Fashion Patrick Kelly's designs have been described as camp and "Radical Cheek" for his ironic use of bold colours, antiquated or incongruous styles, and reclaimed racist symbols. He designed a banana dress in reference to
Josephine Baker and dedicated a whole collection to her. He used mismatched buttons when creating his own take on a
Chanel suit. By the time he died in 1990, he had dressed noted queer icons such as
Grace Jones and
Isabella Rossellini. His grave is marked with a stylized
golliwog—a reclaimed symbol for his label—featuring big gold earrings and bright red lips. The show featured tributes to
queer and camp figures, including a bronze statue of
the Vatican's
Belvedere Antinous, portraits of
Louis XIV and
Oscar Wilde, and celebrations of Black and Latinx
ball culture and the
Harlem Renaissance. Lady Gaga's entrance took 16 minutes, as she arrived to the gala alongside an entourage of five dancers carrying umbrellas, a make up artist, and a personal photographer to snap pictures of Gaga's poses. Gaga arrived in a hot pink
Brandon Maxwell gown with a 25-foot train and went through a series of four "reveals," paying homage to
drag culture, Other notable ensembles included
Katy Perry wearing a gown that looked like a chandelier, designed by
Moschino; and
Kacey Musgraves appearing as a life-size
Barbie, also by Moschino.
Film s, like
Douglas Sirk's
Written on the Wind (1956), have acquired
cult status because of their unintentional camp content. Some writers have even considered the genre to be "cinema made for and by
gay men." The 1972 musical
Cabaret is also seen as an example of the aesthetic, with film critic Esther Leslie describing the camp in the film thus:Camp thrives on tragic gestures, on lament at the transience of life, on an excess of sentiment, an ironic sensibility that art and artifice is preferable to nature and health, in a Wildean sense.Australian writer/director Baz Luhrmann's
Red Curtain Trilogy, in particular the film
Strictly Ballroom (1992), has been described as camp. The term camp is also used prominently in the horror genre, with examples including
Killer Klowns from Outer Space and the
Evil Dead franchise. Since the 2000s, other horror films reported as camp are
ThanksKilling (2008),
Drag Me to Hell (2009),
The Burning Dead (2015),
M3GAN (2022), and ''
Hemet, or the Landlady Don't Drink Tea'' (2023).
Literature Dandyism is often seen as a precursor to camp, especially as embodied in
Oscar Wilde and his work. The character of Amarinth in
Robert Hichens's
The Green Carnation (1894), based on Wilde, uses "camp coding" in his "effusive and inverted" use of language. In the American writer
Susan Sontag's 1964 essay
Notes on "Camp", Sontag emphasized the embrace of artifice, frivolity, naivety, pretentiousness, offensiveness, and excess as key elements of camp. Examples cited by Sontag included
Tiffany lamps, the drawings of
Aubrey Beardsley, Tchaikovsky's ballet
Swan Lake, and Japanese science fiction films such as
Rodan and
The Mysterians of the 1950s. In Mark Booth's 1983 book
Camp, he defines camp as "to present oneself as being committed to the marginal with a commitment greater than the marginal merits". He makes a distinction between genuine
camp, and
camp fads and fancies — things that are not intrinsically camp, but display artificiality, stylization, theatricality, naivety, sexual ambiguity, tackiness, poor taste, stylishness, or camp people, and thus appeal to them. In his 1984 book
Camp: The Lie That Tells The Truth, writer and artist
Philip Core describes
Jean Cocteau's autobiography as "the definition of camp". In 1993, journalist
Russell Davies published comedian
Kenneth Williams's diaries. Williams's diary entry for 1 January 1947 reads: "Went to Singapore with Stan—very camp evening, was followed, but tatty types so didn't bother to make overtures."
Music American singer and actress
Cher is one of the artists who received the title of "Queen of Camp" through her colourful on-stage fashion and live performances. She gained this status in the 1970s when she launched her
variety shows in collaboration with the costume designer
Bob Mackie and became a constant presence on American prime-time television.
Madonna is also considered camp and according to educator
Carol Queen, her "whole career up to and including
Sex has depended heavily on camp imagery and camp understandings of gender and sex". Madonna has also been named "Queen of Camp". In public and on stage,
Dusty Springfield developed an image supported by her peroxide blonde
beehive hairstyle,
evening gowns, and heavy make-up that included her much-copied "panda eye" look. Springfield borrowed elements of her look from blonde glamour queens of the 1950s, such as
Brigitte Bardot and
Catherine Deneuve. This, her singing style and her sexuality made her a "camp icon" and won her a following in the gay community. Rappers such as
Lil' Kim,
Nicki Minaj and
Cam'ron have all been described as camp, often because of the opulence and winking humour of their personas.
Dapper Dan has been credited with introducing high fashion and camp to hip hop. In pop and rock, musicians
Prince and
Jimi Hendrix have also been called camp because of their flamboyance and playful use of artifice. South Korean rapper
Psy, known for his viral internet music videos full of flamboyant dance and visuals, has come to be seen as a 21st-century incarnation of camp style.
Geri Halliwell is recognized as a camp icon for her high camp aesthetics, performance style and kinship with the gay community during her time as a solo artist. Dancer, singer and actress
Josephine Baker has been described as
camp. Her famous banana dress has been noted as particularly camp for its flamboyant, humorous and ironic qualities, as well as the way it makes a political point using outdated but reclaimed imagery.
Katy Perry has also been described as camp, with outlets like
Vogue describing her as another "Queen of Camp". The British tradition of the "
Last Night of the Proms" has been said to glory in "nostalgia, camp, and pastiche".
Camp still forms a strong element in UK culture, and many so-called
gay icons and objects are chosen as such because they are camp, including musicians such as
Elton John,
Kylie Minogue,
Lulu, and
Mika. Musicologist Philip Brett has highlighted campness in the work of
Benjamin Britten and has also argued for a camp reading of French composer
Francis Poulenc's
Concerto for Two Pianos in D minor, noting its combination of a Balinese
gamelan with a sense of "musical resignation and longing".
Photography Thomas Dworzak published a collection of "last portrait" photographs of young
Taliban soldiers about to depart for the front, found in Kabul photo studios. The book, titled
Taliban, attests to a campy aesthetic, quite close to the
gay movement in California or a
Peter Greenaway film.
Television The
Comedy Central television show
Strangers with Candy (1999–2000), starring comedian
Amy Sedaris, was a camp spoof of the
ABC Afterschool Special genre. Inspired by the work of
George Kuchar and his brother
Mike Kuchar,
ASS Studios began making a series of short, no-budget camp films. Their feature film
Satan, Hold My Hand (2013) features many elements recognized in camp pictures. Since 2000, the
Eurovision Song Contest, an annually televised competition of song performers from different countries, has shown an increasing element of camp—since the contest has shown an increasing attraction within the LGBTQ+ communities—in their stage performances. This is especially true during the televised finale, which is screened live across Europe. As it is a visual show, many
Eurovision performances attempt to attract the attention of voters through means other than the music, which sometimes leads to bizarre onstage gimmicks, and what some critics have called "the Eurovision
kitsch drive", with almost cartoonish novelty acts performing.
Theatre Andrew Holleran's 1988 book of essays,
Ground Zero, includes an analysis of "smoldering anarchist of kitsch"
Charles Ludlam—a theatre artist who produced what
Garth Greenwell describes as "extravagant drag epics" with Ridiculous Theatrical Company, until his death of AIDS-related pneumonia in 1987. Greenwell writes: "Holleran's essay is the most concise and profound discussion of camp aesthetics I know." The Australian theatre and opera director
Barrie Kosky is renowned for his use of camp in interpreting the works of the
Western canon, including
Shakespeare,
Wagner,
Molière,
Seneca and
Kafka. His 2006 eight-hour production for the Sydney Theatre Company
The Lost Echo was based on
Ovid's
Metamorphoses and
Euripides's
The Bacchae. In the first act ("The Song of Phaeton"), for instance, the goddess
Juno takes the form of a highly stylized
Marlene Dietrich, and the musical arrangements feature
Noël Coward and
Cole Porter. Kosky's use of camp is also effectively employed to satirize the pretensions, manners, and cultural vacuity of Australia's suburban
middle class, which is suggestive of the style of
Dame Edna Everage. For example, in
The Lost Echo, Kosky employs a chorus of
high school students: one girl in the chorus takes leave from the goddess Diana, and begins to rehearse a dance routine, muttering to herself in a broad Australian accent, "Mum says I have to practice if I want to be on
Australian Idol." In the UK, the
music hall tradition of
pantomime, which often uses drag and other features of
camp, remains a popular form of entertainment for families and young children. Most towns and cities in the UK stage at least one pantomime between November and February, drawing in an estimated £146 million in 2014. == Distinguishing between kitsch and camp ==