Categories
News News Blog News Feature

Riot Drag Show To Support LGBTQ+ Community

Bricks have become symbolic for the LGBTQ+ community. However, Hunny Blunt, a 27-year-old local drag performer in Memphis, tells the Flyer that it isn’t a violent symbol, but rather one that bears meaning and is representative of an ongoing struggle present in the community.

Blunt explains that the brick symbolism dates back to the Stonewall riots in New York City in 1969, a pivotal moment in LGBTQ history. “When we hold a brick in the air, we’re not necessarily threatening violence or inciting any sort of damage,” Blunt explains. “What we are doing is really paying homage to the fact that we were so repressed that we literally had to fight back with bricks.”

Hunny Blunt, like many others in the LGBTQ+ community, has been fighting back in a number of ways over the past few months. Most recently Governor Bill Lee signed legislation that will negatively impact members of the LGBTQ+ community. Some of these bills include Senate Bill 3 and Senate Bill 1.

Opponents of the legislation say it serves as an attempt to erase LGBTQ+ culture from Tennessee. 

“You read the wording of some of these bills and it’s so hateful. I can’t believe nobody said ‘This is a little too much,’”  said Jenna Lee Dunn. Dunn serves as the trans services specialist for OUTMemphis, and recently started Jenna On Fire Productions, LLC. “There is no line or boundary with these people. They’re just hateful. They want to get rid of us completely.”

Members of the LGBTQ+ community have decided that they will not go quietly and are planning to take an active stance against the legislation. One of these ways is through an event called “Rage On The Stage: Trans Day of Visibility, Drag Show Riot.” The event will be held on March 30th at the Hi-Tone Cafe.

The event was created by Dunn, who invited several community partners to sponsor the event.

“We need to be seen. We need to be making noise to show how big we are in number,” says Blunt. “I think we are reaching that turning point where it does feel good to see allyship from people. It does feel good to be seen and accepted.”

Blunt explains that it is important for them to stand in solidarity, as these bills impact the community as a whole, and not just drag performers and trans youth. “A lot of these drag bans really target transgendered people who really aren’t drag performers, but are everyday transgender people” she says. “We have transgendered drag performers of course, but there are transgender people that don’t necessarily do drag, but that’s how they live their life, and these laws can really prevent them from being in any kind of safe space.

The idea of not only having a safe space, but the need to be seen and heard has been a common theme amongst participants and event organizers like Dunn, who says that there are certain places, like drag shows, where people in the community feel more comfortable. She says that her love and passion for the trans community, as well as having friends that are drag performers, has amplified her drive for wanting to put on events such as this one.

“I can’t go to Nashville and force these people to not pass these bills, and to change their minds and to stop hating people,” she says, “but what I can do is create outlets for people to be able to go and enjoy themselves and try to get some of this off of their mind.”

Categories
Memphis Gaydar News

Cooper-Young Rainbow Crosswalk Gets a Permanent Refresh Sunday

Memphis’ Rainbow Crosswalk/Facebook

If you noticed the rainbow crosswalk in Cooper-Young was looking a bit faded, a new one is on the way and it’ll have staying power.

Volunteers will repaint the rainbow Sunday morning and install a more-permanent resin material over it to protect it from weather and traffic. The $3,000 project was funded by private donors.

Work on the crosswalk will begin at 7 a.m. and go until 2 p.m. Project partner Alchemy Memphis will open from 4 to 6 p.m. for to-go drinks and frozen cocktails.

At 7 p.m., a drag show and ceremony will be held outdoors at the corner of Cooper and Young. Bring your phones for contactless tipping for the entertainers.

Memphis’ Rainbow Crosswalk/Facebook

Categories
Memphis Gaydar News

Coronavirus: Dru’s Place Drag Shows Go Virtual

Dru’s Place/Facebook

By now, maybe you’ve done a virtual workout or your child has done some virtual learning. Tune in to Facebook tonight for, perhaps, a brand-new virtual experience — a drag show streaming live from Midtown.

Dru’s Place on Madison is moving cautiously ahead with its regular drag shows on Thursday and Saturday nights. Bar owner Tami Montgomery explained in a Thursday Facebook post that she’s taken many precautions for the shows, including streaming them on the bar’s Facebook page.

“I understand there are many people who disagree with businesses remaining open, and you have every right to your opinion,” Montgomery said. “Do not think for one second that this is an easy decision for any business owner to make. We will adhere to all regulations put forth by the city, state, and/or federal government.”
Dru’s Place/Facebook

Montgomery said she has removed half of the bar’s seating, hired an environmental sanitation company to treat the bar every week, increased cleaning procedures, increased the personal hygiene requirements of the staff, canceled events, limited bar hours, and limited the number of people allowed inside.

However, the drag shows will remain for now, she said. For those, buckets will be used to collect tips (and you can send virtual tips on Venmo and other apps), the crowd is limited to 50 people, the bar will be open only for an hour and a half, and performers will remain on the stage and not circulate through the crowd. If you’ve never been to a drag show but have been curious, log on to Facebook and get a live look tonight from 10 to 11:30 p.m.
Dru’s Place/Facebook

A screenshot from a live-feed test by Dru’s Place yesterday. Tune in tonight and see the stage filled with the bar’s famous drag artists.

Montgomery said hosting the shows is a business decision, but a tough one.

“Many of you feel that there is help being provided and a business can just close up and the government will take care of them and their employees, or that business insurance covers the shutdown,” she wrote Thursday afternoon. “This is not factual information. Most policies will not cover a business being closed due to a virus.

“If you have never owned a business with employees who depend on their job to put a roof over their head, pay their bills, and eat, or invested everything you have ever had in a business, then you do not understand the position small business owners are in at this time. We have obligations you can not imagine, and every day we get up and do the best we can to do the best we can.”