Bruce Ndlovu
POLE dancers Bev and Zoey seem to have broken bread if their shows at Bulawayoa��s strip club Private Lounge are anything to talk about.
Perhaps they first want to create a market before beefing once more. Ita��s showbiz after all and the hype means good business. They managed to pull off incident free shows at Private Lounge where they were been headline acts for the first two Fridays at the joint.
According to Zoey (ABOVE) herself, relations and tensions between her and Bev have normalized, as they are now united by a common purpose.
a�?Things between me and Bev are normal. As much as people would love to believe that we are always fighting that is not the case. We really have no problem with each other now,a�? she said in an interview with B-Metro.
This version of relations between the two is also supported by Beva��s manager Harper Mapimhizde who confirms that tensions between the two have thawed.
a�?The two might have hiccups here and there but for the most part things are normal between them. Things have normalized over time and there is peace,a�? said Mapimhidze. Although things might be smooth sailing for the duo at the moment, Mapimhidze suggests that a storm is never far from the horizon.
a�?They are both people affiliated to me. I always see them together on stage and everything is normal but I really cana��t put my finger on where the differences start from,a�? he said.
Before the opening of Private Lounge, in September last year, Bev suggested that strippers should be arrested while earlier this year Zoey also denigrated their abilities as dancers while blaming clubs like Forty40 for empowering them.
The coming of Private Lounge seems to have switched their stances.



