The Korea Times

Vietnam drag queens electrify Hanoi’s nightlife

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HANOI (AFP) — Makeup artist by day, cross-dresser by night, Betty is among a vanguard of Vietnamese drag queens shaking up Hanoi’s nightlife — and social norms — in a city where such performanc­es remain little known.

In a lime green barely-there mesh dress and towering silver heels, the 22-year-old hopes to bring drag into the mainstream with regular performanc­es in Hanoi, a conservati­ve capital better known for its colonial charm than men in sequined minis.

“If we dare to be pioneers, soon this art will be accepted in Vietnam,” Betty told AFP before a show Saturday that stirred up crowds with renditions of hits by Whitney Houston and Alicia Keys.

The drag night started as a weekly viewing party for the hit TV series “RuPaul’s Drag Race” and quickly transforme­d into a show of its own -drawing a handful of men in drag to the stage for punchy lip-sync performanc­es.

Organiser Tamah Lake said it’s the only event of its kind in Hanoi.

“It’s brought it more into the open... I think it’s becoming slightly more mainstream and slightly more well-known,” said Lake, not herself a drag queen, who works as a teacher during the week.

The drag queens who turn out for her Saturday night parties say they have few places to perform in a city where cross-dressing is almost unheard of, unlike in the West where starlets like RuPaul — the drag queen mother — have helped to popularize it.

“In Vietnam there are drag queens that have been active for a long time but have not been acknowledg­ed. This show helps more people know about our art,” said Betty, who started the five-member drag group “Victeam” in Haiphong, east of Hanoi.

Communist Vietnam is seen as relatively progressiv­e on LGBT issues -- the one-party state decriminal­ised gay marriage celebratio­ns in 2015, although it stopped short of full legal recognitio­n for same-sex unions -- and the government is currently drafting a transgende­r law to allow legal gender changes.

But cross-dressing can help to boost tolerance, according to Vuong Kha Phong, LGBT rights programme officer at Vietnamese NGO iSEE.

“Drag queens being out there performing helps tremendous­ly in getting people to know and be more comfortabl­e with diversity,” Vuong told AFP.

Though the drag scene is still just emerging in much of Vietnam, cross-dressing has historic roots: the centuries-old ritual of “Hau Dong” requires mediums to dress as the opposite sex to channel spirits.

Still, when it comes to modern cross-dressing, some drag queens face pushback from the community for blurring gender norms.

First-time performer Za Za Zellia hopes the drag show will help to sway conservati­ve attitudes.

“Hanoi is really traditiona­l, they don’t hate (drag) but they don’t approve of it at the same time,” the 25-year-old told AFP, after debuting in a Gatsby-inspired sequined look.

“This just tells people it’s alright, it’s completely normal,” Za Za said after the show, a huge white feather emerging from a wig of thick black curls.

 ?? AFP-Yonhap ?? Irish drag queen Lavender performs in a show at a local bar in Hanoi, March 24. A vanguard of Vietnamese drag queens is shaking up Hanoi’s nightlife, in a city where such entertainm­ent remains little known.
AFP-Yonhap Irish drag queen Lavender performs in a show at a local bar in Hanoi, March 24. A vanguard of Vietnamese drag queens is shaking up Hanoi’s nightlife, in a city where such entertainm­ent remains little known.

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