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Serving history: 'Drag Race's Soa de Muse channels the original Queen of Drag
We love a queen who knows her history. RuPauls Drag Races Soa de Muse may have been the electric queen who sashayed into the hearts of fans first on Drag Race France and now Global All Stars and whose recent elimination from the latter left them heartbroken. Still, she will forever have a place in my heart for honoring our past in the art of drag. In one of her latest runway looks, the French queen paid homage to William Dorsey Swann, a 19th-century drag queen who paved the way for every queen who steps onto the Drag Race runway. For me, it was, what can I say? It was an opportunity, Soa told PRIDE in an interview following her exit. Lets take a moment to step back into the queer time machineyour finest Victorian-era bustles are not required. Its not the era we often associate with drag ballrooms and house mothers, but thats precisely what well find in Swann: a former enslaved person turned drag queen and activist. She is widely regarded as the first queen of drag. Can you imagine being that fabulous in a time when being Black and gay, let alone publicly donning a wig and gown, was considered an act of rebellion? But thats what William Dorsey Swann did. In the 1880s, Swann organized secret drag balls in Washington, D.C., which would have had even the fiercest of queens today shaking in their stilettos. She faced police raids, arrests, and the constant threat of violence. Yet, she persevered, fighting for the right to celebrate her identity and her community.Long before the fabulous, glittering world of RuPauls Drag Race, well before the voguing scenes portrayed in Paris is Burning, and long before that brick was thrown at Stonewall, Swann fought for our right to serve looks and live authentically. As house mother, Swann's gathering consisted of formerly enslaved individuals and drag queens of the time, known as the "House of Swann." One of the dances they participated in was the cakewalk. Once performed by enslaved Americans in Southern plantations in a semi-minstrel manner, it was reclaimed with improvisational movements and expressions that resemble our modern voguing. In the late 1800s, Swann and others were arrested and charged for running a brothel and sentenced to a few months in jail. Though Swann failed to get a presidential pardon, they left another historic moment for the books: becoming the first American to legally defend our community's right and dignity to gather freely and without violence. Sadly, theres no surviving image of Dorsey today, so Soa de Muse had several references to source for her look. He looked to Swanns friend, Mr. Brown, often mistaken as Swann in early photographs, an American performer who went to France and later performed in a cabaret.So Im gonna try to connect with [Mr. Browns image and story] and do this kind of Afro-futurism vision about who is William Dorsey Swann, de Muse told us.Swann stopped hosting drag events and died in 1925, aged 65. Today Swann is a historical figure who has largely been forgotten, but her legacy is now being rediscovered and celebrated. We have to thank Soa de Muse for embodying that legacy.As the music played and the credits rolled at the end of this weeks episode, I wondered how we honor our drag ancestors in a world that often tries to forget them. Perhaps its through queens like Soa who remind us that drag is not just a performanceits a way of life. A celebration of identity. And the most artful form of protest.So, as we say au revoir to Soa this season, lets not mourn her departure. Instead, lets celebrate her for what she truly is: a revolutionary. A queen like Dorsey reminds us that drag is history, drag is activism, and, most importantly, drag is forever.
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