Author: Jake Hook

  • REVIEW | Supreme Fabulettes At Leicester Square 2015

    Wigs at the ready, the Supreme Fabulettes are back…

    (more…)

  • MOTORING: Imagine A World Designed By Ford

    What do a chaise-lounge (above), a boat, a table football game and a guitar have in common? Apart from the fact you won’t be able to fit any of them in their brand new super vehicle, the Ford GT, they are in fact the imaginations of Ford’s design team.

    Given free reign to design and re-imagine everyday products, Ford design teams from around the globe were able to forget their normal remit and go beyond automotive design to create products that showcase their prowess as a design company and their innovative research tools. At the world’s most prestigious international design expo, Salone del Mobile exhibition in Milan, Ford unveiled the beautifully sleek modern lines of everyday objects redefined.

    Incredibly the design team are now using eye-tracking technology to collect data about what bits of the car we love and perhaps more importantly to them, we hate. They’re collecting biometrics to see what turns us on and off about their products. Sounds a little Big Brotherish? It’s all for us as customers I’m assured. As consumers, we’ve never been so choosy and a brand’s place in the world is no longer a given. There are many competitors in this crowded space. We as consumers want perfection. We want more bang for our pound. We want connectivity and we want it now.

    With technology becoming an ever increasing factor in our lives, as newspapers and traditional magazines give way to digital offerings, as MP3s give way to streaming and Netflix looks more and more attractive than Network TV, Amko Leenarts, Global Interiors Design Director suggests that in the near future that touch-screen technology and tablet incorporation could feature. The car is your personal space for you to connect with. Where before automotive designers were looking to perhaps build a car we could age happily in, the design pulse is modern, it’s millennial, it’s generation Z.

     

  • EDITORS LETTER | Porn Go On Admit It You Love It

    From the very first click of a camera, men, come on it’s always nearly men, were looking at ways to capture sexuality on film and from the first dark room developed photo to the naked selfie you took this morning, pornography is everywhere. It won’t surprise you to learn up to 37% of the net is porn and according to TopYenREVIEWS.com, it’s big business with over $3075.64 being spent on porn every second. Every 39 minutes a new porn movie is made in the US.

    Porn is a worldwide business. It seems that regardless of a country’s laws surrounding homosexuality, it doesn’t deter a midnight ramble on Google to find elicit images. The way in which we consume porn is rapidly changing.

    My first experience with porn was of an old discarded Playboy that some kid at play-scheme had discovered in the summer holidays. We’d sneak off to the woods and look at the battered, weathered pages, whilst drinking our Cherry Cokes and eating giant strawberries, marvelling at the nakedness in front of us…

    A little different to today’s kids who are viewing it on their way to school on the bus via their smartphones.

    Countries which repress homosexuality have actually found that gay porn is one of the most searched for terms. Interesting?

    So, here’s our very first porn issue, without being porny. In fact the only two phalluses you’ll find on these pages are of a dick shaped perfume bottle (we want) and the world’s largest Billy doll (we also want).

    We’ve interviewed 9 of the hottest porn stars around, at various stages of their careers. We probed and delved and may have had a look at their online presences too much. We also chat with Conor Maynard, Miranda Sings. Sir Derek Jacobi and Sir Ian McKellen grace our pages for the first time. We also have Aaron Frew’s first Gay press interview.

    Why no peen? Well, we’re a little Victorian on the matter of willies here at THEGAYUK, sometimes the hint is better than the full thrust (actually that’s never true).

    The brand new issue of TheGayUK is available to download from Apple and Android stores.

    We hope you enjoy the show… Remember to keep your comments coming on our Facebook or Twitter.

     

    Opinions expressed in this article may not reflect those of THEGAYUK, its management or editorial teams. If you’d like to comment or write a comment, opinion or blog piece, please click here.

  • HOTEL REVIEW | Hilton Garden Inn Glasgow City Centre

    HOTEL REVIEW | Hilton Garden Inn Glasgow City Centre

    ★★★★ | Hilton Garden Inn Glasgow City Centre

    A contemporary gateway into modern connected Glasgow

    Hilton Glasgow

    Set along Glasgow’s famous Clyde River, the Hilton Garden Inn is the perfect place to stay, when visiting the bustling city of Glasgow.

    Situated in the redeveloped and developing area around the historic Finnieston Quay, the hotel is a stone’s throw from the burgeoning media city and the sports facilities that were in full use during the Commonwealth Games 2014.

    The newly built hotel has 164 guest rooms, which all feature an iMac entertainment system and free WIFI along with, what I would call room essentials, an ironing board, hairdryer, tea and coffee making facilities. There’s also a well equipped, free Precor gym, should you want to burn off calories from the exquisite food available from the AA Rosette restaurant, City Café.

    The rooms are well appointed, with an inventive, airy, modern sensitivity, and best of all they offer stunning views across the river, and spectacular visions of The Clyde Arc, or as some around these parts call it, the ‘Squinty Bridge.’ It’s especially beautiful at night as the coloured light from the bridge reflects off the inky blackness of the Clyde.

    If you’re in Glasgow to do a spot of business, the rooms also have an ergonomically designed office chair – as well as that iMac mentioned previously, for you to use, but if you prefer to be amongst the people, you’ll also find a fully functional 24-hour business centre.

    A brisk walk along the river bank will take you into the heart of Glasgow to enjoy the many delights that Scotland’s second largest city has to offer, including a well developed gay scene, with bars and clubs.

    With a late check out of 12:00PM and the trademark ‘nothing-is-too-much-hassle’ attitude from staff, the Hilton Garden Inn, Glasgow City Centre, is the first choice for accommodation in Glasgow.

    Parking is just £5 and all rooms are non-smoking.

    Visit the Hilton Garden Inn Glasgow online

  • TV REVIEW: Grace And Frankie, Intelligently funny

    “If anyone gets to sit on Ryan Gosling’s face it’s me…” And with that iconic line, I hereby crown Grace and Frankie, the new Netflix Original, a hit.

    Chalk and cheese duo Grace (Jane Fonda) and Frankie (Lily Tomlin), can’t stand each other, however for the last 40 years, they’ve been in each other’s life’s. One thing is now forcing them to re-evaluate their relationship, turning their lives’ upside down. Their business partner husbands (Martin Sheen and Sam Waterston) are leaving them, for each other – and they want to get married.

    Intelligently funny, but lacks the comedy pace of sayUnbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Grace and Frankie has its share of ‘old women’ jokes but looks not to diminish the women’s newly single existence, nor bang the drum for gay rights and same-sex marriage, which is one of the critical issues being fought in the US right now.

    Whether Grace and Frankie is to become an overnight success will remain to be seen, it seems that Netflix are playing the long game with its creations, crafting a raft of programming to reflect its massive audience. Some are instance success like House Of Cards some are grower like Marco Polo. The audience for which this show is aimed isn’t so clear-cut. Is it Golden Girls? Is it Modern Family? The New Normal? We’re not so sure. But it is good. Very good. Plus you get to hear Jane Fonda say f**k. I mean that’s worth the view right?

  • W1A Series 2 Returns Roaring Its Timid BBC Head

    W1A roars back onto our screens with a laugh a minute. Okay, cool, yeah.

    Life it seems, goes on – at a snails pace sometimes at the BBC.

    BBC 2’s hit comedy, W1A triumphantly returned to our screens last night in a laugh a minute episode, which saw the ‘way ahead taskforce’ and a clueless PR, plan a visit, in the ‘Frankie Howard room’ from royalty.

    An episode in which not a lot happens, which seems to be the running joke. The BBC also needs to sex up its Wimbledon offering as the corporation is in danger of losing its contract. Siobhan Sharpe the PR genius, comes up with brand hash… Mixing brand BBC with brand Wimbledon.

    “Yes,”

    “Brilliant,”

    “Cool,”

    “Great…”

    “The fact is this, it needs to be better.”

    Brilliantly observed we assume and expertly delivered. I laughed at least 5 times in this 1-hour mud flinging, stinging satire on what exactly is wrong with our broadcast services in the UK

     

  • TV REVIEW | Newzoids, Flat Dull and Unfunny

    Watching the leaders’ debate gave opportunity for more satire than ITV’s latest offering, Newzoids, in last night’s debut of this long awaited, much anticipated show.

    Promises of 80’s ingenious were expected, or rather hoped for, but Newzoids failed to deliver and don’t blamed the subjects, just because Margaret Thatcher isn’t around anymore doesn’t mean you can’t make political satire funny.

    And stop already with the inane Clegg/Cameron housewife/underdog situation, it’s been done… Done I tell you.

    In a Twitter age where we’re expecting fresh content every nanosecond, Newzoids, felt positively ancient as it dealt with the first leaders’ debate, Jeremy Clarkson and Russell Brand – these are all so last week/month/minute.

    Browsing my Twitter timeline it looked as though many agree that Newzoids is as awkward as the puppets’ CGI’d mouths.

    Apparently Spitting Image wasn’t an overnight success, so perhaps Newzoids will become a grower.

    And that Andy Murray sketch was just downright weird… So maybe…

  • INTERVIEW | The Overtones – We don’t all live together!

    The Overtones are genuinely pop’s sweethearts. Easy going, easy on the eye and easy on the ear. Since their breakthrough in 2009 after a residency on Dancing On Ice, the band have sold over 750,000 records in the UK over 3 albums. In an industry that is notorious for dropping acts before they really get time to develop, it seems like Warner Music is prepared to play the longer game with this band.

    Although nothing was really made of it at the time, 3 of the band’s men are out and proudly flying the flag for gay men in what some may say is a bit of sea change in terms of acceptance for gay men in music. The fact that nothing was said at the time was probably the beginnings of this sea change. We’re here, we’re queer – it’s not a marketing ploy. In Kensington at Warner’s new offices, which occupy where the now defunct EMI once resided, we get down to the nitty gritty.

    So what more is there for The Overtones to do? What is there that you haven’t achieved yet, but really want to?
    MIKE: It’s a difficult one, because I feel like we’re kind of living our dream, to keep on doing what we’re doing. We talk about our fourth album and it’s something that a lot of acts in this day and age, in this ever-changing music industry don’t get the opportunity to do. So we do feel very lucky. For us, immediately, it’s about continuing this dream, continuing this career that we’ve worked hard at over the last five-years to build. We talk about fan base and stuff; that fan base, it grew slowly and solidly. There’s a solid foundation in there. So we’re going to keep on doing what we do, hopefully we’re going to spread our wings to other countries. Anywhere where people are willing to hear us and enjoy what we do. We’ll get there…

    Is it important for bands to crack the all-important, if somewhat elusive, US market?
    DARREN: If they have a strong desire to then I guess it is. But, you know, people have perfectly good, great careers without ever going to America. If you’re asking if we’d like to go and have a crack of course we would, we’re ambitious boys, but we’re also very happy with our career now and how we’re doing.

    Arguably what you’re doing, in terms of style and essence has its birthplace in America. Do you think they’d enjoy what you’d have to offer?
    DARREN: I think so…
    MARK: Yeah! For sure, but it’s just a massive nut to crack. It takes a lot of time and at the moment we’re enjoying being in the UK promoting our album here. Hopefully in the future we’d be up for it.
    TIMMY: I’d go to Timbuktu and do a gig if they enjoy our music. That’s the value of what you do. You work hard on music and create great albums and you work hard to do that.

    In the music biz they talk about the three major markets: the US, the UK and Germany – which you are doing very well in… Why is that?
    TIMMY: (Laughing) We did an RTL campaign out there.
    LACHIE: It’s a big TV station out there.
    TIMMY: They got behind “Gambling Man” (the band’s very first single, which ended up charting at number 16 in Germany) and they used it to advertise this new station and used us as part of it. It was a great introduction to Germany. We have gained some amazing fan base out there. So loyal. They come over whether we’re doing a gig in Germany, Ireland or anywhere in the UK, and they come over and we; I, really appreciate that kind of support. We’re looking at doing a few gigs, a small tour there, which is great. I think for us doing live gigs – that’s where we get to crossover and bring this album to life. We’ve got the moves, we’re looking sharp…

    You are quite polished in terms of your look and your marketing, compared to say, Adele or Sam Smith, who can be a little more ‘take me as you find me…’
    LACHIE: Did you find Adele was like that on 21? Come on now. Come on…
    TIMMY: In our downtime we’re wearing trackies… But I think everyone’s polished up their act actually. Even Sam Smith, he’s always wearing jackets, but even in their downtime I’m sure they’re wearing trackies and onesies!
    LACHIE: But with the style of music we do, I don’t think you could rock in wearing jeans and flips flops saying, “yeah we enjoy singing 50’s and 60’s music in a vocal harmony style.” This is doffing the hat. When we sat down on the couch (today), I said, “Oh look at us wearing all the same thing”… It’s good fun.

    It’s very classic. At the moment music has had that 50’s/60’s feeling for quite a while now, probably one the longest rebirth of styles. Is there a worry that it might pop and if it does, will The Overtones restyle? Will we see you in lime green jump suits and disco get up?
    DARREN: You know what, it goes back to the live shows again. We’ve been doing it for four years now and we’re very lucky that we’ve got a lot of fan base with touring. No matter what the fashion is in music, we’ve got a fan base that loves this style of music. So we’re very lucky boys.

    Since we last spoke Sam Smith has become unquestionably the world’s biggest artist, with an album written about his relationships with men. Are we past the point of people caring about the whole “gay” thing?
    DARREN: I’d like to think so, I saw the speech where he won one of his four Grammy’s and I think it was the last one and he thanked his ex-boyfriend for giving him the material to write about and I just thought that was really cool and refreshing to hear.
    TIMMY: I think he’s flying the flag in a very classy way. I think there’s a very aggressive approach sometimes saying, “I’m doing this for…” But he’s happy to say that he was in a relationship with a guy. I liked the way that he said people wouldn’t sign him because he was big or whatever, and I think whether you’re gay, straight, man, woman, black, white everyone can kind of like feel that in that album. It’s still quite universal, but he’s still okay to talk about that. Yes that is a change. But Freddie Mercury… All these people… It’s been going on for years. I think it’s lovely for him to be really comfortable to talk about it. I think he’s holding himself in a really classy way as a gay man.

    You’re now four albums in… Does it get easier?
    DARREN: From what point of view?

    Your personal point of view…
    LACHIE: I think from a recording perspective, it’s tighter; it’s a bit more professional. I just remember album one, we were like, “We’re in a recording studio, and there are producers and people from the record label and I feel like I’ve got to be a good boy”, but now I feel more free to say, “I think it could be that… or this harmony, or maybe, not that song, but this song.” This is album four and we’ve shown in our last three that people who listen to our albums really enjoy it. Really enjoy it. All of that has come directly through us. So there’s comfort that comes from that, but you don’t want to let anyone down, to keep it exciting and fresh and new and come up with new stuff, so there’s still an element of crossing your fingers.
    TIMMY: You don’t know what’s going to happen…

    Did you imagine you’d get to album four?
    DARREN: Yep. I did, I can’t speak for everyone, but I’ve always believed in us.
    MARK: I think we’ve also always taken it album by album as well. Obviously we’re in this for the long run. People always say, “What are your plans for the future”, but we’re really excited about here and now and this new album and promoting this Sweet Soul Music – out March the 2nd…
    DARREN: Thank you!!

    Tell me a little about the sweet soul music…
    MARK: Well, the title says it all really. It’s all the soul classics and we’re keen songwriters as well so there are three originals on there… It’s songs like: “I Heard It Through The Grapevine”, “Give Me Just A Little More Time”,
    DARREN: “Let’s Stay Together”
    TIMMY: “River Deep Mountain High”
    MARK: With Sam Bailey….
    TGUK: Tell us about Sam Bailey, how did that go down?
    DARREN: She’s cool man; she’s a really cool girl. Really down to earth, loves a chat… We just sat there for two hours and we’re like, “We should probably do some singing now…” It was really cool to see her and Lachie go in, they had a mic each when they were doing their leads. It was like one big sing off. It was really cool. She was heavily pregnant and we were a bit like, as she was hitting them high notes, “I hope she doesn’t pop!”

    Do you think she deserves a bit more of a shake of the tree, a bit more run of the rad than she’s been given?
    LACHIE: I never get the feeling from Sam that she’s wandering round saying, “Make me famous, make me famous!”. I think she’s grafted from a very early age. She has an extraordinary voice, she’s got her feet on the ground and her head screwed on. She’s got a beautiful family and a lovely fella, and I think Sam will just carve her way. Do you know what I mean? She can sing. Does she want to be on the cover of the teen mags? I don’t know… I just have real faith that she has an astonishing talent and she will have a really lovely career and have a lovely time, doing whatever she wants to do. Doing it how she wants to do it.
    TIMMY: She keeps it really real. She has her fan base and there’s no reason why she can’t have a career and go on tour… When you’ve got a voice like that…

    This issue is about food, so let’s get foodie… Are any of you good cooks?
    DARREN: I’m getting better, yeah. I need to broaden my horizons, I just focus on spaghetti bolognaise and some boring chicken dishes, but Lachie and Timmy kind of cook stews and roasts. I’m not there yet.
    MARK: I went round to Timmy’s the other day and he did a lovely… well it was meant to be a Red Thai curry…
    TIMMY: I thought it was Red Thai, but it was Tikka Masala,
    DARREN: He makes really small portions…
    MIKE: Yeah, really small, he’s really tight…
    TIMMY: I’m more a of “eat little and often” type guy. Like a bird… I see pictures that Lachie puts up on twitter…
    LACHIE: I love cooking…

    Lachie are you like a food porn baron on Twitter?
    LACHIE: oh no no no no no. If you go to a restaurant and you see people get their phones I feel like wiping the plates away. Don’t bother…
    TIMMY: (whispering) I do that…
    LACHIE: No! Do you?
    DARREN: I did that at TGI’s the other day…
    TIMMY: My mum might present the plate… (Demonstrates a pose showing off a plate)
    LACHIE: Well that’s nice… I’m talking about the people who when the plate goes down show people, “How interesting I am that I have chicken stuffed with Gruyère cheese…”
    TIMMY: I did it with scrambled eggs, bacon and black pudding…
    LACHIE: Go away you people. Okay that’s a bit harsh.
    TIMMY: I’m loving stews and casseroles. Comforting food, I’m good at that.

    Do you think that’s a lot to do with the climate we live in?
    DARREN: I reckon it is, (to Timmy) you love in the winter cooking all those wintry dishes, but I eat the same food all the year round.
    TIMMY: In those times, I think I go back to childhood. Things like Irish Stew, beef stews with red wine gravy. I love all that. I think it is to do with the climate. Lachie is from Australia and when you go out there, it’s all salads and no carbs… I was like “I’m starving all the time…”
    DARREN: Mike cooks a disgusting macaroni cheese. (Laughs)
    TIMMY: Has it got tomatoes?
    MIKE: Yeah, its got tomatoes and breadcrumbs… I get a bad rap for my macaroni cheese. Timmy’s the only one who’s tasted it.
    TIMMY: It’s really good.
    DARREN: No wait, he said behind your back…
    TIMMY: No I didn’t…
    MIKE: That breaks my heart a little… (they hug)
    MARK: Timmy will tell you that I cook a lovely kedgeree.
    TIMMY: Mark invited me over. I was really looking forward to it, you know bring a bottle of wine the whole lot… I sit down… I don’t like oily fish, or mackerel I don’t like egg and he cooked kedgeree which has all of those ingredients so I basically had rice. We still giggle about it.
    MARK: It’s got better now. You need to come around again and I’ll cook it for you again…
    TIMMY: Maybe with Salmon? can you do a kedgeree with Salmon? I’m up for that.

    Do you all live separately?
    ALL: Yes!
    TIMMY: No we don’t have an Overtones house.

    Is it difficult when you’re on tour to eat well?
    ALL: Yeah…
    TIMMY: It has been in the past.
    DARREN: No it’s not now…
    MIKE: I really tried… The hard thing on tour, we’ve got catering now which is great, great cooks, beautiful food, but when you finish a show at ten o’clock you’re starving, so it’s invariably “There’s a burger bar at the end of the road”, or granola bar for Darren… It’s really hard, I struggle as well.
    MARK: The good thing is we have an amazing catering team that come on the road with us and they always bring that big juicer.
    DARREN: But they also do nice desserts, which is hard to get away from.
    MIKE: That’s a killer!
    TIMMY: It’s Dillon and Pauline; we have to give them a shout out… They’re like mums and dads on
    tour. We never had that at the start… it makes it home from home.

    Is it important for you all to keep slim and fit?
    MARK: We do a two-hour show every night that’s fairly energetic – with our finger clicking… That burns of a few calories, we do go to the gym as well.
    DARREN: Yes, personally I eat healthy and go to the gym a lot and then at the weekends I chill out.
    TIMMY: Darren is very disciplined. I do have to say that! I’m a bit of a sugar fiend. So I’m trying to cut down on that, and I’m finding it very hard.

    Is there jealously between you all?
    MIKE: I’m jealous of these biceps (squeezes Darren’s arm)
    DARREN: Do that again!
    MIKE: Oh God it’s unbelievable.
    DARREN: You’re doing well
    MIKE: I’m doing all right; I’m getting there…
    TIMMY: Mark has the kind of hairy chest that I can only dream of really…
    MIKE: You’ve got that little wispy bit there…
    TIMMY: and Lachie, they are representing on that hairy chest front.
    MARK: I’m thinking of shaving it off.
    TIMMY: Are you? You could lay it down and I could just glue it on…

    Fan questions:
    Is there going to be a video of the tour?
    TIMMY: Let’s be honest, we’re asked about it many a time and we’d love to do it in the future, but the thing is with doing it, it does end up costing a lot of money so we’re hoping to do that in future…
    DARREN: There’ll be some nice iPhone footage on YouTube!

    Which is your favourite original song:
    MARK: I’m going to go with, on our second album we had a song called “Love Song”,
    DARREN: I’m going to say “Give Me Soul” from our new album. Maybe something you wouldn’t expect from us.
    MIKE: “Something Good”, it’s an Overtone song, It’s not specific to a relationship. It could be about anything that’s making you feel good at the time.
    TIMMY: I’m going to go back…Anytime we go on tour it always surprises me how much our fans connected with this song and it was the first original we ever performed on telly. “Gambling Man”.
    LACHIE: I’m going to say “Loving The Sound”. It’s really weird turning on the radio and hearing your voice every time. It really catches me. That song had so much support from so many radio stations…

  • REVIEW: eDermastamp – Our Lunchtime Facelift

    It is with some hesitation that I do anything to interfere with my face. Creams yes, pills yes, needles in the face in the name of a more youthful complexion? I wasn’t so sure.

    (more…)

  • INTERVIEW: Courtney Act : “Mr Act Will Have A Pulse”

    2014 was a whirlwind year for Courtney Act. The Australian drag queen who’s, not once, but twice ruled the reality TV waves. Back in her home country, Courtney Act is a household name thanks to her participation in Australian Idol in 2003.

    In 2014, she became a house-hold name in nearly every gay home in America thanks to her near vertical rise to the top of RuPaul’s Drag Race, wowing judges and viewers alike with her versatility, costumes and cracking body. We catch up with Shane Jenek, (her boy self), after her touch down in Sweden as she prepared to end her European tour.

    It seems there’s a bit of a thing between you and Michelle Visage on the Twitters – care to elaborate?

    It’s funny you know, people are like, ‘Why aren’t you padded? Why aren’t you wearing fingernails? Why why why?’ people like the keyboard warriors of the world and if Michelle Visage says something a lot of people think it’s gospel. She’s a woman who has an opinion on what drag should be and quite often a lot of us disagree with her! (Laughter)

    As a woman do you think she’s allowed to have that opinion on drag?

    I mean anyone can have an opinion and she has grown up for the last however many years on the gay scene and grown up around drag queens, so she knows drag. But she also knows drag from the 80s and 90s and I think drag has evolved.

    So who was she having a go at in that message?

    Oh she has a go at everybody. She said that I needed to pad more and comments about body shape. Which is interesting.

    Are you actually padded?

    Yeah. I have a corset and hip and bum pads. Under the particular dress I was commented on I was naked… So there’s no room for padding – just a little room for tape!

    You never got into the bottom two on Drag Race… How did that feel? Was it annoying to never have to lip sync for your life?

    Every week I knew my songs. I’m not a lip syncer. I was putting in extra effort. I haven’t lip synced since I was 18. So I was well aware that if I ended in the bottom two I had to be REALLY good. I remember in one particular episode, I was convinced that BenDelaCreme was going to be the winner and she ended up going home, so you never really know what the judges are thinking.

    So you get to travel an awful lot. Any travel tips?

    When I was on Australian Idol I remember Marcia Hines one of the judges, taking us all aside and saying, “When you’re touring sleep when ever you get the chance.” That’s the best advice.

    Do you get to experience the places that you go or is it just planes, hotels, cars and stages?

    It’s a little bit like that. My assistant and I are both vegans. We have an app called Happy Cow, and every city we get to it tells you where the nearest vegan or vegetarian restaurant is. So that’s kind of our local adventure in every city. On the way to the vegan restaurant you get to see a lot of things. If it’s a 15 to 20 minutes walk we will just walk there from the hotel.

    When you go to all these new towns, how has the reaction been from the drag queens that already reside there? You personally, but also to the wider group of Ru’s girls?

    It’s always been very positive. I think that they get to see you and they respect what you do – they’re always really lovely. I know that drag race has changed the game as drag goes in America and even in the UK. Before, drag queens in the US would tour from city to city and different performers would become popular and they could command a higher fee and they would tour more. Now it’s made it challenging for those who haven’t been on drag race. It’s bringing drag into the mainstream. A very large female population watches drag race and people are becoming more aware of drag. As such, a bigger audience means more for everybody – hopefully.

    There were a lot of personalities, especially in your season. Were any of the girls making life too uncomfortable?

    No. I think some of them made their own lives’ uncomfortable. I was fine, Lahanja Estranja, bless her, made her experience much harder than it needed to be I think. That’s what she went through.

    Did it get a bit messy?

    Oh yeah!

    There’s this rumour… I’d like to see if it’s true. RuPaul can kill a queen’s career… True?

    What does that mean?

    If she doesn’t like you, you might just drop off the face of the planet and never be heard from again...

    (Laughs) I’m sure that RuPaul can positively and negatively impact people’s careers.

    In a kind of Illuminati kinda way? Especially her power over the decision making process?

    (Laughs) Well she’s definitely got power over who goes and who stays. There’s also obviously power in the editing suite. But I think if somebody is talented and going to be a success, I don’t think RuPaul or anybody can stop them from that.

    Do you think any of the girls from your season were wrongly edited, or given a bad edit?

    I think Darienne (Lake) and I got a bit of a bum edit as the season plays out, but I look at the positive aspects, more people know me now than ever and I’ve had some wonderful opportunities because of the show, to tour all over the world and show people who I am, it’s a wonderful jumping off platform and you know, they are making a reality TV show, they’re not making a documentary.

    This issue is our coming out issue can you talk about your upbringing and coming out in Brisbane?

    I grew up in suburban Brisbane, I didn’t really realise I was gay until I was 18 and in Sydney. I guess I remember having posters of the Spice Girls and having a crush on Leonardo DiCaprio, but I didn’t really attribute it to being gay because school yard slagging, like puffta and faggot seemed like something negative with those things, and I didn’t feel negative about who I was. So I never really attributed being gay to who I was, until Sydney.

    My friends took me to Stonewall, which is a bar in Sydney, and I just remember like being, “hang on, all of these people are gay, this newspaper, this is a gay newspaper!” I just remember that very first night, it all just made sense, and I was like: Oh I get it! That night I had my first kiss and went home with my first boy all on one night – and they were two separate people!

    You dirty girl…

    Right!

    So the day you discovered you were gay, you actually had some GAY!

    That’s right, I had a bit of bum fun! (laughs)

    Did you end up going out with him or was it just one night?

    One night, but I do still know him now, he lives in London actually.

    Are you happy with that as a first experience, or would you have wanted it a different way? Maybe being a proper lady!

    No! Being a proper lady is boring, let’s face it. If you’re a proper lady then be a proper lady, but if you want to be a whore be a whore, I say…

    When did you come out to your parents?

    My Mum and Dad came to Sydney and we were having dinner and I was talking about friends who were drag queens and boys with strange names like ‘Girl Craig’ and I remember my Mum asking, whether if one of them was my “special friend…” there was that awkward moment at the table, and Dad was like, “I’m going to get a drink…” and we all sort of stood up and left the table.

    So she left a stink bomb of a question…

    Right! “Special Friend…” I was like No no, he’s able bodied…

    (Laughs)

    So your Mother had an inkling that perhaps you were gay?

    Well I guess so, she said that she didn’t, but asked that question. The next day we didn’t talk about it again. I remember calling my friend and like crying in the bathroom not knowing what to do and going to my friend’s house. I remember a time, struggling coming out to my parents and my own gender identity, I didn’t know whether I wanted to be the archetype ‘gay underwear model’ or be a woman because I was doing drag and I had a lot of people telling me that because I was so pretty I should take hormones and live as a woman and I know I felt very confused about everything. The next day, at the only job I’ve ever had in my life, like a ‘real’ job, I was working at an internet café and I went home for lunch, I guess I had a bottle of wine in the fridge, and I sat there eating lunch at home drinking a bottle of wine, watching Touched By An Angel on television, I just remember like crying, I guess it was inspired by Touched By An Angel, but the cry went much deeper than that. I remember it was just like howling. I sent Mum a text, this is the year 2000, so the advent of text was a new thing, and I texted I AM GAY. She wrote back, ‘That’s nice dear see you at dinner!’

    So that night at dinner my Dad said that he had lived with 6 drag queens back in the 70s, I asked him to stop there; I felt that one revelation was enough for the night.

    This is my moment!

    Yes! My Mum used to be a beauty therapist and she used to wax the legs of Australia’s most famous transsexual Carlotta, so it was funny, once I came out I was very fortunate, my parents were very supportive and understanding.

    I could tell that Mum had that dream of her boy marrying a girl and having babies and whatnot. I could see that she was still hanging on to that a little bit, but Dad was completely fine. He was very conversational about it. It’s a great learning experience, for the child and the parent, for their relationship. Often being gay, or other life questions, seem like they can be a hindrance, I have ultimately found that those things have been the greatest gifts. In some ways, I think having to question your sexuality and actually understand that you are gay and understanding what that means is a great gift in getting to know who you are. You’re more in touch with yourself.

    Young people now, which I love, are just, you know, refusing to be put into a heteronormative box, because even gay and straight have become somewhat heteronormative in a way, and I love the concept of queer. I like to identify as queer for my sexuality and as gender queer for my gender identity.

    There’s something I like about being queer. It’s like refusing to be put into a box. It’s political and personal.

    Can you explain what queer means to you?

    Well queer for me, with my sexuality – Not often do I actively go out to look for sex with women or anything, but I still think women are attractive, and I’ve had sex with women over the years… I like men and I like having sex with men, but queer for me says that I’m not going to conform to the concept that I should like men or I should like women or I need to conform to a stereotype of society. It says that I’m me and I’m going to express myself freely – have sex with who I want, when I want, and with as many as I want. Or none at all. It’s about the individual’s personal feelings rather than the identity of a group.

    And from a gender point of view?

    From a gender point of view, I think that, interestingly in gender we have male and female – it’s a binary thing and then we love to polarise – we love the binary. Even with CIS gender and transgender we still manage to polarise that as well. You’re either a trans or you’re not. The odd thing is that the definition of trans is in-between genders. So we tend to think of trans people as people who were assigned one sex at birth and then go about changing their gender expression to the opposite gender. For me, I love dressing up as Courtney. I love being Shane. I have no desire to take hormones to live as a woman, but the fact that I chose to do drag, especially such realistic female illusion. I used to say in my twenties, when I was more uncomfortable with my gender identity, I would say that drag was being like a policeman. Putting on a uniform and going to work, or someone who works at a theme park putting on a Mickey Mouse costume and there’s nothing strange about that. I used to try and justify my choice of occupation by saying that there was nothing strange about putting on a costume. I’ve realised in my thirties, who cares if it’s strange or if it’s not what other people think I should do.

    I think we’re seeing a gender revolution right now, different to the women’s lib movement, this is about trans people. We’re seeing Laverne Cox, Janet Mock, Chaz Bono, were seeing inspiring trans people, we haven’t seen that in the media before. Often trans people were portrayed as extreme… And people like Laverne, Janet and Chaz are everyday people who are inspiring and talented and I love that about them. I think there is a gender revolution going on and I love this queer movement as well.

    Do you think that a “queer” movement, will make it harder for people to find what they’re looking for? When you label someone or yourself as gay or bisexual, or this person is a man or this person is a woman, you know what you’re getting. Does queer blur those lines?

    I think when you label it, or you put it in a box you limit it to being just that. The reality of the situation is that most people aren’t just that. I think that it’s limiting people’s own expression and maybe limits people finding what they want, but I’ve found that places like Burning Man or even on the road when I’m travelling, I meet people I wouldn’t identify as gay, but someone that I’ve been seeing, who had never been with a guy before, was completely comfortable having sexual experiences with one.

    You can tell it’s a subject you like talking about. It’s very considered!

    (Laughs)… Now tell me your favourite colour…

    Do you remember the first time you dressed up as a woman?

    The very first? I went to a theatre school, after school, and we were always dressing up as things, like a mouse in Cinderella or a dwarf, and it was in 1996 or 1994, whatever year Pricilla came out… We were on tour around southeast Queensland doing a show, called the Spirit of Christmas and we were having a cast party where we did performances for ourselves. My friend Scott and I, we borrowed the girls’ bikinis and lip synced to I Love The Night Life, from Priscilla. That was the first primitive form of drag.

    When I moved to Sydney, New year’s Eve 2000, was where the first authentic experience happened.

    That was when Courtney Act was born.

    Was that a paid gig?

    No just for fun. A lesbian friend had a crush on me and I think she thought if I was dressed as a woman then somehow we’d be two women… and it would be okay! It didn’t quite work out that way. But that is how Courtney Act was born…

    How did you get the name?

    My friend Vanity Fair and I were sitting in a café in Crown Street in Darlinghurst and we were talking about names and I wanted to be called Ginger La Bon, because I wanted to be a smokey red head night club singer, and she thought that name was not appropriate for me, she thought that I should be something cute and girlie like Courtney.

    In Sydney all the drag queens have double entrendre names and I said, Courtney really slowly… Court… ney, Cour…t…ney Court…in…the Act…

    And a star was born!

    When did you start performing as Courtney?

    Shortly after… I had a business idea to start selling chewing gum and Chupa Chups from a neck tray and I approached some clubs about doing that, and they loved the idea, but they wanted a drag queen and I couldn’t afford one… So I started doing it myself. Some friends asked if I wanted to be in a show and within a month or so I was working four or five nights a week, up and down Oxford Street, and then I won the Drag Industry Variety Award, Diva Rising Star that year. When something feels good then it’s usually the right decision. In my body I loved it so much but intellectually I thought there was something wrong with it. But I’m glad I listened to my heart, and not my brain.

    Do you think you broke some TV screens 11 years ago when you decided to go on Australian Idol as Courtney Act? Did it confuse people?

    Yeah! I mean I hope so.

    I still get messages from kids, who said that they came out to their parents after watching me on Idol. Watching idol with their dads and dad being like, “Whoa she’s a hot Sheila”, and the kid explaining that in fact she was a boy… and then “by the way dad I’m gay…” (Laughs) Dicko, one of the judges on Australian Idol he really created a safe place because he would talk about the fact that Courtney was a beautiful woman saying stuff like “I’m going home to tell me wife that I’m leaving her for Courtney,” and he made it okay for the men of Australia to appreciate it as well.

    Did people think that you were transgender? Because you went to rehearsals dressed as Courtney?

    I went along the first day as a boy and I got knocked back and I went the next day in drag so if you missed that episode then you didn’t quite get what was going on. But because I got through as Courtney they insisted that I did the whole thing in drag.

    Oh really? So if they hadn’t insisted do you think you may have reverted back to Shane?

    Yeah! That would have been much easier. I’d have to get up two hours earlier than everybody else to get into drag!

    Is there a Mr. Courtney Act?

    There is NO MR. ACT….

    Are you looking?

    I’m not, not looking… But I’m not looking… I like the idea of meeting somebody and sharing my life with them. But I’m not in anyway needing that. The fact that I’m constantly on the road, there’s no time for that at the moment. I think Courtney and Shane are kinda in some strange relationship for the time being.

    What’s your type if he happens to be reading?

    He has a pulse.

  • Top 10 Campest Moments From The Brit Awards

    Ah, the Brits, of the last bastion of drunken, ego driven, campery that hits our small screens every year, oh well that and the Oscars…

    Scores of people have won and gone, but it’s the camp moments of this event that keep has tuned in every year. If only to see if Geri Halliwell will be involved. We delved into the annals of Brits history to find its campest moments. The aforementioned Halliwell has three of the campest moments alone. We also have Sharon O, Kylie and Adele’s middle finger…

    10. Bjork: I am grateful: grapefruit
    Grapefruits are one of the campest fruit we know. Seriously, okay maybe a pineapple is a little gayer, but Grapefruit reminds us of Louie Spence, Bright, zesty but bitter.

    9. Geri Halliwell does Jessica rabbit
    First on the list of Halliwell’s moments is her Jessica Rabbit moment. Geri knows how to steal the show. Bring back Geri we say.

    8. Michael Jackson’s “Christ-like figure”
    Never one to be ignored Michael Jackson showed the world what it would look like if he was a god. Too much for Jarvis Cocker who stormed the stage and waggled his bum. Yes, we said Waggled and we own it.

    7. Lady Gaga
    Pretty much anything Gaga does is high campery.

    6. Kylie Mashup
    Queen Kylie mashed up her glorious gay hits into one hot homo-song-soup. All rather marvellous. And looking incredible. How does she do it? (Sneaky side eye)

    5. Sharon Osbourne
    Queen of vamp, you know where you are with Mrs O. Never one to mince her words, she asked Kelly “What have they come as?” about a rather dishevelled looking Artic Monkeys and called Vic Reeves a p*** head bastard.

    4. Geri Halliwell Union Jack
    Probably one of the most iconic looks of The Brits of all time. A look that would launch a thousand Drag Queens into existence. Let’s face it; Geri is the goddess of Drag. And who knew, that her sister, out of t-towels, made the dress. Dirty dishes.

    3. Adele’s Middle Finger
    If anyone can flip the bird at millions of viewers at home it’s Adele. Newly crowned as a gay icon, by the listeners of a now defunct Gaydar Radio, Adele couldn’t get two words in edgewise but had time to stick her fingers up…. Oooo errr. We do like a double entendre.

    2. Sam Fox & Mick Fleetwood 1989
    Everything about Sam and Mick’s hosting was camp, in a tragedy way. We demand, neigh, need this to happen every year. Those awkward silences, those soft mumblings, the knowing looks, it’s like us when we’re on a date when we’ve been Roofied. Don’t worry it’s usually us who packs the Rohypnol.

    1. Geri Halliwell, Bag It Up
    Geri Halliwell made the world her gyno in 1997 when she sang from the middle of her legs. Usually it’s suggested that you sing from the diaphragm, but no Spicey logic dictates the vay vay is the place.