Defend Drag Shows
Maclean's|May/June 2023
We need a way to protect LGBTQ+ Canadians—especially drag performers—from harm. An Ontario traffic law could work.
Kristyn Wong-Tam
Defend Drag Shows

I DON'T DO HEELS VERY WELL. I never have. I came out when I was a teenager, and my introduction to the world of drag largely happened in nightclubs and at parties in downtown Toronto. There I was, an awkward kid with limited life experience, watching queens like Michelle Ross entertain their admirers at Komrads dance club, strutting like Amazons across a shining floor to the tunes of Donna Summer. One of my most powerful drag memories is of watching RuPaul perform at the March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay and Bi Equal Rights and Liberation in 1993. I was in a 10-person lineup for the porta-potty when the early beats of "Supermodel (You Better Work)" came on; everyone deserted the queue to watch Ru own the stage in her wig, American flag-inspired bodysuit and sky-high boots. Back on earth-and in runners-I was giddy.

LGBTQ+ rights have come a long way since then. (RuPaul's Drag Race just finished its 15th season.) But certain folks want us to go back to the Dark Ages. In recent years, trans and non-binary individuals who make up a tiny fraction of the population-have found themselves the targets of a ramped-up global disinformation campaign by conservative religious fundamentalists to sway public opinion toward hatred. Not all drag artists are trans, but their joyful, gender-blurring acts have nonetheless become a wedge issue, and the performers themselves have been wrongly vilified as "groomers."

This story is from the May/June 2023 edition of Maclean's.

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This story is from the May/June 2023 edition of Maclean's.

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