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Idol Gossip

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Drag Idol Admiral Duncan

THIS IS LONDON CALLING! Yeah, Electro Velvet nil points, Big Ben, jellied eels, royal baby blah blah blah and all that palaver. Basically, through my incoherent ramblings, what I’m trying to say is, all of the results and goss this week come from within the M25. So settle down with a nice box of fried chicken and we can get started…

By Jason Reid


Halfway to Heaven put two acts through from their second heat last week: Chamonix Aspen and Shae den Freude. At the Admiral Duncan it was a packed house for heat three, hosted by Son Of a Tutu. So much variety in this heat. It must’ve been a hard decision for those judges up in that green room, quaffing vodka and sucking on fags…. BUT they didn’t keep the Dunky revellers waiting too long, announcing Sum-Ting Wong as the winner.


It’s been a good few weeks for Miss Wong, someone who’s still very new to it all, “Drag Idol is my first real dabble into drag as a performer” she told me, “and it’s so much harder than it looks! Being funny is genuinely difficult for me. But I’m learning so much about everything.”


The Two Brewers also held their third heat last week, hosted by Idol organiser La Voix. The shimmering Jade Justine took the win, securing her place in the heat final there. Meanwhile over at the RVT, with SKY News in attendance, an emotional Shakkonda won, and had half the judges holding back the tears (Yes, even me!) Finally, at Central Station’s heat on Sunday, Carmelle Toe was given the all the clear to spread her wings even further.


Speaking to me post win, Carmelle was rather taken aback, “I was shocked to have won if I’m being truly honest, I was the last to perform on the night and all the other acts who were on before me had set the bar very high.”


Congrats to all the winners this week. The heat finals are shaping up nicely now. I’ll be popping up on the RVT judging panel this Thursday as usual. If you see me, throw a sambucca down my throat… TA!


Introducing James & Chris

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Hi, I’m James. You may know me from stumbling into me on a dancefloor. Possibly you’ve heard me laughing loudly in a smoking area, or perhaps you’ve tolerated me telling sub-par jokes stolen from Will & Grace to small groups of disinterested people as my alter ego, Dom Top.

I’ve been tooling around the London gay scene for over seven years now, falling off bar stools in Soho, shaking my body under the Vauxhall lights, and strutting the streets of East London, all clad in a selection of highly misadvised outfits.

I am passionate about all aspects of our gay scene: the clubs, the bars, the music, the parties, the community and the causes. But the thing that drives me most is the people. You won’t find a more diverse cross-section of captivating individuals anywhere else. It’s what led me to QX, where I’ve worked as everything from an advertising executive to a staff writer, until finally settling into the role of Scene Editor this year.

Our gay scene, like the NHS and Dolly Parton, is something to be treasured and preserved. As far as I’m concerned, the London gay community is a family. A much extended, very dramatic, sometimes dysfunctional and often highly incestuous family, but a family nonetheless. Instead of christenings and Christmases, we have parties and Prides.

I want you to think of QX as your weekly family album, if you will. As your new Scene Editor, I’ll try to make sure I choose the best photos.
See you on that dancefloor.

James Egan, Scene Editor


Hey! I’m Chris and I’m your new features editor. When I pitched to Cliff about having my work appear in the magazine I clearly got more than I bargained for.

In my freelance work I’ve covered a range of issues that affect the gay community, from the impact of cuts and closures, to the plight of asylum seekers and those living in countries that criminalise their right to exist. I’ve written regularly for VICE, The Independent, The Advocate and others, tackling all things LGBT.

If there’s something you want to see covered in the magazine – a story, issue, person, etc. – then just drop me an email (or tweet me @ChrisPJGodfrey if that’s more your thing). QX is already a great platform for raising the issues that need to be raised, for celebrating the scene in all its sequined glory and for giving a voice to those who need to be heard. I’ll be sure to continue in this vein.

If you see me out and about be sure to come and say hi!

Chris Godfrey, Features Editor

The Queens of NYC

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peppermint_sherry vine

They are two of the biggest and most well known names on the New York drag scene, and make for the most unlikely pairing, but it’s one that works beautifully. Sherry Vine, a name every drag fan knows, has produced some of the funniest parody videos in recent years, while Miss Peppermint is one of New York’s hottest and fiercest divas. They took time out to speak to Jason Reid this week, ahead of their European mini-tour… 

Good to chat to you both, it’s been a while. You’re performing at XXL this weekend, what kind of fabulous madness can we expect? 

SV: Well, it’s Bear Pride and I’m Goldilocks, so I’ll definitely have to hide my honey [laughs]. Peppermint and I have some new duets and hilarious solo numbers ready for you guys.

MP: Yeah, we’ve been rehearsing brand new music for weeks. Not sure how it will sound after our red-eye flight though!

SV: One thing is for certain, the show will be high energy, naughty and fabulous!

You’re only doing one London show on this trip, right? 

SV: Yes, sadly. We’re on a mini-tour of Europe, so it’ll be show, Craigslist, back to the airport and off again.

MP: Hopefully we’ll find time to catch up with our girls, Charlie Hides, Jodie Harsh and Sheila Simmonds, and also dash over to hear Q Boy play on Friday night.

Sounds like a hectic schedule. Like you said, Sherry, the show is part duo/part solo, and as a duo you have a great connection onstage, even though your performing styles are very different. What do you admire about each other as performers? 

SV: First of all, Peppermint is THE sweetest queen on the scene. She’s always up and happy, so being onstage with her is a joy. And the bitch is funny! She really keeps me on my toes. I like that.

MP: We are sisters and have the perfect balance of flavours, but you’re right, we are like day and night. I like to think that I’m the yin to her yang, the ebony to her ivory, the baby new year to her father time. I think you get it, right?

Totally! How would you describe the New York drag scene right now? 

SV: Like London, it’s so diverse that there’s no one word description. We have our glitter queens, glamour queens, bearded queens, you name it we have it. It’s exciting because every night of the week there are numerous shows on now.

MP: And it’s a a true sisterhood. There are tons of new girls thanks to shows like Drag Race, and the scene is constantly changing with the new girls coming and going, but Sherry and I have both been part of it for centuries.

“I like to think that I’m the yin to her yang, the ebony to her ivory, the baby new year to her father time. I think you get it, right?”

Talking of Drag Race, Peppermint, when we last spoke, you said the time wasn’t right for you to do it, would you consider doing it now? 

MP: Drag Race is looking more and more appetizing to me. But I think the time has finally come… for Drag Race UK!

Oh we could spend the whole day talking about that. And people are at the moment… So moving on, what are your favourite NYC bars/clubs? 

SV: I love Industry and Therapy, not just because I work there, but because they both have shows every night and are very supportive of the queens. They nurture new talent and have respect for the elderly queens – like Lady Bunny.

MP: Mine are Ritz and Therapy and it’s totally not because I have very successful long running shows there on Tuesdays with Sherry and Thursdays with Cazwell. Not at all. Honestly…

Drag is thriving right now here in the UK, is it the same over there?

MP: Not since we left to come here, but it’ll be vibrant again as soon as we return. I’m kidding, the scene is really bustling and blossoming. There was a palpable dead zone for a while; people were asking “where are the new girls?, but that’s all turned around. Everything has a cycle. Including Sherry. She has major P.M.S cramps right now.

SV: [laughs] BITCH!

We should wrap up, before Sherry’s cramps get any worse. But first, tell me a secret…

SV: I’m a sci-fi geek! Sssssh.

MP: Mine is not that bad, thankfully. I once had a warrant out for my arrest, for unpaid child support! That was until the police realised they got my name and social security number mixed up with some deadbeat.

XXL Bear Pride is Saturday 23rd May at Pulse (No. 1 Invicta Plaza, South Bank, SE1 9UF) from 10pm-7am. Tickets £16/£9 members. www.xxl-london.com

The Glory Needs You!

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jonny woo

Jonny Woo and John Sizzle, The Glory’s answer to Michael Aspel and Anthea Redfern, are on the look out for Mr Glory 2015. Have you got the style, sex appeal and talent to snatch the crown and win £1000? Here are the categories and some hints on how to impress the judges:

Evening Wear

It’s your take on the classic tuxedo. Nothing says suave and sophisticated like black tie and tails. Maybe you’ve got other ideas though. We might be a bit old school down The Glory but can you shake it up with a modern take on this classic? Punk it up? Grunge it out? I’m partial to a time-honoured cummerbund and patent dress shoe. Maybe you know different.

Hints:Check the attitude in the cloakroom. Life wasn’t meant to be taken too seriously. You can still be a man in high heels!

Swim Wear

No beauty pageant is complete without the obligatory swimwear section. It’s a basic category where if your conversation won’t sparkle, you can let the body do the talking. This is East London though: we welcome all shapes and sizes and are as partial to a fresh, lithe, young Dalstonite as we are to a bear or muscle god. Speedos, trunks or bikini and heels. Whatever you like to get wet in.

Party Piece

Call it a talent if you like. A unique skill? How do you show off? Maybe you’ve got a trumpet in your wardrobe that hasn’t been blown for a while. Karaoke king? Secretly a Strictly Ballroom superstar? How long can you stand on your hands? That thing with the ping pong balls? Bring it on! No rules, no expectations really. We are up for whatever. You have 3 minutes and we want you to impress us.

Kill it in these three categories and walk off in the final with £1000!

• Mr Glory begins at The Glory (281 Kingsland Road, E2 8AS) Wednesday 3rd June until the end of July.
• Email info@theglory.co to register

Things That Make You Go BANG!

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BANG BOYS 2

It’s been almost a year since BANG! blew the doors off it’s first party, and since then, the name is rapidly becoming synonymous with something that comes out better than expected, kind of like “woohoo!” or “yassss”.

In order to utilize this term properly, the Bang! kids have provided some examples of how you can use it at their next event, The Big Bang at Bankside Space on June 13th.
So FAMILIARISE YOURSELVES with the following…

1. When you turn up at the door, your name is on the list and JJ Clarke gives you a cheeky smile and stamps your hand… BANG!

2. When you walk in and that really hot guy you’ve been stalking online is at the bar, looking better than in his profile picture… BANG!

3. When you decide to take it to the dancefloor and any of the hot Bang! DJs are either playing your favourite jam or an amazing song you have never heard before. You get goosebumps all over, lift your hands up in the air and someone grabs your bum from behind… BANG!

4. And it turns out to be the guy you were stalking online doing the grabbing! BANG!

5. When you start kissing and the feeling is like a mix of kittens, unicorns and rainbows… BANG!

6. When Alexander Han comes to join you for a cheeky dance and compliments you on what you’re wearing and gives you a limited edition t-shirt. BANG!

7. When you decide to get an Uber home with your beau, it’s there instantly – playing fun music and not Heart FM, the journey home is less than five pounds and the driver asks you how long you’ve been dating and says you make a great couple… triple BANG!

8. When you stop to buy drinks at the corner shop and, despite being in your 30’s, you get asked for ID! BANG!

9. When you come home and you DID think of tidying up before leaving, the place looks great, your flatmate and his boring boyfriend are out of town and not on the sofa catching up on House of Cards. BANG!

10. When he pulls his trousers down and it looks like he doesn’t skip leg day in the gym and the whole package looks like Christmas in June…. BANG!

11. When you …BANG! And its like BANG! BANG! BAAAANG!

12. Oh, and we have to add one more; Caitlyn Jenner! SHE BANGS! Respect.

• The Big Bang is at Bankside Space (32 Southwark Bridge Road, SE1 9EY) on Saturday June 13th, 10pm-6am. Tickets £12 advance.

RUpresentin’ the UK

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All rights reserved to markstoreyphotography.com

To coincide with the launch of RuPaul’s Drag Race on TruTV, twenty one shortlisted drag artists gathered in the West End two weeks ago to perform in front of Ru herself, for the chance to be crowned the first UK Drag Race ambassador. It was a fiercely fought competition with queens from every corner of the land sashaying to stay.

Our very own La Voix placed second overall, but it was The Vivienne from Liverpool who claimed the title. We sent Jason Reid off for a chat with her this week…

First things first, condragulations on winning the competition. How does it feel now you’ve had some time for it to sink in? 

Thank you so much, Jason! At the moment I feel like I’m in a crazy tucked up dream. But it feels great!

Did you approach the competition with a game plan or strategy? 

My only game plan was ‘do you!’ And hopefully they’ll love you. And I think it worked.

It must have been quite a surreal experience, especially with RuPaul right in front of you. What was going through your mind as you progressed through the rounds? 

Surprisingly, I was very calm. I never suffer from stage fright or anything like that. But I was conscious that this was RuPaul. And that’s BIG! I just kept the positive thoughts flowing, and Ru’s words: ‘don’t fuck it up’ ringing through my ears.

So now you’re the official ambassador, what are you looking forward to most about your new role? Flying to LA must be one of them, right?

I’ve been dreaming about going to LA for ages. And now it’s going to become a reality. West Hollywood is like the holy grail of drag. I can’t wait to meet the gorgeous pit crew member Miles Davis Moody. But the main aim, of course, is to show the UK that the drag queens are here.

Away from Drag Race, tell us a bit about yourself and your act.

Well I’ve been doing drag since I was 16, so for around seven years now. I’ve performed all over the world but my heart belongs to my home city of Liverpool. In my act you can expect celebrity impersonation, live vocals and I’ll even take an angle grinder to the stage now and again.

Liverpool must be very proud of you. 

The support from everyone there has been simply amazing! Liverpool is the greatest city in the world!

And you perform there regularly? 

Yes. I perform and DJ at Superstar Boudoir on Monday and Wednesday nights.

 

“I just kept the positive thoughts flowing, and Ru’s words: ‘don’t fuck it up’ ringing through my ears”

 

You come across as a very humble person/performer too. Is that something that’s important to you? 

I think it’s extremely important to remain humble in order to let people in, and I love people! I’ve got time for everyone. Negativity gets you nowhere.

Good attitude to have. So there’s been lots of talk about a UK version of Drag Race, and surely you’d be one of the first names on the list for that now. Would you do it? 

OH MY! Of course I’d do it. This is the MAIN goal.

Do you think the format would need to be adapted for a UK version? 

No, not at all. Keep it the same as in the US.

If it did happen, who else would you like to see in the line up?  

Everybody from the ambassador competition, because they all kick ass! And my local girls, Tiara and Stella. They’d give them what for.

Finally, when are we gonna see you back in London. Any plans? 

Soon, hopefully. I love London but my club residences and heart is in Liverpool! But I must say, Porn Idol with our Baga is a hoot! So I may have to visit more often.

Fitladz East

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Fitladz East

Top up your Oyster cards and pack your jockstrap – Fitladz are going East! After their spunktacular success south of the river, they’ve upped sticks to a sexy new crowd and an awesome new venue in Farringdon.  We asked Fitladz head honcho Steve Darragh what to expect from the repackaging of the steamily salacious night that took Vauxhall by storm…

What can Fitladz fans expect from the new location?

It’ll be different, but we’ll ensure that it’s just as much fun. If not even more!

What’s the venue like?

It’s quite classy but intimate, with great facilities [laughs]

Care to elaborate?

Oh, I think people will know what I mean.

Have you got anything special planned?

We have! Look out for upcoming theme nights weekly, including things like Stripladz, Under 25 Ladz and even Gingerladz! 

Is sportswear still encouraged?

We always encourage sportswear, because grey trackies are dangerous in my opinion! And we always encourage anything that’s dangerous.

Grey trackies are pretty much the bread and butter of Fitladz.

They are! So they’re always welcomed and encouraged, but there’s no strict dress code.

Do you think the move will change anything about Fitladz?

We think so, change is good! As long as there’s sexy guys here, put together in one place, we’re sure everyone will be happy. We’ve concentrated primarily on the sexy tech-house music, so we’ve got Steven Geller, PJ, Riano, they’ll be our core DJs. We’ve got some plans for big monthly events too in the future.

Do you think moving Fitladz East will bring in even more fit lads?

We hope so! Keeping our fingers and legs crossed!

What are your hopes for the new venue?

We hope everyone enjoys it for what it is: a sexy bar with hot ladz.

Plus you’re open seven days a week now! You’re gonna need a lot of stamina for that I’m guessing!

Well, I don’t think I’ll be here every night, seven days a week… I mean, I’ve got a lot of stamina but not even MY sex drive can push to that level!

• Fitladz East launches on Friday June 5th at 117 Charterhouse Street, EC1M 6AA, 6pm-6am. Free entry. Men only!

Why the Taboo Around Sex and Age?

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Adam Weymouth shadows performance artist Tammy Whynot as she tours the UK with her latest show, What Tammy Needs To Know About Getting Old and Having Sex.

As the lights come up, Tammy WhyNot (Lois Weaver) is sat at the front of the stage, dressed in a boiler-suit, melancholic. Now in her sixties, she confides, she’s been finding her urges just aren’t what they used to be. “I used to think I’d always be like one of those Duracell bunnies, hopping from bed to bed,” she sighs. “I thought I’d be doing it on my deathbed. But these days, I just don’t feel like it.”

Then the country kicks in, a pulsing bass line, and Tammy slips out of her boiler suit and into sequins. She is planning her comeback album, she tells us. It’s going to be about sex and getting old, and she needs to do some research. Why the taboo around sex and age? Why can’t we speak about old people having sex? Do we really think they’re not?

Tammy, so the story goes, was a famous Country and Western singer until, in a moment of clarity, she packed it all in to become a famous lesbian performance artist. For the past few months Tammy has been on a tour of the UK with her latest show, What Tammy Needs To Know About Getting Old and Having Sex.

Weaver herself has been a leading light in the performance art world for more than 30 years, and more recently a Guggenheim wining artist and a Professor of Contemporary Performance at Queen Mary’s University. Speaking to me after the show, Weaver describes Tammy as her superhero, the side of her personality that is “not afraid to fail.” She has an infectious curiosity, an upfront, unashamed naivety, and people delight in opening up to her.

“There’s this protection not just from a subject like sex, but from any kind of real emotion, or real life experience, once we get to a certain age.”

Each city she performs in, she spends the days leading up to the show in care homes and drop-in centres, talking to the residents about their sex lives. We hear from a 67-year-old with three boyfriends she found on the internet, a man recently widowed and an 84-year-old with a partner 18 years her junior who is still having regular sex. For us young folk, it’s enlightening. Weaver believes that we don’t talk about sex nearly enough, however old we are. To hear these conversations is to understand that each of us is a complete and complex individual, that all of us share the same desires and fears, whether we’re twenty years old or eighty.

In Croatia she lived, as Tammy, in a retirement home for a week. “I found out they were all doing it,” she laughs. “Definitely doing it. In the hallways, in the elevators.” In Britain she has found getting access much harder, getting fobbed off by managers that the residents are not interested, but when she does get inside she discovers just the opposite. “A lot of the women had all read 50 Shades of Grey,” she says. “They all really wanted to talk about that. Maybe they weren’t having sex, but they weren’t dead.”

One care home she visited had a policy of not informing the residents when one of their members died. “There’s this protection not just from a subject like sex, but from any kind of real emotion, or real life experience, once we get to a certain age,” she says. “We don’t really treat people like elders. We treat people like people being finished with life.”

And that, for Weaver, is where the silence surrounding sex and age becomes so damaging, because when we talk about sex, it is not just about sex that we are talking. “The fact that I’m there to talk about sex, and that I’m a queer woman, that gives a sort of permissiveness,” she says. “Everyone likes to get a bit naughty.” But in creating that relaxed, accepting space, it allows for other conversations about the fundamentals of our lives. “It’s about opening up that possibility for people to talk about loss, or desire, or longing, or intimacy.”

In the end, it’s about learning to accept ourselves, whatever stage of life we’re at. I ask her how the conversations and performances have helped changed her own attitudes. “It’s made me feel more relaxed about sex,” she says. “I held onto a tension about it as I began to lose my libido. I thought is there something wrong with me? How can I fix this? And now I feel more open. I’ve let go of that, and consequently I do have more sexual impulses. I can feel a shift in my own ageism, of who and what I find attractive. Including myself.”

Tammy, it seems, is back in town.


Bourgeois & Maurice and David Hoyle: Middle of the Road

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Bourgeois & Maurice

If you’ve finally had enough of queer culture, if you’re bored of having to think all the time and if you’re still looking for some closure from that election result, then it’s probably worth checking out Bourgeois & Maurice and David Hoyle’s collaborative show, Middle of the Road at the Soho Theatre.

 


A celebration of all things bland and popular, it’s a sarcastic attack on the mainstream, a musical exploration of what it means to be beige and a brilliantly devised takedown of everyone from Kim Kardashian to that cheating mutt from Britain’s Got Talent. Even the really, really, really lovely Princess Charlotte is a target.

The show opens with David Hoyle’s keynote speech, delivered with all the slickness of an abstract TED talk from an Apple executive. Among other things we’re told to not ask questions and not think too much. With Hoyle at the reigns, it’s a tempting offer.

The musical numbers throughout are irresistible; everyone from shy tories, the commentariat, and anyone who just can’t resist giving you their opinion comes under fire from the trio’s acerbic, sardonic wit. The angry ode to the world of comment sections and Twitter is particularly hilarious for anyone who’s spent time in either of those tedious echo chambers.

As you would expect, trying to define the show is a nightmare. It’s a mishmash of genres and set pieces; there’s portraiture, there’s a chat show, there’s numerous costume changes and at one point we’re literally watching paint dry (and cheering it on too). But whatever the trio are turning their hand at the performance remains hilarious and thoughtful throughout.

Their decision to appeal to the conventional may have been the sarcastic premise for a deliciously cynical show, but anyone capable of making Coldplay, James Blunt and Mumford and Sons interesting deserves to go mainstream.

 

• Soho Theatre, 21 Dean Street, London W1D 3NE

Box Office: 020 7478 0100 / Ends 13th June

www.sohotheatre.com

The Black Cap of Black Pride

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Black Pride

UK Black Pride will be celebrating its tenth festival this year. Chris Godfrey speaks with the carnival’s director, Phyll Opoku-Gyimah, about why it’s still such an important event in the LGBT calendar.

 


Hey Phyll, how is preparation going for UK Black Pride 2015?

You know what, it’s always exciting because you get so many people from the community emailing saying they want to perform, they want to act, they want to do some spoken word, they want to volunteer. And this year we’ve had quite a number of lone people say they want to come but it’ll be their first pride and they don’t want to be by themselves.

So this is great! We’ve got them helping and staffing the stall for Stonewall, or working with St Mungo’s just so their journey in terms of their very first pride is one that feels safe to them, where they don’t feel isolated, and one where it’s exciting and they can have a shared commonality with others who they wouldn’t have necessarily met.

For someone who’s never been before it will feel like a place they’ve been before because everybody is so welcoming, there’s no drama, there’s lot’s of excitement, great food and drink (if they do drink) and entertainment in abundance. But importantly they have the feel of family where they won’t feel lonely.

This year marks a decade from the first event, how have things changed?

Well, there will be more people for a start! There’s more love and passion and drive for people to come together to come collectively to do more. We’ve noticed over the years more people have bought into the idea that there should be a space for BME people to celebrate their achievements and their friends. So let’s get behind it and support it. Because we understand that solidarity is important. It’s about learning and if we don’t learn then we don’t grow. And that’s probably what will be the difference.

Why do you think there’s been this surge in popularity?

When we first started people were like: ‘oh my god, how bloody dare you have a black pride, that’s really racist’. When clearly I can’t be racist! But I think that where we’ve got the next generation coming up, they’re really free to be who they want to be in comparison to the times when I was coming out.

There’s more of a space for people to be out, without fear of major discrimination. Don’t get me wrong I’m not being complacent, there’s still a lot of discrimination that goes out on towards the LGBT community, but there’s also a lot of homophobia and Islamaphobia for people that carry those different intersections of who they are.

Speaking of which, what did you make of the recent research by FS Magazine which looked at prejudicial attitudes on the gay scene?

Well, I skim-read it but having spoken to some of the guys in our community they said it’s true, it’s out there. Some have said they’ve always had a good time when they’ve gone out and never had any problems. But I think that may be few and far between. I think a lot of BME men have experienced real stereotypes and stigmas around who they are.

There’s a reason why UK Black Pride exists, there’s a reason why we have self organised groups that support BME gay men. And if we didn’t have those groups it would mean we’re living in an ideal world. So there needs to be a space to talk about gay people who may be disabled, gay people who may be BME, or women BME who are suffering certain forms of discrimination out there. Even within our community where we claim to understand marginalisation.

We must never try to out-trump each other with our disadvantage within society at large. But it’s important we bring our whole, true authentic self to the table when we talk about what we need and what our aspirations are. Maybe one day there won’t be a need for a Black Pride, but until then we’re going to continue growing and growing.

So how have you grown and what have you learnt in your time with UK Black Pride?

That I’ve aged! I think I’ve learnt that every individual is absolutely instrumental in making UK Black Pride successful. I’ve learnt tonnes about the queer community, I’ve learnt that it’s important that we have allies, that we’re not talking to ourselves, that we’re working side-by-side with our white brothers and sisters who in turn will help us challenge any form of racism and discrimination that affects different groups of people.

I love looking around on the day when everyone’s dancing, eating food, sharing space, networking or forming relationships, which will last for two minutes, two years or a lifetime. Last year on stage we had a rabbi, an imam, a Christian, an atheist and a Buddhist and they led the one-minute silence for all the people we had lost here and abroad due to LGBT discrimination. To see that on stage was powerful to me.

 

• UK Black Pride is a free-entry event and will be held on Sunday 28th June in South London’s Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens. 

Pride Cabaret

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As part of the Pride in London celebrations, Wardour Street in Soho will play host to this year’s cabaret stage, featuring a whole host of talented and bedazzling cabaret artists from across the LGBT community. One of the main hosts on the day is drag/performance artist Michael Twaits, who was also at the helm of this year’s very showbiz Pride’s Got Talent competition. Jason Reid had a pre-Pride chinwag with Michael this week…

 


For those who’ve never seen you, what can they expect on Saturday? 

I like to call what I do pure cabaret; there’s no script, no plan, just me and the audience in the moment sharing the space and introducing a huge range of acts. I’m sure it will be a riot! I have a CD of tracks to bash out a few songs when the mood takes, but I like the ‘seat of your’ pants approach!

You’ve been quite heavily involved with Pride this year in various roles. 

Yes! I got involved a bit last year with a trial version of Pride’s Got Talent and then this year, Ian (event producer) and I wanted to make it bigger and better! So through my involvement in PGT, I’ve performed to most of the board, producers and events managers for Pride and a result have been asked to help out all over the place which is lovely. It’s great to be apart of it all!

It’s nice to see many of those Pride’s Got Talent acts will perform on the cabaret stage too, alongside more seasoned performers. So after making the competition bigger and better, how did it go this year? I must say, I really enjoyed judging the final… 

The competition has been brilliant! We had such an array of talent, styles and people. It was just so much fun and gained a lot of momentum as the rounds went on. I’ve already agreed to be on board for next year and making it bigger and better. So watch out for that.

From what I saw, it was jam-packed full of variety… 

We really did have it all! The winners and runners-up represent the competition well; Charlie Levy is a gorgeous singer/songwriter, Charlie Monroe is a world-class vocalist, Roxx is a new drag act doing brilliant things on the scene already, and then the hot, young boy-band Tailormade.

Tailormade are SO hot. Anyway, moving on swiftly, how did you go about determining the programme for the stage and what criteria was used this year?

For the section I worked on, our manifesto was about real artists representing the full spectrum of those celebrating Pride. Pride is often criticised for focusing on gay men – we’ve really pushed for diversity, and have all areas of music, stand-up, poetry, theatre, drag, lip-synch and even Margaret Thatcher. Not to mention people who identify under every strand of the LGBT. We had no stipulations from Pride, they trust us completely!

We’ve really pushed for diversity, and have all areas of music, stand-up, poetry, theatre, drag, lip-synch and even Margaret Thatcher.”

There were a few initial criticisms from fellow performers, who voiced concerns regarding a lack of ethnic diversity in the line-up. How would you respond to that? 

Sadly, you will always offend someone. We ended up with ten acts for our section, and it’s a real shame about the low percentage of black and ethnic performers as it doesn’t represent the full spectrum for Pride. Three acts we wanted to programme, who’d have provided more diversity, actually got taken off our list and programmed on the main stage, which is brilliant for them. I think there would have been more of a hoo-ha if we’d have programmed people purely on their skin colour and to meet a certain quota. Also, Pride as a whole has a higher representation of black and ethnic performers across the stages this year than ever before.

How about what Pride means in 2015? Do you think it’s still as important today as it was when LGBT people had little or no civil liberties? 

Absolutely! There’s a lot of apathy at the younger end of the community. And a lot of segregation between the community. I think people are less worried about equality now as we have so much – and therefore people take it for granted. Pride helps solidify the community and raise awareness of what still needs to be done.

Finally, the theme of this years parade is Pride Heroes, who would be your Pride Cabaret Heroes? 

For me it’s the performers and activists who’ve been putting work out into the mainstream and fucking the system for years: Bette Bourne, Lavinia Coop, Kate Bornstein. And more recently acts like Justin Bond, Our Lady J. People who are so comfortable in who they are and are visible just the way they want to be.


CABARET STAGE LINE UP: 1300-1930 

• Rose Garden & Ross Williams

• Chamonix Aspen (PGT)

• Bambi Boo (PGT)

• Sadie Sinner

• Diane Horan-Hill (PGT) and and Phil Lee-Thomas

• Ollie James-Parr (PGT)

• Marnie Scarlett

• Miss Connie Lingus

• Margaret Thatcher, Queen of Soho

• Pi the Mime

• Ren Stedman

• Virgin Xtravaganzah (above)

• Ruby Wednesday

• Dean Atta

• Crystal Lubrikint

• Adam All & Apple

• Topsie Redfern

• Heels of Glory – A Drag Action Musical

• Divastated

• Tim McArthur, Myra DuBois and Bunny

• Laura Nadia Hunt (PGT)

• Dr Woof & Roxx (PGT)

• Charley Leavy (PGT)

• Murat Sefi

• Vanity Von Glow

• Donna Marie / Lady Gaga

Hello Nieko!

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Nieko

Nieko Strobel is the sparkling smile behind Ku Bar’s Sambuca-spangled success. He puts the Ku in KUrageous and the Bar in wunderBAR! He’s also got a formidable tag-team behind him (so to speak). Among others, there’s fash mag slag Lady Lloyd, sizzling steak slice Rodrigo, and a harem of bar staff that would make Liz Hurley look up from Tatler and go “gosh!” 

Dylan Jones asked him about Ku Bar’s plans for the future, his minty fresh grin, and that nice wallpaper they’ve got.


Nieko! What’s your secret to keeping Ku Bar so fresh, modern and popular?

Our mission has always been to make sure people simply have a fabulous night in Soho; with the latest music and hottest boys around! We constantly work on new campaigns with our boys, as well as continuing re-investment into all venues – our customers are our priority, always, so we make sure Ku remains the place to be.

More importantly what’s your secret to that lovely white smile? It’s whiter than Shakira’s!

You make me blush! I’d say a champagne diet mostly! But I do LOVE going all out for our nights at Ku, with a crown one night and a cape another – Gaga is usually the inspiration, if anyone hadn’t guessed already!

The Ku Bar wallpaper is lovely. Do you have any more interior decorating plans? Another fish tank! 

Oh we do! The summer will see the launch and start of our “Ku 20 Years” campaign – and with it some refreshing new looks across all venues. Expect edgy, artsy, and more slick than ever!

Where do you find your bar men? Because we’d like to go there.

Haha – now that location is a top secret! Well, above anything we look for great spirit, and a great smile! Our boys are the face, front-line and character of Ku, so they love keeping themselves in shape!

How many of them have restraining orders against Lady Lloyd?

They don’t issue them for her any more! I joke… kind of! I absolutely ADORE Lloyd’s style – she’s part of an incredible DJ team we have at Ku. From the glamour of Vicki Vivacious, to Latino hunk Rodrigo, and our hottest new addition DJ Charlie. They play every night on rotation – join them in their outrageousness!

We also enjoy your photo shoots, they’re mouthwatering! 

I’m glad to hear it! We’ve gone for a very Versace edge this year (I’ve always thought myself as Donatella!). Working with celebrity photographer Joe McComick, we’ve created detailed “campaigns” instead of adverts – using the beautiful Ku boys. I love the result – I hope everyone does.

What’s been the best one over the years?

I would say our latest one. Each year has seen a different style – but our current is more edgy and daring than I’ve ever tried at Ku. It’s all about the boys being chic, stylish and vogueing!

What crazy shit do you have planned over Pride?

The Ku Boys are becoming GODS for the day! We’ve got THREE incredible parties! Ku Leicester Square extends its terrace into our Pride Garden Party, Ku Soho explodes with “dancing in the streets” – our gogo’s and dancers in the windows – and at KuKlub, we’re putting on a sizzling after-party with guest DJ Chris Brogan.

We’re asking everyone about their Pride Heroes…who’s yours?

I would say those in the public eye who passionately support LGBT rights – say Jennifer Hudson’s “I Still Love You” video, or James Franco’s passion for his gay roles. People idolize them, and listen to them – their voice make a noise like no other.

We hear a collaboration with CloneZone is in the works?

It’s very exciting! On Pride we’re joining forces with CloneZone in the parade (make sure you keep an eye out – we’ll be walking with Alex Minsky), as well as a clothing and marketing partnership afterwards – as CloneZone go international! Get ready for some very sexy offers, events and eye-candy!

If Ku Bar were a pop star, which pop star would she be and why?

Cher, Madonna and Gaga… spot the trend! We like to think ahead-of-the-game, as well as keeping our venues slightly crazy, fun and unlike any other!

Thanks Nieko. Right, that’s quite enough chat. Let’s have a gin & tonic.

• Ku Bar, 30 Lisle Street, WC2H 7BA. 12pm – 3am Monday to Saturday, 12pm – 12am Sunday. 

Mark Ames

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mark ames

What’s in store for the big boys this year at XXL Pride? Bigger? Badder? BEARIER?

XXL is all about one club fits all! We are all for one and one for all – as long as you leave your attitude at the door, you dance like nobody’s watching, love like you’ll never be hurt, you sing like nobody’s listening and party like it’s heaven on earth.

You’ve added a couple of new resident DJs to the lineup, who are they and how did you find them?

Well – three you will already know by reputation – Wayne G, Moto Blanco and the Hoxton Whores – they are international names – and coming into the fold is DJ Funkybear Martin from the West Coast of the USA bringing a deeper tribal rhythm to the dance floor. He’s an internationally renowned circuit DJ who will splice up the dance floor between Christian and Alex.

You recently had Bear Pride in association with Ben Cohen and the StandUp Foundation and it looked like a massive party! How did it go?

Brilliant – Ben is a gent and it’s a great cause – we raised £10,000 for his foundation and we can’t wait till next year.

“We are all for one and one for all – as long as you leave your attitude at the door.”

What can we look forward to this coming year for XXL?

We are launching XXL’s very own fat fighters – FIGHTING FOR YOUR RIGHT TO BE FAT, FUNKY and FURRY – this will start off with monthly pre-clubbing socials with Buffet, Booze and Bearlesque.

This year’s London Pride parade theme is Pride Heroes, who is your hero?

I’ve never just done one at a time – it would have to be the Fantastic Four!

If you could be any superhero and why, who would it be?

Hellboy – I would have been Thor – but she’s too precious! And who can’t resist a horny hero with a cigar in his mouth!

Not us, that’s for sure.

• XXL London Pride is at Pulse (No1 Invicta Plaza, South Bank SE1) on Saturday 27th June, 10pm-7am. £8 members, £15 guests.

Asifa Lahore: Disarming Through Drag

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Asifa Lahore

Asifa Lahore, the UK’s most prominent Muslim drag queen, uses her act to challenge stereotypes of faith and sexuality across the Asian and LGBT communities.  Last Friday, at the inaugural Attitude Pride awards, she was awarded for her work empowering LGBT Muslims and helping to unite two distinct communities. Chris Godfrey caught up with her. 

 


Hi Asifa, congratulations on your award! What was your reaction when you found out you’d won?

I was so, so surprised. When I got the call I literally screamed for a good ten minutes. I just couldn’t believe it. It’s the first time in my life that I’ve actually received an award. It was an acknowledgement of love and acceptance from the mainstream gay community, which I’m really honoured by.

I always go back to those times when I first got on the Drag Idol stage and the gay community didn’t quite know how to take me. Since Drag Idol to now I’ve done a lot of work in terms of media awareness, the cabaret show, club hosting, in empowering the gay and Muslim community. This was the first time actually that I got acknowledged by the mainstream gay community for the work I’ve done as a gay person. It’s about time a gay and out Muslim drag queen is celebrated in the LGBT community!

So the big news last week was the SCOTUS ruling in America; how has your faith impacted your feelings towards same-sex marriage?

I’m a big supporter of gay marriage and people assume that because I’m a gay man that’s why I support it. But actually I support gay marriage because I’m a Muslim. I feel the notion of marriage is very, very new to the gay community. And I think it will probably take about a generation, another twenty years for gay marriage to be normalised in British society and for it to be culturally gay as well. I think marriage for a lot of gay people is still very alien.

But for me I always wanted to be married as long as I can remember. Growing up and watching my mum and dad in a marriage setup, in a long-term and seeing Muslim people in my community getting married, I wanted that as well. I just happened to want it with a person of the same sex.

The notion of marriage actually comes very much with my cultural and religious identity, probably more than my gay identity. I’ve now been in a civil partnership for six years, the two identities are so intertwined. I’m sure a newer generation will be entering into gay marriages more and more as time goes on. So I think the notion of marriage for me is probably more culturally Islamic than it is gay right now.

You’ve spoken a lot about reconciling your sexuality and your faith, is there still conflict there between these two identities?

I think for a lot of gay Muslims, they find it so hard to straddle the two. I think most people would give up one for the other. In some cases people are like ‘no I don’t want to be gay, I’m going to get an arranged marriage, I’ll pretend to be straight’. And marriages of convenience in the gay Muslim community are still very high.

On the other hand some people feel ‘no, I’m going to be gay and totally get rid of my Muslim side, I’m not even going to bother with my Asian heritage’. And you know that has an impact on their life as well. This idea of authenticity and actually being honest to yourself, not only with your sexuality but also with your religious and ethnic background, a lot of people feel they have to give up one or the other.

Where I stand with it is actually I want it all – I want to be in love with the person of the same sex, I want to be married to that person. I want to be able to walk in to my mosque on a Friday afternoon and pray. And on Friday night I want to go out and perform and boogie as well. I’d rather do everything out in the open, not hidden from the eyes of God, not hidden from the eyes of the world.

Has your drag attracted much attention from the non-LGBT Islamic community?

I have a massive following of British, Muslim heterosexual women who adore the fact that I am glamorous, they adore the fact I wear Islamic clothes as well as British clothes.

But the reaction that I do get from the more conservative elements of the Muslim community is very harsh. I am publicly denounced by some of the biggest Mosques in the UK. I receive regular death threats, for me to stop not necessarily doing my drag but to stop calling myself a Muslim drag queen. I get threats not only to myself but to my husband and to my parents as well. That can be very hard when you’re caught up in that.

It’s a mixture of responses. I think if we take onboard the younger generation – the Zayn Malik generation, shall we say – of British Muslims, they absolutely adore me. I get much more positivity than I do negativity from them. However it’s interesting that British Muslim communities which are accepting of me would never come out and say that she is doing some amazing work, or we follow and accept her.

Do you think there’s a lack of understanding, even a fear, in the gay community of Islam?

I think regardless, Islam has been politicised within mainstream media and, to a certain extent, the British Muslim community themselves in the last sort of decade. In Britain the picture of Islam is pretty bad right now. So I don’t think it’s confined strictly to the gay community. But I do feel that education on both parts needs to be there and that open dialogue from both Muslim communities and gay communities needs to be there.

The key is gay Muslims themselves. Now if gay Muslims were empowered to be themselves and were out and proud, not only about being gay but also about being Muslim, then it’s people like us that hold the key to bridging the two communities together. Actually I think our communities have more in common than we think and education is the way forward on both parts. The people that can actually bring about that change is the gay Muslim community in the UK itself.

For every one person that comes to Pride there are 50 at home, probably watching that parade on television, probably still feeling isolated in Britain today. What I want the LGBT community that is out and proud to do is reach out to people and ask those challenging conversations to people that you wouldn’t normally. Chances are LGBT people are in places you wouldn’t even have imagined and are crying out for their hand to be held. My message is to just be out and proud and hold the hands of people you wouldn’t normally hold hands with.

Juju and me

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Jujubee

The sweetest treat of all the Drag Race alum is Jujubee, and she’s landing in London to cast judgment on the eye candy on display at G-A-Y Porn Idol next week. Dylan Jones caught up with her for a taste of what’s in store… 

 


Hello Jujubee. It’s lovely to talk to you! 

Aaw thankyou so much that’s so sweet! I’m so excited to come back to London.

You came before didn’t you and performed with Meth?

Oh my god I LOVE Meth! Wait, that could totally be taken out of context. You could totally use that as a quote. “Oh my god I, like, LOVE meth.”
I’ve got you on tape saying it too!
[SCREAMS] NO!

So did you have fun when you were here then?

Oh my gosh, I had a great time. The queens there are so nice. And so talented. It’s a different side to drag.

Yeah, how does it compare to the US?

Well, this is what I’ve noticed. Even within the US there are differences. There’s culture in drag…like there are different subcultures within the culture of drag itself. But the girls in London just do what they want to do! And a lot of them perform live! And I think that’s so awesome! Because performing live is one of the hardest things to do. It’s so vulnerable.

Yes I think maybe there’s more singing and less lip-syncing.
Totally! And it’s also more diverse as far as looks go. I hate to admit this but drag is very superficial, from head to toe. We have to dig very deep to find the person behind the character, because everybody’s a character.

So congratulations are in order…equal marriage in America! Amazing!

Yes! Finally, right?! It’s so amazing. When it happened I was in Seattle for Pride, and it was just magical. People were happy and everyone was smiling. I also got to spend a little time in San Francisco with Raven and everything there was just so bright. It was basically like there was a huge rainbow that nobody else could see but the gays!

Oh my god so speaking of Raven… you guys’ lip-sync battle in All Stars was so heartbreaking.

[Laughs] It was such a rollercoaster ride, that whole thing.

Was it surreal going back for All Stars after season two?
I can’t speak for everybody else, but I know first-hand, and as far as Raven goes, we talked about it all the time. We were like “Whoa man!” (we call each other “man” and “dude” by the way, just because it’s funny). But yeah we were like, “whoa man, we’ve had all this time to experience life after Drag Race and now we’re back!” Because coming from season two, we had more time to expand our knowledge with the business and the art of drag. For me, drag is something you can never perfect. You can always keep setting the bar. And to get on Drag Race All Stars that quickly…I was like WHOA, we’re here, we’re competing AGAIN. Now in teams! Which was crazy and drove me insane!

I wasn’t very happy when they announced that that was how it was going down…

Yeah. Because you KNEW, if there were teams, there were less episodes! I was like “GIRL, I’ve bought all this shit, and I can’t wear it all?!”

I love that clip of you stealing Raven’s ring in Drag U! “It’s mine now bitch!”

I think I still have that ring somewhere [cackles]

Whose actually was it?

It was hers. BUT IT’S MINE NOW BITCH!

Do you guys still hang out a lot?
Yeah we’re seeing each other this weekend! We’re gonna spend July 5th together because I’m working on the 4th. We’re gonna do the good old American thing and eat hamburgers and hotdogs!

I’m actually going to a 4th July party! 

Oh you’re having a little American party?!

Yes! And a drag queen is singing!

Oh my god, if she sings the American National Anthem, tell her it HAS to be the Whitney Houston version, live from the Superbowl in the eighties. It HAS be that one.

You’re judging Porn Idol at G-A-Y! Have you been before?

I’ve never actually been! I’m really looking forward to it, I hear it’s huge! I just can’t believe I’m finally getting paid to judge something. I usually do it for free. I’m very judgemental.

So thanks so much for talking Juju. Just one final question…what advice would you give a baby queen starting out in this beautiful new age of pride and equality?

Know exactly who you are as a performer and why you’re doing drag. Whether it’s for fame, or for the art. One will win over the other. If a queen is worried about being well known, then she’s probably not doing it for the right reasons. So know what you’re doing and know why you love it.

That could apply to a lot of things!

Yeah! It could apply to drag and it could apply to life.

 

• Jujubee is judging G-A-Y Porn Idol @ Heaven (Under the Arches, Villiers Street, Charing Cross, WC2N 6NG) on Thursday 16th July, 10:30pm-5am. Free entry wristbands available at G-A-Y Bar


Oh Danny Boy!

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Danny Beard

The newly crowned winner of this year’s Drag Idol and the most talked about act to hit the scene in some time, Danny Beard, is a fascinating character. The competition itself has seen somewhat of a queer revolution of late with both LoUis Cyfer and now Danny taking the title. Giving his first full interview post Drag Idol, the man behind Danny spoke to Jason Reid this week…

 


Firstly congratulations, your performance at the final was electric. So tell me, how and when did Danny Beard come to be?

Thank you very much, Jason. I started about 18 months ago, DJing out of drag in Manchester whilst in university. And slowly the drag took over, then I was DJing all my gigs in drag. Who is Danny?

Danny is me, essentially, an extension of who I am, and I’m most comfortable when on stage, so Danny is my excuse to get on stage.

How would you describe your performance style in a snappy sentence? Imagine you’re a trashy journalist…

Cheeky, loveable, fresh, modern, slightly rough around the edges, but classy.

Your style is also very technically sound. Do you come from a performance background? 

I do; I studied Performance, Contemporary Theatre Practice, and I got a first class honours. A large part of my degree was about the difference between an “actor” and a “performer”.

And which would you say you are?

There’s a fine line between the two, but I can say with confidence that I’m a performer.

Let’s talk about your look as it intrigues me so much. HOW did you come up with it? 

In university I studied live art and became a little obsessed with Leigh Bowery so that’s definitely where the white face came from. I actually experimented with a whole glittered face but eventually it was the beard that stuck. The body developed over time too; I love a woman’s silhouette so that’s really what I am trying to create with the hips, boobs and really high shoes.

Ah yes, I can the Leigh Bowery influences there now. Who else influences you artistically?

Aside from the aesthetic, my performance influences are people like Lily Savage who was quick, funny, and a character that you could just warm to. Also current queens on the scene like La Voix with her amazing voice, Myra with her gags, and Sandra just because I really like her.

Everyone loves Sandra, and she does her very best to love them all back. Personally. In the dark… Anyway back to you. Would you say Danny is genderless? The look is very fluid, with some male aesthetics – most notably a beard – which many would say is the archetypal mark of masculinity, but then there’s the striking female side.

I would say Danny Beard is genderless yes. I’m just really whatever you think I am. If you think I’m a man, I’m a man, likewise if you think I’m a woman then I’m a woman.

Which pronoun do you prefer?

Personally I prefer ‘she’ but I am from Liverpool and queens there call everyone she [laughs].

Is challenging gender stereotypes and gender fuckery something you want to get across to your audiences? 

I think its a part of who I am so yes. I don’t like to get too political but I think my work can be inadvertently political if that makes sense. Just being the way I am and looking the way I do is enough for me. If that particular audience member get’s it, understands it and goes with it then great, but if they think its just a crazy look, thats great too.

Now, you’re from Liverpool, but live in Manchester, and you represented one of London’s most prominent cabaret bars in the competition. Safe to say you’ve gone nationwide. How do you feel about it all, and your upcoming tour?

I couldn’t be happier, the support from people along the way has been truly overwhelming, in fact I’m sure there is some dodgy pictures from the final of me crying my eyes out. I feel excited and nervous for the tour, and I can’t wait to get to perform all over the country.

Finally, who is YOUR Drag Idol? 

LILY SAVAGE!

A Diamond From Down Under

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Dolly Diamond

Winging her way in from Melbourne, Australia, Dolly Diamond is in the UK for a month of shows, sightseeing and sunning herself with drag pal Rose Garden. She’ll be bringing her unique brand of live drag and comedy to Halfway to Heaven, Admiral Duncan and Brighton Pride during her visit. Jason Reid took time out to chat to Dolly this week about Australian drag, Pie and Mash and her favourite performers.

 


Well hello, Dolly, you’re looking swell…actually I can’t see you because you’re still in Australia, so I’m assuming, and I thought it’d make for a suitably camp opener. BUT by the time this goes to print you’ll have landed in London. ANYWAY, how are you? Been busy? Long time no chat…

Hi Jason, I’m well thanks. Living in Australia keeps me very busy. I’ve just finished doing some big band shows with a Christmas in July theme, any excuse to get the tinsel out.

Are you coming to the UK to escape the Australian winter, if there is such a thing? 

Melbourne most definitely has a winter, and as I approach my 40’s I’m hating the cold even more, so London’s Summer is a must. I’ll be out and about as much as possible, and catching up with my old friend Rose Garden.

Ahh, good old Rose. As a dear friend, what is it that you admire about her most?

That she’s still alive.

Oh Dolly, she’ll love that! You two perform as part of a double act too: Pie & Mash. Will you be doing your bit for Anglo-Australia relations and resurrecting that act on this trip? 

Yes, I’m doing Brighton Pride with Rose. I was poisoned the last time I performed there, by a young girl from Trashville in Tennessee if I remember correctly. I won’t be so quick to put my nose to the fence this time, well not without asking what the fark it is?

How strange! How would you describe your onstage connection with Rose? 

We’ve always had great chemistry. She’s always pie-eyed and I’m always mashed!

Best way to be! As an Aussie born and bred, why do you think the country has such an appetite for drag? It’s almost in the blood. 

It’s been going on for years here, but it really found it’s footing after Priscilla, Queen of the Desert. Most performers mime over here, so as a live artist, I’m quite the novelty. Let’s face it, we all like an excuse to dress up!

Having performed in both countries, do you think there’s much of a difference between UK and Australian styles of drag? 

In the UK it’s more of a nod to the old variety days, with an emphasis on comedy and I’ve brought that style to Melbourne. It’s a bit rough and ready in Australia, but there’s room for both.

How about the audiences?  

My shows are theatre style, so they pay their money and listen…well most of the time. There’s always some dick-head who thinks he’s gonna talk while I am, they’re wrong, dead wrong.

Who are the current big drag stars Down Under right now, apart from yourself OF COURSE?

It’s hard to separate myself from this question. I’ve been watching the same faces, (although a little more stretched) over here for years: Miss Candy, Paris, Millie Minogue and Rita La Coqe Eater. They’re fun loving girls, and a few of them were extras in Cocoon.

And who are your UK favourites?

I grew up watching Sandra – that potty mouth we all know and love. And Miss Jason and Drag With No Name are always worth a trip to Brighton and beyond to see. BUT if I don’t say Rose Garden I’ll have no accommodation in London, so ROSE GARDEN – she makes me laugh (at her, not with her).

 

• Dolly’s welcome and leaving party are at Halfway to Heaven: Sunday’s July 17th & Aug 15th.

 

Other dates & venues are:

  • July 23rd Admiral Duncan
  • July 26th Legends
  • Aug 1st Brighton Pride
  • Aug 2nd Legends 
  • Aug 3rd Charles Street

#Juliasays…

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Meat Boys

Have you ever had those days when you just can’t seem to get started? I’m having one now…massive fail! Never mind, there’s always FAGGY OKAY! at The Glory (281 Kingsland Road, E2 8AS), on Thursdays to put you in the mood. It’s a weekly karaoke party in the basement hosted by some gorgeous ‘girls’. Jonbenet Blonde and Ginger Johnson switch on the mics at 8pm ‘til late. 

Also this week on Thursday 16th July A Man To Pet goes live for a late night supper party session at Hoi Polloi (Ace Hotel, 100 Shoreditch High Street, E1 6JQ) from 10.30pm ‘til 1am. Watch in awe as Miss Pet cavorts in true style singing live with a multitude of costume changes as you slurp on a Hoi Polloi camp cocktail!

Big moment in our social calender this weekend, it’s Miss Sink The Pink 2015 on Saturday 18th at Bethnal Green Working Men’s Club (42 Pollard Row, E2 6NB). Who will steal the crown off last year’s winner Rodent Decay? The celeb panel cast their vote while you scream for your favourite! Doors 9pm, get there early and don’t miss a second of this wonderful night!

Did you know there’s a disco bar in the middle of Old Street roundabout? Well there is dears and it’s called The Magic Roundabout (Old Street Roundabout, EC1Y 1BE) and it’s about to have a Sunday takeover from Brut’s BEEFY-TEA on Sunday 19th from 2pm ‘til 11pm. Serious afternoon blowout with DJ’s Louis Lennon, Ben Jamin, Ross Jones, The Meat Boys and the gorge Wes Baggaley amongst others. Plus you can grab a bit of sustenance from Burger Bear who will be cooking up the most delish burgers for you to guzzle on. Free entry to East Bloc (217 City Road, EC1V 1JN) after if you decide to carry the party on!

I’m very pleased to announce the start of a theatre run at The Glory with The East London Session Players starting on Monday 20th July, of Tennessee Williams’ camp classic Suddenly Last Summer. It’s all very experimental, with a star-studded lineup of who’s who on the London club and performance scene; Moa Johansson, John Sizzle, Giorgio Spiegelfeld, Jonny Woo, Little Jimmy Johnson and me! Who knew? The nerves are kicking in! Additional film installation from Jeffrey Hinton, and styled up by Max Allen in charge of the drag wardrobe btw. Starting at 7.30pm on 20th, 22nd, 27th 28th, 29th and 30th July. See you there!

#Juliasays…

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Sharon Husbands

Nowadays there’s so much going on you might be considering going to two or more places of an evening, and if you don’t feel in the mood you can always sneak a peek online just in case you’ve got a dose of FOMO!

Anyway back to the real world and this Thursday 23rd July it’s time for the official launch of my fave zine POLYESTER issue 3 at The Shacklewell Arms (71 Shacklewell Lane, E8 2EB) up in Dalston. Come on everyone, I’m DJing along with designer Mary Benson, /Kit Brown and Cora Delaney plus there’s a PA from Boy With Wings. Starts at 8pm, free to get in, ends at 12 midnight and issue 3 available to buy on the night!
And that’s not the only thing going on this Thursday. Naked Boys Reading: Into the Garden finds the nude literary minded gang at the Ace Hotel (100 Shoreditch High Street, E1 6JQ) thinking about flora and fauna with a set list of carefully selected passages planned for the evening. Catch up for an intellectual ‘read off’ with additional music from Duchess of Pork and hosted by Dr Sharon Husbands starting at 7pm ‘til late.

Show time at The Glory (281 Kingsland Road E2 8AS) this month is reaching new heights with Bourgeois & Maurice and Friends having a basement musical comedy soireé on Friday 24th July from 7.30 ‘til 10.30. Joined by cabaret chums Jess Love and Ursula Martinez where they’ll be having a good old giggle! After which The Glory basement turns into a disco ‘til 2am!
And if you fancy it skip along to Dalston Superstore (117 Kingsland High Street, E8 2PB) on Friday 24th as well… HOMOSTASH this month where resident DJ Tafkanik is joined by JVP (DJ  Julian Von Petrovosky), Pavliné, Junior Moura and Carly Foxx are keeping both floors jumping from 9-3am.

On Saturday 25th July we’re still going strong with STRAIGHT NASTY at Vogue Fabrics (66 Stoke Newington Road, N16 7XB) and an unabashed pop blowout! All your faves all night long with DJ’s Trinny & $u$annah, Shy Charles and Je M’Apelle Rochelle and GG Bear, 10 ‘til 3am.
Then my dears there’s that HANDSOME lot to say hello to at East Bloc (City Road, EC1V 1JN) on Saturday 25th. Join Dan Beaumont and Hannah Holland going back to back. Plus Dave Kendrick and Mistamaker for a no holds barred basement party ‘til 6am!

*Catch the last four nights of the play I’m in Suddenly, Last Summer along with Jonny Woo, John Sizzle, Moa Johansson, Little Jimmy Johnson (aka Ginger Johnson) and Giorgio Spiegelfeld at The Glory on Monday 27th, Tuesday 28th, Wednesday 29th and Thursday 30th July, show time 7:30pm. Break a leg as they say!

Opera’s H&H, and Looking To Party

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Still from the opera

Opera. It ain’t getting any younger. Luckily, there’s a new generation of composers ready to inject new life into what many consider a dying art. Josh Lee caught up with Vahan Salorian, the young composer behind Boys Of Paradise, to discover how he’s bringing opera to new audiences. Spoiler alert: there are twinks.

 


 

In late 2013, a series of operas were screened in cinemas nationwide. The aim was to attract a younger audience, but the results were, well, predictable. 80% of attendees were over 60. Just 10% were under 50. So if opera isn’t reaching the crowds it needs to stay on top, what can be done to keep the centuries-old art alive? Young composer Vahan Salorian might just have the answer: make it gay.

“Opera is about extremes,” he tells me over a pint at a particularly busted out pub in Bethnal Green. The 22-year-old Guildhall Music school graduate talks me through the thinking behind his latest operetta (a lighter, more condensed opera), Boys of Paradise, and it sounds intense.

Set in Vauxhall and based on the myth of the Phoenix (rising from the ashes and all that), it’s inspired by what Salorian describes as: “the drugged-up, days-long fantasy of it all; the Adonis-like figures chewing their faces off, the bathrooms where you can hear blatant snorting coming from every cubicle, the smoking areas in the daylight.” I’m already hooked.

Boys of Paradise follows a young twink’s initiation into the scene, his first dalliances with drugs, the thrill of attention and, finally, the feeling most of us know too well: being replaced by a younger model. It’s as much about the dizzying highs of the London scene as it is about the rock-bottoms. And it’s hard not to laugh through gritted teeth when you realise that the lead character’s trajectory is as tragically typical as your own.

But what isn’t typical is how Salorian got started in the world of classical composition. Better known for being the art form of the privileged, he was given his first flute care of a now long-gone policy that provided underprivileged kids with free instruments and music lessons. If you’ve ever doubted the power of a free flute, his story will obliterate your preconceptions.

“When I was 17, I was put forward to feature in Goldie’s Band by Royal Appointment,” he says. “The series followed Goldie, the DnB DJ, and his group of mentors – Ms Dynamite included – as they searched for twelve young musicians from around the country who, despite coming from difficult backgrounds, were succeeding in music.

“It was like an anti-X factor. I was the ‘classical one’ and the baby! The series followed us for six months as we created a set to play at Buckingham Palace in front of Prince Harry. It was amazing; the drum kit was set up in front of the Queens throne”.

It’s a story as bizarre as Boys of Paradise itself, but it’s one Salorian is incredibly thankful for. Coming from an underprivileged household, he might not be where he is today if it wasn’t for government help, not to mention the support of teachers and mentors along the way.

“I owe where I am today to those teachers that put that extra effort in for me to get the tuition and opportunities I did, without the financial means that other kids had,” he says. “Most of what drives me now, in this very competitive and difficult career, is to pay those people back, and my mum, for the investment they made in me. It’s also why I am so invested in education”

Once he mentioned his mum, I had to ask what she thought of the piece. After all, it tackles issues and themes we spend our lives pretending we know nothing about to our parents. Thankfully, she’s a “big fan”.

It raised an interesting thought though. The gay party scene exists in its own bubble, only facing outside scrutiny in its darkest moments. It must be tough, sharing such a private world, loaded with its own baggage. Why tackle such a controversial theme?

Salorian thought over a sip of ale and explained: “it was actually very liberating to produce something so honest and open, where LGBT characters and issues were at the centre of it all”.

It’s exciting to see someone making art that doesn’t just feature, but centres on queer people. We’re so often the sidekicks, the comic relief, the tragic food for thought at the end of the show. But in Boys Of Paradise, we are the show – even if we’re not being shown at our most presentable.

Despite the operetta being created for LGBT audiences, the straight cast members were just as fascinated by it. “They were brilliant and so invested in learning about the scene,” says Salorian. “One rehearsal involved me talking through the effects of various substances that feature in the opera, like G and mephedrone. There’s a scene in a dark room, so our director came up with some very intimate warm ups to get everyone comfortable with each other!”

At this point I start asking where I can get tickets. Lots and lots of tickets.

Between the honest background, an eye for a subversive story and the backing of both Goldie and Ms Dynamite, Vahan seems set on changing the way we think about opera the old fashion way – lots and lots of sex.

And with a degree from the prestigious Guildhall School of Music under his belt, his sights are set on staying in music. “I really hope the opera opens some doors for me and the London gay scene is a subject I want to keep working with,” he says.

You have to hand it to the young Lancastrian. It’s not easy to come from a poor background with a flute and your ambition, make it through the top music school in the country, and then blast out onto the scene with an opera about gay sex and drugs. But when the vast majority of opera-goers are about to receive their free bus pass, maybe it’s exactly what the art form needs.

Short, sexy, subversive and involving what’s been described as a “cocaine waltz”, Boys of Paradise promises to be a spectacle. Hopefully, like the Phoenix tale on which it’s based, Salorian too will keep rising. If his ascent so far is anything to go by, poppers and meph could soon be the new Puccini and Mozart.

• You can catch Boys of Paradise on the 24th July at Egg London. Tickets can be bought at www.tete-a-tete.org.uk/egg-london

• Phot0 by Matthew Ferguson

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