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HoA General Discussion : Site mascot (13) by snouto - April 06, 2008, 05:16:38 PM| 2008 Wild Rose Challenge |
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| Wednesday, 16 April 2008 | |
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by Christopher Walsh
![]() Women's Roller Derby in Alberta
The
little girl who once dazzled her family with figure skating flair is
now being chased by a vicious group of women on roller skates dressed
in fishnet stockings and short skirts, some even sporting war paint,
intent on maiming her. Girls with names like Bamm Bamm, Loriville
Slugger, Trailer Trish, Whiskey Girl and Topp Gunns. But Scarla is
cruising the cement, taped-on track with great efficiency. Those pink
and white wheels are rolling fast around corners just brushing past a
screaming crowd cheering for a hit, a take-down, an errant elbow to the
jaw; anything that might send Scarla to the floor and sliding into
their raucous arms, only six feet away.
Some in the front row have even
brought their own targets to facilitate the process. That's the best
part of roller derby, after all, and even the girls will tell you a
spill into the front row, if executed properly, can be a rewarding
experience.
“Sometimes,
yeah,” the former figure skater explains during half-time. “It's kind
of an exciting element of the game. The adrenaline rush is huge.”
And
the crowd is loving it. The Big Four Building is rocking with 500 or so
excited fans who've plunked down $15 to say they witnessed the first
ever Wild Rose Challenge between the Calgary Hellion Rebellion and the
Edmonton Oil City Derby Girls. Do you remember where you were April 5,
2008? Because here on the Stampede Grounds things are starting to get
mean....
The punk music blares
from the speakers under the fluorescent lights that illuminate
perfectly every scar or unwanted line on the girls' bodies. The gray
cement has taken a beige tone with the dimming of the lights and looks
colder and harder than ever as Angi Septic, Sexy Wrexxxy and Dragstrip
Dolly cruise that thin white line looking to score points any way they
can.
And
here comes their girl, LuLu Cthulhu, a star on her helmet, outlapping
everyone, as those distorted guitar notes bounce off the concrete
stage. It's LuLu's turn to be the “Jammer” and she's quite good at it,
passing the Edmonton girls and scoring points for her efforts. (For
those unfamiliar with the game, the jammer is the only one who can
score points for the team. They start behind the pack and have to skate
through the other girls one time and lap the pack before they can start
scoring points.)
LuLu does it in
spirited fashion, in a way few other girls can get it down. Her bum is
arched a little higher than the rest, the pattern in her fishnet
stockings spread a little thinner and there's that “juxtaposition” – as
she would say – between those blood red lips and death black hair and
those flirty eyelashes.
![]() “Let the bodies hit the floor!!”
“Remember ladies and gentleman, roller girls will be flying everywhere, so keep your eyes on the game.”
LuLu
knows this although her eyes are not always on the game. Not when they're
needed elsewhere anyway. LuLu's a jazz singer and a natural ham for the
cameras. We all paused before the match and doffed our caps as LuLu
performed the national anthem.
“I
love performing and that's the thing that roller derby has that other
sports don't,” she explains. “I have a background as an actor. I love
how I can play to the crowd in this game.
“I'm
a showboat. I love to go out there and I love to wink at cute boys in
the crowd. I'm all about that stuff, but you don't need to be that way
to play this sport,” she stops to ponder that last comment. “Every team
needs one showboat.”
And the crowd is eating it up.......
A
quick scan produces a perplexing equation. The women and men are about
even in presence. There's a lot of women with piercings and tattoos in
black tank-tops and then there are men in NASCAR hats and moustaches
and others still in exuberant slim green suits with piercings all their
own. Guys with slicked-back hair, guys with low-maintenance shaved
heads, women with the same; mullets, brush cuts, pompadours, bangs,
earrings in odd places, African-inspired hoops through the ear, bare
lips kissing bare lips, and enough grease to wax a full-fledged green
and black mohawk for three years.
Yes, it's all here
at the 2008 Wild Rose Challenge.....
“Let the bodies hit the floor!!”
That's
the chant we heard coming from the Calgary Hellion Rebellion bench
before the match started. The girls' day personas had disappeared,
replaced now by screaming derby girls ready to get dirty. And a
ferocious crowd ready for the action.
It
was reminiscent of a WWE frenzie, but something entirely its own. These
people had signs and they seemed to understand the intricacies of this
new pastime, in all its whizzing glory.
The
notes from the audience were starting to reach a strange peak, when my
photographer Peter leaned over to whisper something chilling, but at
the same time logical for this setting. By the end of the first half,
Calgary was ravaging Edmonton by something like 40 points and the crowd
understood all too well what they were witnessing. It was a full scale
blow-out and they were getting restless.
“Oh God,” Peter said. “They're gonna bring out a pig.”
It
made sense in a twisted way. Yes, a squealing pig in leather
swine-chaps, a leather bikers' hat and matching studded choker, being
pulled out on a chain leash by a 40-year-old dominatrix to rousing
cheers from the audience. The little bugger would undoubtedly be angry
and disoriented and squealing like a bastard fearing for his life to
the rhythm of the blasting music. What would they do with him, anyway?
But
it didn't happen. The pig was spared. We went out for a smoke instead
and found a couple of clean-cut university guys talking to each other
about the game.
They were here out of curiosity, they told us, and liked what they saw.
“I've
never been and the guy I work with has, so he was telling me about it
and we thought we'd just check it out,” a guy named Blair said. “It's
awesome. It's fun and the people watching it are great too.”
Blair's buddy chimed in:
“He told me about it. I don't get out much, so....It's cool.”
A
lot of other people are starting to think the same way about roller
derby in Alberta. Most of the audience here is made up of family
members and friends of friends, but it's starting to catch on,
organizers say, and every event draws more people than the one before.
The
Calgary Roller Derby Association boasts itself as a “skater-owned,
skater-operated, not-for-profit, women-only, flat-track roller derby
league that is part of the grassroots re-invention of flat track roller
derby”. Most of the girls are too young to remember roller derby's
glory days of the 70s and 80s.
But all
history aside, the new wave seems to be catching on in Alberta. A
female fan at half time told us she's trying to start a league in
Medicine Hat.
“I used to burlesque, so that gives me street cred,” she said.
There's
talk of other leagues in places like Lethbridge starting up and word
is, Hoochie Mama from Oil City might be starting a chapter in Red Deer.
The Calgary league was conceived in 2006 by 10 girls who wanted to try
it, including Scarla Maim. She says it's something positive that women
can take part in.
“It was
something that wasn't around and because it's a unique entertainment
that really, nobody has ever seen here,” she says of why it works.
“It's just an absolute, phenomenal outlet for any kind of pent-up
energy. It fits me perfectly.
“Everybody's really good people that are involved in it, so you make a lot of friendships through derby.”
LuLu agrees.
“I've
always played more aggressive sports and the thing about roller derby
is that it's a sport by women for women,” the Calgary team captain
says. “In this sport, I am celebrating being strong and aggressive and
feminine all at the same time. It's about being strong and kick-ass
like a woman, not being strong and kick-ass like a man.”
The names are just a fun part of the sport, says Scarla, a councillor for troubled youth when she's not on the track.
“It's
kind of like an extension of your personality that you bring with you.
You kinda take your personality to the extreme,” she explains.
But, they say, it's all real. Roller girls often suffer sprains,
strains and, in some cases, broken ribs. A fight between these roller sisters is always a real possibility.
“One
hundred and 10 per cent is real,” Scarla says. “If there's fights, it's
a real fight. If there's any kind of rivalry, it's because the girls
really don't like one another or want to take each other out.”
With
nine minutes left in the bout, Edmonton is starting to realize they've
been maimed. Our bets were on Oil City, based on appearances alone, but
this is roller derby and it's starting to become clear anything can
happen.
One of Edmonton's
coaches, a serious and deliberate woman by the name of Major Agony, is
getting fed up with the bout and feeling it. Her team's down by 100 or
so points and things are getting frustrating.
“You don't want to know what I'm thinking,” she says. “I'm not happy.”
“Well, Major,” I offer, “what went wrong?”
The refs, she replies. There were changes to the rules just before the game that the Edmonton girls weren't ready for.
Rules?
“It's messing our team up pretty bad,” the Major tells me.
The
other Oil City coach has had enough and with just under one minute to
go, he's hand-picked his strongest girls to end this game the way they
do a hockey blowout.
“Let's fuckin' hit,” he tells them.
Queen Chaos – her figure skating name was Princess Pain – is taking the loss hard.
“It's
been bullshit ever since the beginning of the day,” she yells coming
off the track in true tough-girl fashion. “We're getting called on
bullshit penalties!”
Queen
Chaos' voice is hoarse from screaming at everyone for a good two hours.
She's still wired and her voice is reminiscent of the old female
wrestling managers, or that woman in a small town bar who's just caught
up to her husband. Her face is hard and puckered in a scowl, her vocal
chords popping through the skin of her neck as she explains the
shortcomings of tonight's effort.
“We
need our fuckinggg jammers and those fuckinggg refs know that so they
keep callin' bullshit penalties! They're lettin' Calgary get away with
fuckinggg every little fuckinggg thinggg!”
I
doubt the league has a drug policy in place at this early stage in its
existence. But Queenie's on a roll and the whole rant reverberates
through her jaunty body.
“Our blockers learned a valuable lesson on this game, big time,” she says, calming down
slightly.
“Hopefully,
our fuckinggg coaches learned a lesson!” she yells past me towards the
male coach. “I knew! When I heard who our refs were gonna be, I knew it
was gonna be dirty!”
Guys like
Killhouse van Boutin and Cray del Robber. Cray had been hanging out
earlier in the day and said he just wanted to be involved with this new
sport any way he could. His testicles prevented him from participating
as a roller girl, but this new sport is fun and he knew he had to get
involved somehow. He's seen that intensity a few times during his year
of reffing the league.
“I wish I was a derby girl,” he confessed earlier.
Which doesn't matter because, as Queen Chaos would agree, he doesn't have the balls for it anyway....
The
Edmonton girls were upset about the humiliating loss, but looking
forward to their bout in Victoria this week. Other girls from the team
will be traveling to London, England later this year to take part in an
international roller derby event.
After the Wild Rose Challenge, girls from both teams were hugging each other, celebrating the sport.
“We
all want to win and we'll kick the shit out of each other, but at the
end of it, we realize that we're all trying to build something together
as well,” LuLu Cthulhu says. (Her name, Cthulhu, is taken from a 1920s
H.P. Lovecraft horror story.)
What's good for the game is the main thing, both sides agree.
“We
all come together and this is something that we build together as a
group,” LuLu continues. “There's something really awesome about a group
of really strong, independent-minded women working together. It can
almost be like a magical thing. I know it's a corny thing to say....
“The
juxtaposition of ultra-femme aesthetic, with super aggressive physical
strength and sport. Those two things don't often get put together and
there's something really fascinating about seeing them exist in one
cultural object.”
Maiden Alberta, an Oil City Derby Girl agrees.
“Sweaty girls in fishnet stockings and short skirts, how can you go wrong?”
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