, performs "Bye Bye Baby" on
The Girlie Show World Tour in 1993 On September 2, 1993, Madonna opened the
1993 MTV Video Music Awards performing "Bye Bye Baby". She cavorted on stage with three scantily clad women in a brothel-style setting, dressed in tuxedos and top hats, in a choreographed, highly sexual routine. According to choreographer
Alex Magno, he wanted to do "
Justify My Love" or "The Beast Within" on MTV, but Madonna decided that they might be too controversial for live television and abandoned the idea. Nevertheless, "Bye Bye Baby" was chosen and performed with the choreography they had been practicing for
The Girlie Show World Tour, since it represented the whole idea behind the tour.
Louis Virtel from
The Backlot ranked the performance at number eight on a list for "Madonna's 11 Greatest VMA Moments". He praised Madonna's rendition of the song at the Video Music Awards, calling it "a hell of a VMA performance" and a "killer cinematic throwback". The performance of the song on the Girlie Show tour featured Madonna and her backup singers, DeLory and Haris, dressed as
Victorian gentlemen in masculine outfits, including
top hats and
tailcoat. The whole ensemble was an homage to actress
Marlene Dietrich in the 1930 American romance drama film
Morocco, with the singer carrying a cane in her hands. The main inspiration behind this segment was 1900s
showgirls and Japanese all-female cross dressing dance company,
Takarazuka Revue. Madonna transformed her voice into that of a
circus ringmaster, introducing the arrival of three female strip-club dancers. A voice-alteration similar to the single was used in the performance. The dance routine revolved around three chairs. The female strippers seduced Madonna and the backup singers, by rubbing against them, holding sexual poses and dominated them, before they took control again. The performance on the November 19, 1993 show at
Sydney Cricket Ground was recorded and released on
VHS and
Laserdisc on April 26, 1994, as
The Girlie Show: Live Down Under. Brett Beemyn noted in his book,
Queer Studies, that Madonna was expanding on the characteristic
butch and femme portrayal with the performance. He added that on a mere glance the performance might appear to be a "typical provoking one" from the singer, but underlying it was a "more complex queer perspective". The butch roles are played by white and African-American women, while the strippers were played by Asian-American women. There are simulations of masturbation and sexual penetration in the performance, while the butch females control the femmes. Beemyn concluded by saying that "the fact that Madonna chose Asian-American women as the femmes reinforces stereotypes of Asian women as the passive, exotic, and feminine 'other'. It also mocks the fact Asian women have been exploited as 'comfort girls' for American servicemen, therefore, Madonna made a statement against male chauvinism, in her queer way." For Gerry Bloustien, author of
Girl Making, the performances of both "Bye Bye Baby" and "Like a Virgin" on the tour emphasized the "blurring of gender and representation". ==Track listings and formats==