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She Fights Like A Girl

@shefightslikeagirl / shefightslikeagirl.tumblr.com

This is an Emilie Autumn fansite / blog, providing up-to-date information and media from inside the walls of the Asylum. Please feel free to browse our archives, but beware: it's easier to get in than it is to get out...
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I know y'all know I try to be neutral here, but I thought you all should know:

Emilie's recently released 444 limited edition "never before released" NFTs are a straight up scam.

Yes, I know it's a "free" NFT, but there are fees involved with purchase. Don't buy it!

The photo is a released photo, and in good quality. This is the original release (to my knowledge). I'm reposting it here for posterity.

The recent NFT listing states:

This animated image of Emilie Autumn is accompanied by her ultimate battlecry, the epic "Fight Like A Girl" from her album of the same name. The original photo has never before been made available, and will only be offered in this format as a limited edition of 444 minted NFTs.

I was willing to give EA the benefit of the doubt that she hadn't done her research on the impact of NFTs on the environment, but the fact that she's blatantly ignoring all the commentary on her Instagram is sitting wrong with me. Now this.

Do what you will with this information.

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My fellow Plague Rats and Inmates, to celebrate my birthday week, I've made you a present! I am so delighted to include a vial of my newest magical creation, ✨The Asylum Oracle Incense Blend,✨ with every #asylumoracle deck purchased from the #asylumemporium from NOW through Sept. 22nd! Your incense will automatically be added to your order when you checkout at the ***Link In Bio.***⁠⠀
🐀⁠⠀
Each deck will ALSO include a free ♥️Autographed Limited Edition Fight Like A Girl Album♥️!⁠⠀
🐀⁠⠀
I've created this incense blend myself of entirely organic and wild harvested plants, oils, and resins (no chemical fragrance oils, ever), specifically to burn as you work with your Oracle (though of course you are welcome to burn it at any time you like;). ✨ Sprinkle a bit on a charcoal disc and you will be instantly enveloped in the exotic warmth of enticing cinnamon and cloves, heady vanilla and benzoin, fragrant rose petals, and smokey dragon's blood resin.⁠⠀
🐀⁠⠀
This incense is not available for sale, and is at this time only included as a gift with the purchase of the Oracle. I so hope you enjoy burning this intoxicating ritual blend as much as I enjoyed creating it. Let's make some magic together!!!⁠
~W14A🥄⁠⠀
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Dearest Plague Rats 🐀, I have been working on a number of things I can offer to give either comfort or entertainment during this difficult time, and the first of them is:
With the shipment of every Asylum Oracle deck, I will be including a ✨Free✨ Limited Edition 🖤Autographed Fight Like A Girl album.🖤 (Whilst supplies last—there is a limited number of these albums printed.)
You can find the #asylumoracle with this offer at the link below...
...It is my honor to offer this to you, and if this is an album of mine that you have not heard before, know that its theme is one of strength and unity in the face of unutterable challenges, culminating in the anthem for moving forward when you've no idea how, "One Foot In Front Of The Other."
I for one will be marching to this song daily. Of course, I will be marching in place because, well, quarantine, but marching nonetheless. I hope you will join me.🖤
I love you, my fellow Inmates!
~W14A🥄
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CORSETS AND STRIPED STOCKINGS: OUTFITTING THE ASYLUM FOR WAYWARD VICTORIAN GIRLS by She Fights Like A Girl

These articles are best viewed on desktop, but are mobile friendly. Please excuse any strange formatting on your phone browser or the Tumblr app.

PART V: AN ASYLUM MUSICAL [CONTINUED] See first post here.

The first Asylum Rags, worn during Gaslight and The Key, were the ones featured in the Fight Like A Girl music video (2014).

Reason to join the #flagtour2013 at The Troubadour in LA tonight: Because we will be wearing the filthy nightgowns used in the "Fight Like A Girl" video directed by @darrenbousman who will also be there tonight:)!!!  (x)

These costumes were designed to be the clothes that inmates of The Asylum for Wayward Victorian Girls wore during their internment. Emilie, as Emily-with-a-Y, also wore a key tied around her thigh with a ribbon for (the aptly named) The Key.

To finish out the show, the girls appeared in their finale look for One Foot in Front of the Other Foot, Mad Girl, and Thank God I’m Pretty. See them in their finale dance below!

Now, to close out this part of the series, there’s one more corset, a new mohawk, a music video, and certain faerie I need to talk about. 

First: The Fight Like A Girl music video.

Speaking strictly to costumes, the music video only debuted a few new ensembles. One appears to be a costume slated for the 2013 South American tour that never made it onstage, debuting here instead on an unnamed Bloody Crumpet / Inmate.

RIGHT: Busy in the costume shop, creating new magic for my S. American Plague Rats;)! twitpic.com/bcwhq5 what will you be wearing?? (x)

Below are some photos of other costumes from the video, for all the other boys and girls (and everyone otherwise undecided) featured on screen.

From left to right, up to down: Ulorin Vex, Veronica Varlow, Unknown Inmate, Emilie Autumn, Maggie Lally, Benjamin Michael Marsh, Craig Anton, Sarah Saviano, Unknown “Conjoined Inmates.” Costume Design by Emilie Autumn, Mildred Von Hildegard.

Read more about the FLAG music video here.

Second: The Asylum “Sparkle Heart” Corset and Mohawk v2 from the final Fight Like A Girl World Tour. 

The Sparkle Heart corset is another recycled costume, changed from its original iconic look to a new one.

Asylum Secrets: This corset pictured (the Opheliac corset) was not the first but I believe the second corset that I toured with as a primary costume piece. Years after its debut, it was reincarnated into something almost unrecognizable. Can you guess what very photographed piece it became? (I know I mentioned this somewhere in the past, but I don’t remember when or where, so let’s just pretend I’ve never said it before.) -W14A (x)
Yep. That’s the Opheliac corset. Full circle. From the drowned victim to the proud warrior she transformed. ~W14A (x)

The original mohawk was sold on eBay in May of 2013, after the Fight Like A Girl: North American Tour (2013) and the FLAG music video. A new mohawk debuted for the Fight Like A Girl World Tour (2013). This version featured a helmet-like design, presumably for easier removal and longevity as a headpiece.

Now, third and last: Moth.

Captain Maggots had scheduling conflicts with the last leg of the Fight Like A Girl World Tour, prompting the introduction of a new Bloody Crumpet. Known as Moth, or Anathema, Jill Evyln joined the Crumpets and took on the long-lost role of a faerie. Her costume featured two sets of wings (large and small), and she performed a fan dance in lieu of Maggot’s stilts and fire performances. 

Emilie crafted Moth’s wings as she had all her faerie wings in the past, teasing them on Flickr and Twitter with little to no context before the tour began.

And so here ends the tale of the Fight Like A Girl Tours. But that’s not to say the gates of the Asylum never opened again...

“And no one’s coming, Coming to take me home...” - Gaslight (2014)

Up Next... PART VI: THE ASYLUM EXPERIENCE

Remember to visit Part III and enter our giveaway! Ends 12/1/19.

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CORSETS AND STRIPED STOCKINGS: OUTFITTING THE ASYLUM FOR WAYWARD VICTORIAN GIRLS by She Fights Like A Girl

These articles are best viewed on desktop, but are mobile friendly. Please excuse any strange formatting on your phone browser or the Tumblr app.

This article was longer than intended and image-heavy, so it’s been split into two parts.

PART V: AN ASYLUM MUSICAL

“And if I end up with blood on my hands, Well, I know that you’ll understand ‘Cause I fight like a girl.” - Fight Like A Girl (2014)

And now we're back to the relatively recent past, when this blog was in its infancy and the fandom couldn't decide whether to stick with the forum or run rampant on Tumblr. Fight Like A Girl (the album) was still being recorded, but Emilie did a few live dates Down Under and decided to feature the title song from the unfinished album.

To my understanding, the Harvest Festival was another one of those concerts where the show was considerably downsized because of the cost of shipping props and set pieces. But where the South American tours hadn’t pulled back in the wardrobe department, the Harvest festival did. Emilie and the Crumpets performed in one costume for the entire set. But to make up for the lack of glam, EA debuted the first costume of the FLAG era.

This costume was worn for the cover art of Fight Like A Girl, and acted as the signature corset for the very first Fight Like A Girl World Tour (2012). 

“Asylum Secrets: All of my costumes over the years have been made to look as though someone had been murdered in them and come back from the dead to enact a fabulous revenge. To achieve this, I have employed techniques from melting fabrics with an industrial strength heat gun to spraying them with solutions that no human should ever breathe. In the case of the corset pictured, I burned it mercilessly with sticks of incense before painting the fabric to make it look moth-eaten.” - EA on the creation of the FLAG corset (June 25, 2018)

Speaking of the 2012 FLAG World Tour! While there were a lot of changes from The Door Tour and Harvest Festival, this tour is probably best remembered as a transition phase between eras. There were new costumes, but… the Rat Queen still introduced the show with 4 o’Clock. There were new set dressings, but… the shadow scrim was still main stage center. The new corset was mixed in with the Rat Queen ensemble and the structure of the show hadn’t changed terribly. New, but… kinda not?

Except for that Warrior Mohawk, of course.

Upper: WVC content / eBay listing photo. Lower: Making of the Warrior Mohawk from Emilie’s Flickr account.

This is the only tour where Emile wore a mohawk for the entirety(-slash-majority) of the show. Later concerts would see her removing it after the third song. There was some slight skepticism in the fandom with its debut, sparking discourse about everything from cultural appropriation to thematic relevance, but EA didn’t make much comment on the criticism.

“[The Warrior Mohawk] signified the transformation from victim to warrior. I feel that it is important for me to let go in order that I may go on to transform yet again and create new bits of wearable magic to surprise you with... This headpiece symbolized the birth of a new era in the Asylum…. This is the headdress of a tribal Queen…” - EA, 2012 eBay auction description.
“The Mohawk headdress represents the tribal, wild element of the sisterhood that formed during the imprisonment of the inmates, and shows that, once we escape and are on the rampage to take down our oppressors, we have indeed transformed from individual, helpless victims into a strong and beautifully terrifying tribal warriors.”  - EA for Natalie’s World, 2013 (x) (x)

Another costume that debuted on this tour was the MC of the Ophelia Gallery, who had his own brand-new number: Girls! Girls! Girls!

And as for its history...

(My best guess is that this photo originated in 2009, based on her hair.)

This character is a hint at the structure of the tour (and album) to come, where it would be less about the mad girls existing inside the Asylum and more about the story of how they got there, and what happened once they were interned. Allow me to stray from the costuming topic for just a moment…

A TANGENT: OF STAGE SHOWS AND ASYLUM CONTINUITY Spoiler filled ramblings of a long-time fan.

I’ve got a running theory that The Asylum for Wayward Victorian Girls, in all its forms, runs in parallel to the concerts. But they match each other in reverse. [Spoilers for the book to follow.]

Emilie’s first concert of the Opheliac brand was in a small venue in Chicago, alongside Lady Joo Hee. In The Asylum… book, Emily-with-a-y’s final days in the Asylum were spent with Sachiko (a character based on and formerly named Joo Hee). 

The Opheliac shows of 2007-2011 were all about the women in an Asylum singing songs and welcoming others home. Cannibals, ballerinas, pyrate captains, nymphomanics -- they all ran rampant with no apparent oversight except from Emilie herself. Rats crept and crawled onstage unbothered; toys, crumpets, and cupcakes were in abundance, often served alongside “tea,” and there isn’t a single cell door in sight.

Especially in the earliest days of the concerts, the set design had an emphasis on appearing hand-made -- not only because it was, but because it should be for these girls. This was the world EA branded for herself: a world of freedom, without judgement, earned by their own hands.

In The Asylum… book, after the Inmates take over and kill the doctors, this is very much what they do: impersonate medical professionals and welcome sick and not-so-sick girls home to protect them, nurture them, and give them the best life that the Victorian Age fails to do. They take over the Asylum and make it their own.

Then in the FLAG performances (2012-2014), the storytelling shifts. EA’s Asylum world is no longer loosely themed with inmates running amok, but adheres to a more rigid storytelling structure, detailing the struggles and despair of the girls locked up in The Asylum(-with-a-capital-T). It mirrors the bulk of the content in The Asylum… book. The carefree, whimsical stage dressings shift to bars -- a representation of the cells and gates in The Asylum. There might be a bear tied to a dreary grey harpsichord; you might even see a single rat scratching about. But they don’t have dominion here. There’s no freedom. Just the story of the girls trapped behind the bars.

And now we’re stalled on both sides of the street. We’ve met in the middle. The concerts started at the end of the book, and ended at the beginning. 

Ok, I’ll put my soapbox away. Let’s get back on track.

BACK TO BUSINESS

Where were we?

Oh, yes: Girls! Girls! Girls! and new costumes.

So let’s jump forward a little more, because there isn’t much else to say about Emilie’s costume style in the 2012 FLAG World Tour. Moving on to the 2013 Fight Like A Girl: North American Tour (and following European and Australian tours), a brand new show was brought to the stage. Full new stage set-up, new costumes, and a full new setlist. 

A costume I’ll be referring to as the “armored corset” replaced the moth-eaten FLAG ensemble in the opening number. Both Maggots and Veronica were given new costumes as well, replacing the costumes they had worn for years. 

Armored Corset, with varying amounts of sparkled (2013)
Maggie Lally; Captain Maggot / Captain Maggots
Veronica Varlow; The Naughty Veronica

The show design of this tour had Emilie in the armored corset with the mohawk for the two opening numbers, Fight Like A Girl and Time for Tea. The mohawk and the armored plates on her chest and hip were removed during the 4 o’Clock Reprise, leaving her without her armor for What Will I Remember? as the narrative moves back to the beginning of the story, before the “Uprising.”

On the subject of the corset: structurally, it was outfitted with snaps to attach the armor and allow for easy removal (see corset detail above, bottom right). The mohawk proved a more difficult challenge to remove, as it was securely clipped, pinned, and secured into EA’s hair. This ended up being corrected in the redesign that produced Mohawk 2.0.

Back to the show! By the time we get to Veronica’s Dominant fan dance, EA has removed the armor corset completely in the interim to prepare for the Girls! Girls! Girls! costume change. After Scavenger, the entire cast changes into Asylum Inmate Rags to perform Gaslight and The Key, and then changes back into full costume for the finale. Emilie wears the full FLAG ensemble from previous tours to close out the show, with varying headdresses. 

But I’m skipping over something important.

The Scavenger.

Inspired by Jim Henson’s The Dark Crystal, The Scavenger, a vulture-esque representation of Dr. Greavsely, appeared onstage for Scavenger. 

“This is the start of the original costume @maggotmagpie wears in our show, the one Greavesly wears in #AsylumMusical will be bonkers…” - EA on the Scavenger (February 7, 2016)
EA on Twitter/Twitpic 2012 (x)

The Scavenger was usually worn by Maggots as part of a stilt-walking performance, but if the venue couldn’t or wouldn’t allow for stunts onstage, Emilie would appear alone in the costume for the number. 

Scavenger has plenty of different “shows” (A show, B show, and C show for my theme park friends), with “A Show” being Captain Maggot on stilts.

Note: The Atlanta show featured here is a bit strange, as it uses the Stage Screen and the Asylum Bars during a tour that doesn’t feature the former. Emilie also isn’t in the normal costume for this number, using a personal scarf to cover her bloomers and bra.

“B Show” would be Emilie performing as the Scavenger, due to venue restrictions. This was actually the way Scavenger debuted, until Maggot’s first performance later in the tour. (See pictures and even more info here.)

“C Show” would be Moth’s performance in the final set of Fight Like A Girl tours, as seen below:

(There’s also “D Show,” (ha) which is this random dude performing as The Scavenger. I’ve yet to figure this out, but my guess is it was a technician stepping in at the last moment or a friend of EA from Oakland.)

Last, but not least, are the Asylum Rags. You’d think there wouldn’t be much to say here, but there is. Click on the continue link below to learn more about tattered costumes and the rest of the FLAG era, because Tumblr only allows 10 pictures per post.

Remember to visit Part III and enter our giveaway! Ends 12/1/19.

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CORSETS AND STRIPED STOCKINGS: OUTFITTING THE ASYLUM FOR WAYWARD VICTORIAN GIRLS by She Fights Like A Girl

These articles are best viewed on desktop, but are mobile friendly. Please excuse any strange formatting on your phone browser or the Tumblr app.

PART IV: WAYWARD VICTORIAN GIRLS

“Why can I never go back to bed? Who's is the voice ringing in my head? Where is the sense in these desperate dreams? Why should I wake when I'm half past dead?” - 4 o’Clock (2007)

The Gate Tour, which featured a short set of European-exclusive dates in late 2008, was the first notable tone shift in the Opheliac tours. With Vecona’s departure from all things Asylum after The Plague Tour, new costumes were debuted and the Crumpet line-up changed. The Naughty Veronica, Captain Maggot, the Blessed Contessa, and Aprella became the main line-up through 2009 (with some appearances by Little Miss Sugarless).

Most notably, we see the introduction of the third white heart corset, as Vecona’s costumes had been auctioned to fans on eBay. 

EA Heart Corset / Third White Heart Corset, various sets, 2008-2011

More detail on this look later. 

Then there’s a one-tour-only appearance of The Gate “corset” (a possibly-pleather torso wrap that went over a corset).

And how could I forget? There’s also the Rat Queen herself!

While this particular costume has a deeper history than what I’ll talk about (which you can read about here), it’s most indicative of the tone shift in shows. “4 o’Clock” had been performed in almost every tour previously, but this was the first instance of a song being assigned a character. Not just Emilie singing it and the Crumpets playing along in their on-stage world, but the image of a rat crawling out of the Asylum; Emilie embodying a pivotal character from her book and letting the rats out to play. There’s structure here, matched with a more solid sort of storytelling.

The style of the Rat Queen changes from tour to tour. The mask-slash-headpiece gained more decorations, sparkles, and stones as tours went on, and the original corset with white stripes and a white heart (seen above) was later toned down to a grey-only design (seen below). Ear headbands from previous tours were used, as well as the rat tail; decorative sleeve parts were changed and remade between tours.

Emilie Autumn by Scott Legato (2011, right) and detail shots from 2012 eBay listing (left).
The Rat Queen and accessories through various tours (2008-2012)

The following tour was called “The Gate II,” as it almost immediately followed the former and didn’t need much distinction. Some pictures from that tour are featured above. There isn’t much notable change in costume design during this tour, but it is the beginning of what I’ll call SparkleGate, because everything that could go through a Bedazzler did.

Then, in late 2009, the Asylum as we knew it was turned upside down by a rather sudden shift in management. Emilie split with Trisol Records and thus ended a very large and lengthy chapter of her career, going on to re-release Opheliac under a new label, The End Records. This double disk re-release came complete with a new photo shoot by Don Scott, usually known as “The End Photoshoot,” or “Opheliac Industrial.”

The same outfit was featured in book readings preceding her next tour, Opheliac’s first North and South American tour, “The Key.”

The overall design concept becomes considerably more glam (see: SparkleGate) than steampunk-goth, while the set remained relatively the same as tours past. The Bloody Crumpets continued wearing costumes similar or the same as tours past. It’s not until Opheliac’s final tour, The Door, that we see the full sparkle of the Asylum’s glam phase.

The SparkleGlam Corset. Or, as it was more commonly referred to, the KinKats Ensemble. 

Again, the individual parts that make up this ensemble aren’t new. In typical EA style, this corset is a piece from former tours that was re-purposed and accosted with Swarovski crystals. 

This full ensemble made its debut in two parts: the KinKats photoshoot and the Medical Burlesque Performance. (See the whole burlesque performance here.) Fans who’ve been here for a while might remember this as the pasties and/or “GlitterTits” phase (roughly 2010 to 2011), when the fandom was in a constant turmoil over Twitter Rants and Playboy blurbs. 

By the time this ensemble it made its way off magazine covers and to stage, it had changed slightly in the bra, accessory, and wig department, and would continue to do so between tour legs (European, South and North American). But it was always the same general idea: pink, sparkly glam-rock. With really tall hats.

The rest of the stage costumes remained largely the same, featuring the Rat Queen (for the final time) and the white heart corset (#3). The Door Tour was advertised as the final tour for Opheliac and became something of a worldwide event, performed in separate legs across the world. By the official end of it, there was only one place left to go.

Australia.

Emilie was invited to perform in The Harvest Festival “Down Under” after The Door Tour had come to a close. The set ended up being a majority of Opheliac songs despite the record’s retirement from tour, but there was one new song that did debut:

Fight Like A Girl.

“It gives me strength to have somebody to fight for; I can never fight for myself, but, for others, I can kill.” -The Asylum for Wayward Victorian Girls (2009)

Up next... PART V: AN ASYLUM MUSICAL

Remember to visit Part III and enter our giveaway! Ends 12/1/19.

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I am giving away my Fight Like A Girl album free today, so please take it and share it with someone you think it might empower.
Here is the download link: http://buff.ly/2fVw7kD
If you are scared, if you are sad, if you are hopeless, sing with me.
If you believe that sexism and sexual assault and racism and homophobia and climate change are not only real but that they are NOT good things (because to much of America they are all "just fine" things), sing with me.
Stay enraged, stay loud, and stay you.
One foot in front of the other.
~ EA
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