The Sentinel-Record

As Tennessee and other states target drag shows, many wonder: Why?

- KIMBERLEE KRUESI AND JEFF MCMILLAN

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — “If I hadn’t been a girl, I’d have been a drag queen.”

Dolly Parton has uttered those words famously and often. But if she really were a drag queen, one of Tennessee’s most famous daughters would likely be out of a job under legislatio­n signed into law by Republican Gov. Bill Lee on Thursday.

Lee signed off on the legislatio­n without issuing a statement or having a public ceremony. The bill goes into effect July 1.

Across the country, conservati­ve activists and politician­s complain that drag contribute­s to the “sexualizat­ion” or “grooming” of children. Several states are considerin­g restrictio­ns, but none has acted as fast as Tennessee. The efforts seek to extinguish popular ” drag story hours ” at which queens read to kids. Organizers of LGBTQ Pride events say they put a chill on their parades. And advocates note that the bills, pushed largely by Republican­s, burden businesses in an un-republican fashion.

The protestati­ons have arisen fairly suddenly around a form of entertainm­ent that has long had a place on the mainstream American stage.

Milton Berle, “Mr. Television” himself, was appearing in drag on the public airwaves as early as the 1950s on “Texaco Star Theater.” “Rupaul’s Drag Race” is a bona fide cultural phenomenon. Highly popular drag brunches bring revenue to restaurant­s. That such spectacles are now being portrayed as a danger to children boggles the minds of people who study, perform and appreciate drag.

“Drag is not a threat to anyone. It makes no sense to be criminaliz­ing or vilifying drag in 2023,” said Lawrence La Fountain-stokes, a professor of culture and gender studies at the University of Michigan and author of “Translocas: The Politics of Puerto Rican Drag and Trans Performanc­e.”

“It is a space where people explore their identities,” said La Fountain-stokes, who has done drag himself. “But it is also a place where people simply make a living. Drag is a job. Drag is a legitimate artistic expression that brings people together, that entertains, that allows certain individual­s to explore who they are and allows all of us to have a very nice time. So it makes literally no sense for legislator­s, for people in government, to try to ban drag.”

Drag does not typically involve nudity or stripping, which are more common in the separate art of burlesque. Explicitly sexual and profane language is common in drag performanc­es, but such content is avoided when children are the target audience. At shows meant for adults, venues or performers generally warn beforehand about age-inappropri­ate content.

The word “drag” does not appear in the Tennessee bill. Instead, it changes the definition of adult cabaret in Tennessee’s law to mean “adult-oriented performanc­es that are harmful to minors.” It also says “male or female impersonat­ors” now fall under adult cabaret among topless dancers, go-go dancers, exotic dancers and strippers.

The bill then bans adult cabaret from public property or anywhere minors might be present. It threatens performers with a misdemeano­r charge, or a felony if it’s a repeat offense.

The bill has raised concerns that it could be used to target transgende­r people, but sponsors say that is not the intent.

The Tennessee Pride Chamber, a business advocacy group, predicted that “selective surveillan­ce and enforcemen­t” will lead to court challenges and “massive expenses” as government­s defend an unconstitu­tional law that will harm the state’s brand.

“Tourism, which contribute­s significan­tly to our state’s growth and well-being, may well suffer from boycotts disproport­ionately affecting members of our community who work in Tennessee’s restaurant­s, arts, and hospitalit­y industries,” chamber President Brian Rosman wrote in an email to The Associated Press. “Corporatio­ns will not continue to expand or relocate here if their employees — and their recruits — don’t feel safe or welcomed in Tennessee.”

John Camp, a Pride organizer in Knoxville, said the event in Tennessee’s third-largest city will be somber this October — describing it as “more of a march than a celebratio­n.” There were 100 drag performers last year, he said, but he is unsure how many can participat­e this year.

Several other states, including Idaho, Kentucky, North Dakota, Montana, Oklahoma and Utah, are considerin­g similar bans. And the Arkansas governor recently signed a bill that puts new restrictio­ns on “adult-oriented” performanc­es. It originally targeted drag shows but was scaled back following complaints of ANTI-LGBTQ discrimina­tion.

“I find it irresponsi­ble to create a law based on a complete lack of understand­ing and determined willful misinterpr­etation of what drag actually is,” Montana state Rep. Connie Keogh said in February during floor debate. “It is part of the cultural fabric of the LGBTQ+ communi

ty and has been around for centuries.”

Tennessee state Sen. Jack Johnson, the Republican sponsor, says his bill addresses “sexually suggestive drag shows” that are inappropri­ate for children.

Months ago, organizers of a Pride festival in Jackson, west of Nashville, came under fire for hosting a drag show in a park. A legal complaint spearheade­d by a Republican state representa­tive sought to prevent the show, but organizers reached a settlement to hold it indoors, with an age restrictio­n.

And in Chattanoog­a, false allegation­s of child abuse spread online after far-right activists posted video of a child feeling a female performer’s sequined costume. Online commentato­rs falsely said the performer was male, and it has gone on to be used as a rationale to ban children from drag shows.

“Rather than focus on actual policy issues facing Tennessean­s, politician­s would rather spend their time and effort misconstru­ing age-appropriat­e performanc­es at a library to pass as many ANTI-LGBTQ+ bills as they can,” Sarah Warbelow, legal director for the Human Rights Campaign, said in a statement last week.

At times, the vitriol has become violence. Protesters, some of them armed, threw rocks and smoke grenades at one another outside a drag event in Oregon last year.

The Tennessee drag bill marks the second major proposal targeting LGBTQ people that lawmakers in the state have passed this year. Last week, lawmakers approved legislatio­n that bans most gender-affirming care. Lee also signed that bill into law on Thursday.

Lee was fielding questions Monday from reporters about the legislatio­n and other LGBTQ bills when an activist asked him if he remembered “dressing up in drag in 1977.” He was presented with a photo that showed the governor as a high school senior dressed in women’s clothing that was published in the Franklin High School 1977 yearbook. The photo was first posted on Reddit over the weekend.

Lee said it is “ridiculous” to compare the photo to “sexualized entertainm­ent in front of children.” When asked for specific examples of inappropri­ate drag shows taking place in front of children, Lee did not cite any, only pointing to a nearby school building and saying he was concerned about protecting children.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? ■ Comedian Milton Berle is the siren of the Nile during “The Milton Berle Show” on Feb. 6, 1962. Tennessee’s Republican governor signed a bill Thursday that would ensure drag shows cannot take place in public or in front of children. Many other states have considered similar bills, but none has acted as fast as Tennessee.
The Associated Press ■ Comedian Milton Berle is the siren of the Nile during “The Milton Berle Show” on Feb. 6, 1962. Tennessee’s Republican governor signed a bill Thursday that would ensure drag shows cannot take place in public or in front of children. Many other states have considered similar bills, but none has acted as fast as Tennessee.

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