. In one very
brief scene (which starts at 0:50 of this clip<\/a>), the two women
discuss when they should lose their virginity, and
Baby tells Lisa that it should be with “someone
you sort-of love”; not necessarily the person
you want to spend the rest of your life with, but
someone you like and are attracted to.<\/p>\n
Lisa sees sex as part of a long-term plan to persuade
Robbie \u2013 who the viewer already knows is the
sleazebag that dumped Penny when he got her pregnant
\u2013 to marry her, while Baby, who isn’t
deliberately looking for a husband, ends up with the
better man and the more rewarding relationship. This
might not be much of a revelation to many real women,
but it’s unusual to see a chick-flick where the
romantic happy ending doesn’t involve marriage
and babies.<\/p>\n
Dirty Dancing<\/strong> isn’t without its
flaws: the Bungalow Bunnies fit what we would now
call a cougar<\/a> stereotype, and
Johnny’s final speech about how Baby has
taught him to be a better person might be kind of
dodgy from a class perspective, but it’s a
little unrealistic to expect a low-budget romance
film from the 80s to be totally right-on.<\/p>\n
It stands out, not because it’s perfect, but
because the writers address class and gender
issues at all, and as a result has been sneaking a
little bit of Trojan horse feminism into teenage
sleepovers and girls’ nights in for the last
25 years. It’s the feminist sleeper agent of
chick flicks, and deserves a bit of recognition
for that.<\/p>\n
\n