Drag (Drag Queens & Drag Kings)

The performance art of dressing in exaggerated gender presentation - typically the opposite of one's everyday gender - for entertainment, artistic expression, or cultural celebration.

Definition

The performance art of dressing in exaggerated gender presentation - typically the opposite of one's everyday gender - for entertainment, artistic expression, or cultural celebration. Drag queens are typically men (cis or trans) performing in exaggerated feminine presentation; drag kings are typically women or non-binary people performing in masculine presentation. Drag is a performance, not a gender identity. Most drag performers identify with their everyday gender and explicitly distinguish drag from transgender identity.

Etymology

The origin of "drag" as theatrical costume is contested. One folk etymology points to 19th-century theatre slang where male actors playing female roles wore dresses that "dragged" on the floor. Others trace it to Polari - a British gay slang dialect. First documented in print in this theatrical sense in the 1870s.

History

  • Ancient Greece - Male actors performed all roles including female characters; drag is arguably as old as theatre itself
  • Shakespeare's era (1590s-1610s) - Women were banned from the English stage; young men (boy players) performed all female roles
  • 19th century vaudeville & minstrelsy - Male-female impersonation acts were a staple of popular entertainment; figures like Julian Eltinge achieved mainstream celebrity
  • Early 20th century - Drag balls and "pansy clubs" flourished in Harlem and Greenwich Village during the Harlem Renaissance
  • 1969 - Stonewall Uprising - drag queens including Marsha P. Johnson among the first resisters; drag's political dimensions crystallize
  • 1970 - The ballroom scene begins to formalize in New York City, primarily among Black and Latino LGBTQ+ youth; documented in Paris Is Burning (1990)
  • 2009 - RuPaul's Drag Race premieres; transforms drag from subculture into global entertainment industry
  • 2018-present - Anti-drag legislation wave in the United States targeting drag performances and "drag story hours"

Notable people

  • RuPaul (1960-) - Most globally recognized drag queen; creator of RuPaul's Drag Race; "We're all born naked and the rest is drag"
  • Divine (Harris Glenn Milstead, 1945-1988) - Muse of filmmaker John Waters; influential aesthetic icon
  • Marsha P. Johnson (1945-1992) - Stonewall activist; drag performer and street queen; co-founded STAR
  • Crystal LaBeija (1930s-1982) - Ballroom pioneer; founded the House of LaBeija

See also