Openly πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ Profile picture
May 14, 2021 β€’ 19 tweets β€’ 8 min read β€’ Read on X
From Shakespearean England πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§ to RuPaul's global empire 🌍, the art of drag spans centuries.

Let's dig into the history books for a brief herstory of drag. The library is open and don't forget – reading is fundamental πŸ“–

Thread 🧡
So where does drag come from?

From ancient Greek dramas to Shakespearean England, women were often banished from the stage, even when the play had female characters 🎭

The solution? You guessed it – the men had to dress up as women
In fact, the term 'drag' comes from the theatre as well.

Coined in 19th-century England, it came from the long skirts male actors wore when cross-dressing. The dresses, you see, dragged on the floor... πŸ‘—
It was not until the 18th and 19th centuries that cross-dressing hit the streets – albeit not without controversy

In the early 1700s, Princess Seraphina was possibly the first recorded drag queen. But it was the 1871 trial of Fanny and Stella that shocked British πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§ society
The term 'drag' was probably first queered into 'drag queen' in the 1880s in Washington D.C. by former slave William Dorsey Swann, who styled himself the 'Queen of Drag' πŸ‘‘

Today, Swann is considered a pioneer of both LGBT+ activism and modern ballroom culture
While Swann was in the D.C. ballrooms, the first secret drag ball – or masquerades as they were called – were held in Harlem, NYC, in 1869 πŸ—½

The balls became better known in the 1920s, forming part of the Harlem Renaissance
However, it was not just men dressing as women - women also dressed as men.

English-born Vesta Tilley (1864-1952) was an early drag king, becoming the highest-paid woman in the UK πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§ and a star of the vaudeville circuit in the US πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ
Moving into the 20th century, women had been allowed on stage for quite a while, but that didn't stop men impersonating them in popular vaudeville and pantomime performances.

The exaggerated nature of these shows was a precursor for what we now know as β€˜camp’ πŸ’„
Julian Eltinge was another star of vaudeville's variety shows, making him one of the most famous and top-earning entertainers of the early 20th century πŸ’°

Eltinge's main role in 1917 film, β€˜The Countess Charming’, was one of the first representations of drag on screen 🎞️
The Roaring 20s boosted the popularity of drag balls, with drag performers and gay clubs peaking in the so-called Pansy Craze in the 1930s

From New York to Berlin, 'pansy performers' like Jean Malin rose in popularity as gay culture increasingly infiltrated the mainstream πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ
In Weimar Germany, films like 'Victoria and Victoria' (1933) brought drag performances to the silver screen πŸ“½οΈ

But with the rise of the Nazis, the end of Prohibition in America and anti-gay regulations in Hollywood, drag went underground once more
World War II hit queer life hard - both during the conflict and afterwards

The postwar era saw the rise of conservative values, particularly in the US and UK. However, certain artists, like Danny La Rue, still managed to break through
Following riots across America in the 1960s, the pivotal point in the LGBT+ liberation movement came in 1969 outside New York’s Stonewall Inn πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ

Drag queens were on the frontline, fighting alongside other LGBT+ people for equal rights
While the fight for acceptance continued for years, the Stonewall riots were a turning point in the acceptance of LGBT+ people and culture

Drag once more moved into mainstream culture with films like β€˜Pink Flamingos’, starring "the filthiest person alive", drag queen Divine 🦩
From hit-movies like β€˜The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert’, @RuPaul's first big hit and @Madonna's Vogue, the β€˜90s was the decade drag entered pop culture 🎀

Perhaps most memorable was β€˜Paris is Burning’ – a portrait of New York's ball culture, rooted in Harlem
Over the next decade, drag would reach new heights. From the Harlem balls a century earlier to 'moffie' drag parties in South Africa, drag was about to leave the underground behind forever...

It’s now 2009 and the premiere of @RuPaulsDragRace πŸ“Ί
After 13 seasons, numerous spin-offs, awards and international versions, @RuPaulsDragRace has brought drag truly to the mainstream.

From the Oscars red carpet to @IKEACanada advertising campaigns, drag queens are now more visible than ever πŸ“Έ
Now airing on primetime television and influencing popular language and beauty trends, drag culture has proved it's here to stay.

So what next for drag? It may be the turn of drag kings, who have often found themselves marginalised in drag history, to take centre stage πŸ‘‘
This is only a brief – and far from complete – history of drag, whose cultural impact across the centuries has led us to today, but it’s safe to say the art form is flourishing more than ever ⚑️

Who is your favourite artist from drag herstory? 🌈

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