Why RuPaul’s Secret Celebrity Drag Race Is ‘Realer’ Than The Original Series

This article originally appeared on HuffPost US. 

We may only be halfway through a regular season of Drag Race, but RuPaul is not letting that stop her launching the latest spinoff of the trailblazing reality show. 

The Emmy-winning series has attracted more star power than a faux-inspirational celebrity quarantine video over the years, with everyone from pop stars, Kardashians, Olympians and even Nancy Pelosi dropping by.

Now celebrity guests will get a chance to compete on the main stage for themselves in RuPaul’s Secret Celebrity Drag Race, a four-part special event that debuted in the US on Friday. 

Ross Mathews, RuPaul, Michelle Visage and Carson Kressley on RuPaul's Secret Celebrity Drag Race

Who exactly will be blending, beating and, yes, tucking remains a mystery — joins hands in silent prayer for Harry Styles — but each week a trio of celebrities will get in touch with their inner drag queen for charity, with a little help from series veterans, including All Stars winners Trixie Mattel and Monét X Change.

“Honestly, it was realer than Drag Race,” Trxie tells HuffPost. “These celebrities are not performing. They are having authentic, transformative human experiences in front of us.

“I was there to play the game, but — plot twist — the Grinch’s heart grew a few sizes,” she continues. “You really watch them struggle with this new skill. Imagine you’re doing drag for the first time, and it’s on this scale. This is high stakes, bitch.”

Trixie Mattel and Monét X Change

Instead of sitting pretty at the judges’ tables, celebrities will now walk in the contestants’ high heels through various fan-favourite challenges, which proved to be both satisfying and empowering for returning queens. 

“It was a nice little role reversal, because, you know, full tea, sometimes these celebrities come judge Drag Race, and I’m like, ‘Who is qualifying you to give any critiques on drag?’” Monét tells HuffPost, adding how freeing it was to participate without the fear of being sent home.

“When you just allow yourself to have a no-fucks-given attitude, it’s more fun, and you just get better TV,” she says. 

Drag Race has seen many a breakdown and breakthrough in its 11-year run, and it sounds like the celebrity contestants will be transformed from the inside out. They’ll have to work through their own inhibitions to deliver the required charisma, uniqueness, nerve and talent, leading to some unexpected revelations among the cast.  

“People have different hang-ups about dressing up and what their family might have thought of them,” Trixie says about overcoming obstacles during filming. “But celebrities aren’t volunteering to cross-dress on national television unless they’re also looking to get something else out of it, too.”  

“Drag is a scary thing,” Monét adds. “Even in 2020, when we’ve opened up our minds a lot about gender and sexuality. But once you let yourself experience the physical and mental transformation that happens with drag, it just taps something inside of you. You see it especially in the makeover challenges, where these dudes, who have never done drag before, are suddenly, like, simulating fellatio and twerking.”

 

Seeing the power of costumes, jewels and wigs made Trixie realise that she has at times “lost sight of the transformative qualities” of drag and gave her a new appreciation of the art form and the series.

“Remember three months ago, when Twitter gays were like, ‘They need to stop making so much Drag Race’?” she jokes. “Well, guess what bitch, aren’t you happy? We went from a society who would watch, like, 11 seasons of a show we don’t even like for one gay kiss to complaining about too much gay programming.”

She adds: “Gay people, we get what we want, and then we don’t want it.”

Especially amid the ongoing coronavirus outbreak, both Trixie and Monét encouraged fans to support queens more fiercely than ever ― be it subscribing to a queer-friendly streaming service or directly supporting LGBTQ artists by tipping via Venmo. 

“When you see these entertainers doing dope things, we should reward them however you can, because they are being creative for you to enjoy yourself at home on your 14th watered-down vodka soda in your apartment by yourself,” Monét says. 

“Go to the mat for what you love,” Trixie adds. “Sometimes that means drag queens who are just trying to buy groceries for tomorrow.” 

RuPaul’s Secret Celebrity Drag Race airs in the US on VH1. A UK broadcaster is yet to be confirmed.