For the first time TV history, a show with an exciting new premise titled ‘King of Drag,’ will showcase drag kings exclusively in a reality competition show. Airing on Revry, a free LGBT+ streaming app. The trailer for the show was released earlier this month, and it’s entertaining and ambitious.
For years, fans of ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ have argued, outside of their usual arguments concerning who they want to win the title of “America’s next drag superstar,” about one question when it comes to contestants, and that’s whether Drag Kings should be featured on Drag Race. Some fans have argued that as the show’s host, RuPaul, is exclusively judging contestants from his expertise as one of, if not the, most powerful drag queens on the planet and that, while there are drag competitions outside of the show that include both drag queens and kings, the premise of Drag Race is for drag queens to compete against one another. On the other side of the debate, fans in favor of drag kings competing on Drag Race have argued that if Drag Race has been called the “Olympics of drag” by judges and fans alike, then drag kings should be included.
Some contestants, like Victoria Scone, a non-binary drag queen who identifies as female, have even performed as drag kings for lip-syncs as a nod to drag kings. Even outside of Drag Race, drag competitions like ‘Dragula,’ hosted by the Boulet Brothers, have had drag kings and queens competing alongside one another for years.
Instead of waiting for fans to figure out what they want out of the show, drag kings have built their platform, with Murray Hill, who starred as Fred Rococo on HBO’s ‘Somebody Somewhere,’ acting as the host of King of Drag. To aid him, Drag race contestants and drag kings alike have signed on to act as guest judges, like Gottmik, from season 13 and ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars’ season 9, and Tenderoni, a drag king and household name in the Chicago drag scene, are only two names that were featured in the star studded trailer.
Even with the introduction of a new show and platform for drag kings on the King of Drag, the question still remains about what this may mean for the future of Drag Race. It can be argued that RuPaul helped open doors for many queer and gender non-conforming drag artists, and while his name may not be part of it, King of Drag does benefit from Drag Race already existing as a platform. Still, one of the main draws for contestants on Drag Race is the opportunities and platform it offers. On Drag Race, you don’t even have to win to become a household name. A queen only needs to get their name out into the public sphere and build upon their brand once they get onto the show and they’re set, even for contestants that go home on the first episode, opportunities that previously weren’t available.
No matter what happens, King of Drag is sure to be another interesting gateway into the world of drag and, hopefully, it propels drag kings forward into success the same way that shows like Drag Race does for its contestants.