'Delicious' comedy show, featuring drag queens at a conservative fundraiser, set to open in Hamilton - Action News
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Hamilton

'Delicious' comedy show, featuring drag queens at a conservative fundraiser, set to open in Hamilton

A comedy show set to be staged in Hamilton on Wednesday will feature three drag queens who, according to the plot, were hiredto perform at a private functionthey later discovered wasa fundraising event for a conservative politician.

Hamilton drag queen Karma Kameleon was hired as a drag consultant for the production

Promotional picture of two drag queens in front of Conservative poster.
Canadian playwright and actor Mark Crawford wrote The Gig to get audiences to consider 'what do we do when we don't see eye to eye with people's politics.' (Submitted by Theatre Aquarius)

A comedy show set to runin Hamilton startingWednesday will feature three drag queens who, according to the plot, were hiredto perform at a private functionthey later discovered wasa fundraising event for a conservative politician.

The Gig,written by Canadian playwright and actor Mark Crawford, is out to ask: "What do we do when we don't agree with people's politics," Crawford told CBC Hamilton. "What do we do when we don't see eye to eye with people?"

The playtakes place atTheatre Aquarius justas thebyelectioncampaign is underway for the next Hamilton Centre MPP.

Drag queens appearing at eventsin Canada have been the target of anti-LGBTQgroups in the past, including at a Hamilton Public Library Drag Storytimein 2022whereabout 20 people appeared to protest the reading. While drag shows themselves are not inherently political, the appearance of conservative or alt-right groups at these performances in the last few monthshave created an image that conservatives don't typically like or support drag.

ButCrawford saidthe goal of The Gig isn't tochange someone's politics, but to enjoy the characters' journeys and for the audience to gain a fresh perspective on why people think the way they do.

Crawford saidThe Gig will feature a total of seven actors and a large creative team includinga largewardrobe and "a dedicated wig department."

Local drag queen Karma Kameleon was hired as a drag consultant for the production to teach the cast about "the mechanics of drag, like the makeup or wearing wigs,"Crawford said. He said he and the cast were "very grateful for her work and happy to have her there."

'Afunny coincidence'

The Hamilton Centrebyelectionwill be held on March 16. Crawford said he didn't plan for the show to open during the byelectioncampaign and it was "a funny coincidence."

He said the story was in development before the COVID-19 lockdowns and the idea came from the growing popularity of drag queens in mainstream media like in RuPaul's Drag Race.

Crawford said he wanted to write a story examining how people of different ideologies interact with drag and expects people to find themselves surprisedwith who they might agree with at certain points of the play.

"To quote a line from the play, 'Do we pick up our toys and go home or do we stay in the room and have a conversation?' and what does that cost us if we decide to stay and hash it out with people?," he said.

'The circumstances of this show are so delicious,'Lujan

Jaime Lujan is the youngest actor in the cast and is playing Ms. XXXBox, one of the drag queens in the comedy. He comes from Toronto with experienceas drag queen Lucinda Miu and told CBC Hamilton many of his friends love the setting for the show.

Drag queen Lucinda Miu.
Jaime Lujan, a Toronto actor with experience as drag queen Lucinda Miu, told CBC Hamilton that he hopes Mark Crawford's The Gig will inspire more playwrights and actors to work in Hamilton, Ont. (Submitted by Theatre Aquarius)

"The circumstances of this show are so delicious, conservatives and drag queens you know?," he said. "Many drag artists get booked for private parties all the time and everyone can identify with 'What would happen if our employer was a conservative?'"

Lujan told CBC Hamilton that characters in the show will have conversations abouttopics such as cancel culture, what an apology looks like on social media in this age and what younger generations look for from social reform.

"I wish I could be a fly on the wall in the car rides home, because I would love to know the conversations people will have," he said.

"Regardless of where you fall on the political spectrum, there is something to be gained here."

The play runs until March 25.