Orlando Sentinel

Venue change for drag event

Amid legal uncertaint­y, pageant moved at last minute to Kissimmee

- By Matthew J. Palm

A nonprofit that mentors and supports LGBTQ students has moved its biggest fundraiser of the year — an adult drag pageant titled “Miss Rose Dynasty” — from Orlando to Kissimmee just days before the annual event.

Event organizer Jason DeShazo worries that the sudden shift in plans will reduce the amount of money raised for his Lakeland-based nonprofit Rose Dynasty Foundation and other charities that would benefit from the March 4 pageant’s proceeds.

“Our organizati­on is going to be hit very hard,” said foundation president DeShazo, but he felt he had no choice but to relocate the fundraiser, billed as the nation’s only family-friendly drag pageant, after the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts in downtown Orlando decided to implement an age restrictio­n on who could attend.

The arts center’s decision to limit the event to those 18 and older results from the uncertaint­y surroundin­g drag entertainm­ent following a state agency’s complaint over a December performanc­e of “A Drag Queen Christmas” at the Plaza Live in Orlando. The complaint from the Florida Department of Business and Profession­al Regulation could cost the Orlando Philharmon­ic Plaza Foundation its ability to serve liquor — a significan­t source of revenue for an entertainm­ent venue.

“We just need clarity,” said arts center spokeswoma­n Jacklyne Ramos. “At the end of the day, we just want to operate legally.”

DeShazo, a former pastor of an LGBTQ church, said he understood the concerns of the arts center, which has hosted the pageant multiple times. But that doesn’t alleviate his worries that his organizati­on, which became a 501(c)(3) nonprofit in 2019, is now in the state government’s crosshairs.

“We’re the ‘Disney Channel of drag,’ ” said DeShazo, who points to the organizati­on’s mission statement that all events would be appropriat­e for any age. “But now we have a target on our back.”

Because the organizati­on mentors students, they often come to the fundraiser­s, DeShazo said. At the pageant, some perform a dance

number — although not in drag, which is reserved for the adult contestant­s.

The arts center’s age restrictio­n would have barred them from the event.

“Our vision and mission and purpose is all of our events are family-friendly,” he said. “There are children in this show, and I’m not telling them they can’t come.”

But the presence of minors at a drag performanc­e is key to the state agency’s complaint over “A Drag Queen Christmas,” a national touring show.

The Florida Department of Business and Profession­al Regulation says in its complaint that the Orlando Philharmon­ic Plaza Foundation, which oversees the Plaza Live, failed to prevent minors from attending the Dec. 28 show — although signs on the venue doors warned parents the show’s content could be unsuitable for those younger than 18.

The foundation faces six civil counts of statute violations, including admitting children onto a licensed premises where performers conduct simulation­s of sexual activityco­nstituting­lewdness, unlawful exposure of sexual organs, engaging or permitting disorderly conduct and maintainin­g a nuisance on the licensed premises.

In light of that incident,

Ramos said the Dr. Phillips Center contacted four state agencies, including the Department of Business and Profession­al Regulation.

“Due to recent uncertaint­ies regarding age-appropriat­e content at drag shows and pageants across statewide venues, we began working with several state agencies to seek clarificat­ion of Florida statutes to confirm compliance,” she said. “We have not received any clarificat­ion on the Florida statutes in question.”

While awaiting a response, the arts center offered the foundation the chance to postpone the show or hold it with an adult-only audience.

With time running out,

DeShazo felt it was unfair to change the nature of the event.

“We fully respect their decision and look forward to hosting the event in the future,” Ramos said.

The arts center notified ticket holders of the venue change and continued to promote the event on its website. But technologi­cal requiremen­ts meant the center had to issue refunds to patrons, who then had to rebook their tickets on the foundation’s website, rose dynastyfou­ndationinc.org/ pageant. Tickets will also be available at the door before Saturday’s 6:30 p.m. show.

DeShazo hopes the inconvenie­nce and confusion won’t deter supporters from

attending the event, now a few miles from Walt Disney World at the Wyndham Orlando Resort, 3011 Maingate Lane in Kissimmee.

It took effort — and lots of phone calls — to find a new location on such short notice.

“A couple places were hesitant and said they didn’t feel comfortabl­e hosting us,” he said. “We have had to spend more money, which comes out of what we were raising for us and six charities.”

But, he said, there was “no hesitation” on the part of the Wyndham resort, which has previously hosted other drag pageants. Resort staff even helped DeShazo arrange extra security precaution­s.

Friday-afternoon phone calls and emails to Wyndham Hotels & Resorts corporate offices were not immediatel­y returned.

Unlike the Dr. Phillips Center and the Plaza Live, both city-owned, the resort is part of a private corporatio­n. In another difference, the venue doesn’t plan to sell liquor at the event, which will take place in a ballroom at the resort’s conference center.

“We don’t serve alcohol,” DeShazo said of his organizati­on. “That would always be the venue’s decision. We serve iced coffee, soda and water.”

The pageant includes an evening-gown competitio­n, talent showcase and question-and-answer sessions — “like any pageant would,” said DeShazo, who performs as Momma Ashley Rose.

Last year, the event raised $30,000, distribute­d to the foundation and charities selected by the pageant contestant­s. The Rose Dynasty Foundation also holds events such as drag story time, drag bingo and dinner and variety shows to support its initiative­s for LGBTQ youths.

In December, the group’s “Celebratio­n of the Arts” show in Lakeland was picketed by neo-Nazis, many of them masked. Some displayed a banner reading, “Drag queens are pedophiles with AIDS.”

“This is an example of how the climate that we are in today has pushed extremists and given them a voice,” DeShazo told The (Lakeland) Ledger at the time. “Rose Dynasty Foundation will continue to provide a safe space for all people — it’s just a shame that these are the type of things we have to worry about.”

The Dr. Phillips Center has a few other drag shows on its schedule. The next, the 17th annual National Miss Comedy Queen Pageant on March 23, carries a warning: “Adult Content, intended for mature audiences. Under 18 should be accompanie­d by parent. Parents should use discretion when deciding what shows are appropriat­e for their children.”

Ramos said the arts center has no intention of determinin­g or evaluating the content of the shows it hosts and hopes the pageant will be able to return.

“It’s very much an open door for next time,” she said.

And DeShazo says he is not opposed to an Orlando comeback.

“I have no hard feelings toward the Dr. Phillips Center,” which has hosted the pageant multiple times, he said. “But I wish things could have been different.”

 ?? ROSE DYNASTY FOUNDATION ?? Ribbons are twirled and confetti rains down during a production number of the 2018 Miss Rose Dynasty Pageant.
ROSE DYNASTY FOUNDATION Ribbons are twirled and confetti rains down during a production number of the 2018 Miss Rose Dynasty Pageant.

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