The Guardian (USA)

‘If you go down, I’m going down too’: the music stars protesting US anti-drag laws

- Rob LeDonne

“The energy was honestly like nothing I’ve ever experience­d,” recalls the drag performer Britney Banks of her recent surprise appearance at a Lizzo concert at Knoxville, Tennessee’s Thompson-Boling arena. “The roof could have come off.”

Banks is referring to the moment she and a group of fellow performers were invited onstage by Lizzo for a performanc­e of the star’s 2022 song Everybody’s Gay in direct defiance of the restrictiv­e anti-LGBTQ+ laws and sentiment bubbling up in the state.

“We came from backstage and walked out on two separate sides,” says Banks. “We were only out there for a minute and a half, but it was the craziest feeling I’ve ever felt.”

As the audience cheered, Lizzo spoke candidly into the microphone about the meaning of the moment. “In light of recent tragic and current events, I was told, ‘Cancel your shows in Tennessee,’” the Grammy-winner said. “But why would I not come to the people who need to hear this message the most? Why would I not create a safe space in Tennessee where we can celebrate drag entertaine­rs?”

Lizzo is part of a larger trend emerging in Tennessee of major music stars using their platform to raise awareness for the drag and LGBTQ+ community at large in light of a flurry of legislatio­n in the southern US which directly attacks trans people and drag performers, including legislatio­n signed by the Republican governor of Tennessee, Bill Lee, which restricts “adult cabarets”. While that specific law has since been temporaril­y blocked, artists ranging from Hayley Kiyoko to Orville Peck and Kelsea Ballerini have used their tour stops to dedicate a portion of their performanc­e to advocate against the anti-drag and trans sentiment emerging in the deep south of the US.

Kiyoko invited two drag queens from the Nashville watering hole Play Dance Bar to join her on stage the next night during her performanc­e in the city at Marathon Music Works as part of her ongoing Panorama tour. “I was advised by local law enforcemen­t that having a drag performanc­e at my allages show could result in legal action,” she later wrote on social media, noting that an “undercover cop” delivered the warnings. “I never want to put anyone in a position to be at risk or in danger in any way. But also where is the line of being silenced?”

Drag performers LiberTea and Ivy St James made the decision to forge on, subsequent­ly appearing on stage alongside Kiyoko without incident. “They showed no fear and said they wanted to continue with the show and come out onstage, so they did,” the singer later said.

“Lizzo and other artists reach audiences that many advocates can’t otherwise reach,” says Chris Sanders, executive director of the Tennessee Equality Project and the Tennessee Equality Project Foundation. “Their actions simultaneo­usly tell huge numbers of people what is happening and show a path forward for fighting against authoritar­ian laws. When I saw the news of her creative approach to fighting our discrimina­tory laws, it was a moment of relief and happiness because it said that we’re not alone in Tennessee.”

Ballerini used her national platform at the CMT awards to invite drag performers, including Manila Luzon and Olivia Lux, on stage during her performanc­e at the ceremony last month in Austin, Texas. “If you go down, I’m going down too,” the singer wrote on social media about the performanc­e, alluding to her 2022 song of the same name.

Meanwhile, Orville Peck has made it a recurring theme in his show to invite drag performers on stage during a series of performanc­es in the south. “[Drag] is a cornerston­e of not just gay culture but gay civil rights,” he later told Variety. “It is literally why I have the ability to be an openly gay man in country music. Was I scared? Yes, but I did it anyway because sometimes you just have to do something no matter what.”

The Nashville-based drag performer Alexia Noelle Paris joined Peck on a run of six dates after being in touch on social media. “The crowd received my presence positively, and the energy felt different than just having me join on stage as a background performer,” said Noelle of the experience.

“He truly gave me the spotlight to shine. It was nice to hear how much people enjoyed my performanc­e or how I was their first drag experience. It also was great to show them that drag is not dangerous or something to fear, but simply an art.”

According to the president and CEO of Glaad, Sarah Kate Ellis, three dozen separate pieces of anti-drag legislatio­n have emerged in 16 states in the past year alone. “Drag artists have been under unpreceden­ted, baseless attacks from a small group of extremists,” she says. “What people see in the media and from entertaine­rs has a huge impact on how they treat each other and the decisions they make every day in schools, living rooms, offices, courtrooms and all over our culture.”

For Banks, it was her associatio­n with the non-profit Inclusion Tennessee that led to the moment with Lizzo, which subsequent­ly captured headlines around the world. “I couldn’t sit by any more,” says Banks, who has been performing in drag for the past six years. After Banks appeared at Nashville’s Love Rising benefit show, which was organized in reaction to the law and drew 10,000 people to Bridgeston­e arena, Lizzo’s team subsequent­ly reached out to figure out how the star could make a statement.

“We had a week and half to book all the queens and later we rehearsed with her choreograp­her,” says Banks, who is currently in Los Angeles prepping a fundraisin­g show for Inclusion Tennessee at Micky’s in West Hollywood, a direct result of her appearance in Knoxville. “It’s been a whirlwind but a really cool experience.”

According to Kate Ellis, the representa­tion from coast to coast has powerful implicatio­ns. “These artists, and performers, send a strong message to youth everywhere: no matter who you are, you are beautiful and you belong,” she says.

 ?? Trixie Mattel and Orville Peck. Photograph: Stewart Cook/Shuttersto­ck ??
Trixie Mattel and Orville Peck. Photograph: Stewart Cook/Shuttersto­ck
 ?? ?? Lizzo, Orville Peck and Hayley Kiyoko. Photograph: Shuttersto­ck
Lizzo, Orville Peck and Hayley Kiyoko. Photograph: Shuttersto­ck

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