Current:Home > NewsAn afternoon with Bob the Drag Queen -AssetLink
An afternoon with Bob the Drag Queen
View
Date:2025-04-16 18:22:00
On a Tuesday afternoon in New York City, Bob the Drag Queen surveys the bolts of colorful glittering fabric lining the walls at Spandex House, a fabric store in the Garment District.
It's an old haunt of his from when he was starting his career in drag back in 2009, inspired by the first season of the competitive reality show RuPaul's Drag Race.
Seven years later, Bob won Season 8 of the same show, and his career skyrocketed. He's made podcasts, TV shows, an EP, and amassed 2.8 million TikTok followers. He has been preparing to join Madonna on her "Celebration" tour, which has just been postponed after she was hospitalized with a bacterial infection.
But the star of Bob's career has risen in tandem with the popularity of drag across the American mainstream, and with it, a conservative pushback that has grown exponentially in recent years.
In parts of America today, a drag performance is viewed as an inherently political act, and Bob is no stranger to the fear and vitriol his existence brings out of some people. He grew up in a series of small towns in the South, and toured the country multiple times as a drag queen. Yet he has never shied away from bringing all of himself everywhere he goes, regardless of the political climate.
Walking through Spandex House, we ask Bob to pick out a fabric that he might have used back in 2009 when he first started performing. He pulls out a bolt of neon yellow fabric criss-crossed with black diamonds and dotted yellow and black lines.
When we suggest it looks like "scottish tartan meets a caution tape," Bob disagrees, saying it's more of a checker mixed with argyle, "Because tartan would be more squares, and these are diamonds."
Nowadays most of Bob's looks are made by other people he says are "much more capable" than him. But he adds that a basic proficiency in sewing is a necessity for starting out in drag.
"If you want custom clothing, and you can't afford it, then you'd better learn how to make it," he says. Bob was more of a DIY queen in those early days, seeking out deals in bargain fabric shops across the city. He would hunt for discount fabric for a dollar per yard and bags of mystery scraps in weekly special deals across the city.
Today, Bob can still pull together an outfit if he needs to. Fans of the Drag Race recap show Pit Stop likely already know about Bob's love of a black and white pattern. He walks us over to a few bolts of houndstooth. "I had, I think, like 14 outfits made out of houndstooth that I bought from right here in this store."
Later, we find a table to sit at in Bryant Park, coincidentally right by the corner where Bob was arrested years ago. He had been part of a group that was taken in by police more than a decade ago for blocking traffic in a protest for marriage equality in New York state. As he tells it, once they were released, his drag daughter Honey La Bronx turned around on their way out and asked to keep the Polaroid authorities took of each of them on the street as a field mugshot. That photo from that arrest is the album cover for his debut EP, Gay Barz.
"What you can't see in the photo is that ... my breasts are made of cashews, I have a bagel under my wig, and I have a CLIF bar under each hip pad," he says. Unsure of how long it would take to get out of jail once arrested, Bob had brought snacks.
That kind of activism and humor is always present in Bob's drag. In the HBO show We're Here, Bob co-hosts a one-night-only drag show in small towns across America with fellow queens Eureka O'Hara and Shangela Laquifa Wadley.
"There are definitely lots of stares and threats, aggression, foul language that we get when we go into these towns, which doesn't shock me because I grew up in a small town," he says. "I hate to say that I'm so used to it. I'm like, 'Yeah it's just kind of part of being a queer person in America.'"
The tour with Madonna is scheduled to visit Tennessee, which recently passed a law banning drag performances, although it was later struck down by a federal judge who deemed it unconstitutional. Either way, Bob won't let that affect his decision to do drag in places it's been politicized.
"I think that it's important for queer people in Nashville, especially young ones, or people who are afraid in general, to see that like it's OK to go forward, it's OK to not be afraid to be seen. I think there's a lot of laws that want us to hide or go back into the closet or just stop existing in public. For some people, the existence of queer people in public is offensive. And quite frankly, I find that offensive."
"People think there's some agenda with drag queens. The only thing on the drag agenda is brunch on Sundays. There's no scheme. There's no plan or plot to reach people's children or anything. I mean most drag queens don't even want to f***** be around kids," he laughs. "Like, I do a drag show at Barracuda not at Gymboree, you know what I mean?"
With Madonna's tour now postponed, it's unclear when it will progress. But one thing is certain: tour or no tour, Bob will continue to entertain and bring his signature flair to a stage or screen near you.
veryGood! (3781)
Related
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- Risk factor for Parkinson's discovered in genes from people of African descent
- Unpacking the Child Abuse Case Against YouTube Influencer Ruby Franke
- NCAA, conferences could be forced into major NIL change as lawsuit granted class-action status
- Michigan lawmaker who was arrested in June loses reelection bid in Republican primary
- 24 of Country Music's Cutest Couples That Are Ultimate Goals
- An Iowa man who failed to show up for the guilty verdict at his murder trial has been arrested
- The threat of wildfires is rising. So is new artificial intelligence solutions to fight them
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- Science paints a new picture of the ancient past, when we mixed and mated with other kinds of humans
Ranking
- What polling shows about Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, Harris’ new running mate
- Train crash in eastern Pakistan injures at least 30. Authorities suspend 4 for negligence
- Shimano recalls 680,000 bicycle cranksets after reports of bone fractures and lacerations
- Thieves may have stolen radioactive metal from Japan's tsunami-battered Fukushima nuclear power plant
- Residents in Alaska capital clean up swamped homes after an ice dam burst and unleashed a flood
- Are you Latino if you can't speak Spanish? Here's what Latinos say
- Pakistan’s prime minister says manipulation of coming elections by military is ‘absolutely absurd’
- Mexican president wants to meet with Biden in Washington on migration, drug trafficking
Recommendation
House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
What to know about NASA's OSIRIS-REx asteroid sample return mission
Yemen’s southern leader renews calls for separate state at UN
Oregon, coach Dan Lanning put a massive hit on Colorado's hype machine
Messi injury update: Ankle 'better every day' but Inter Miami star yet to play Leagues Cup
May These 20 Secrets About The Hunger Games Be Ever in Your Favor
Niger’s junta accuses United Nations chief of blocking its participation at General Assembly
Historians race to find Great Lakes shipwrecks before quagga mussels destroy the sites