You’ve known her as Miss Nude World.
You’ve seen her crowned among Australia’s most awarded showgirls. You’ve watched her earn nominations as Exotic Dancer of the Year.
And you’ve witnessed the woman who refused to fade.
For more than 15 years, Cherry Pop hasn’t simply survived the stage — she has owned it. In an industry where careers can flicker out like cheap fairy lights, she built something stronger: a legacy forged through reinvention, resilience and undeniable presence.
Cherry Pop is more than a performer. She is a multitalented creative force — musician, producer, creative director, costume visionary, circus artist and storyteller. One moment, she commands the room with a saxophone in hand; the next, she defies gravity high above the crowd. Her artistry moves effortlessly between music and movement, spectacle and soul.
Her roots in strip performance and adult entertainment were never about shock value. They were about command — about owning space, embracing power and vulnerability and walking that razor-thin line in six-inch heels. In doing so, she helped redefine the modern Australian showgirl, blending technical mastery with theatrical depth.
And now, she returns.
Cherry Pop steps back into the spotlight as a lead performer in Infamous The Show, under the iconic Infamous Big Top at the Adelaide Fringe Festival, running through March 22.
Infamous is not your grandmother’s circus. It’s sweat and sequins. Velvet wrapped around danger. A high-octane fusion of circus, cabaret and raw energy. At its heart stands Cherry Pop — saxophone blazing, presence undeniable — weaving bold blues rhythms with sharp character comedy and magnetic stage control. She teases, disarms and captivates, holding audiences exactly where she wants them.
Fifteen years. Countless awards. Endless reinvention.
From strip club stages to international tours, from intimate cabaret rooms to festival big tops, Cherry Pop proves that longevity isn’t luck — it’s craft, grit and fearless evolution.
Now, beneath the lights of Adelaide Fringe, she rises once again.
The music swells.
The crowd leans forward.
And Cherry Pop reminds us why true icons never disappear — they return louder than ever.




























