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showtime

EuroStars Drag Contest 2021 premieres May 1st on LatestTV!

What if there was a mix of Eurovision and RuPaul’s Drag Race? Well, hun imagine that … there is! The EuroStars Drag Contest reality TV series is just around the corner. 

Drag has been a part of the Eurovision song contest since 2002 when Sestre represented Slovenia with “Samo Ijubezen.” In 2014, Eurovision crowned a drag queen as its winner and, Conchita Wurst left the world shook with her looks and talent. Alongside her shiny dress’s elegance and acclamation of her distinguished beard, Conchita seized the Eurovision stage, followed by stating that “you can achieve anything, no matter who you are or how you look.” 

Eurodrag’s next bout is set to take over Europe and explore the best drag talent of the continent, with the first episode releasing on May 1st at 7 pm (GMT+1)! 

The EuroStars Drag Contest derived from EuroDrag and was created by the spectacular drag queen Linda Gold to celebrate the art of all drag types. EuroStars is an all-inclusive drag contest, open to everybody, from Kings and Queens to trans and non-binary people.

Linda Gold said that “EuroDrag launched in 2015 as a protest towards shows like RuPaul’s drag race, which, at the time, excluded everyone that didn’t represent the creators’ interpretation of drag. Now, finally, five years later, after living out of a suitcase and travelling from bar to bar, we’re able to see ALL types of drag on mainstream TV in the form of EuroStars. I can’t wait to watch it!” 

Aiming to uncover Europe’s extraordinary drag talent across 30 countries, the lavish series will come in three episodes, all filmed in actuality, from start to finish. 

What is the EuroStars series’ format?

The format of EuroStars will be a unique blend of Europe’s favourite song contest, Eurovision, and the world’s most famous drag race, RuPauls’ series. 

In the first two episodes, known as the contest’s semi-finals, 33 drag artists will compete for the 12 spaces of the glorious third and final episode. In both semi-finals, 17 and 16 artists will participate. The five winners at the end of each episode will go on to the series finale. Those triumphant winners of the two semi-finals will be selected by the host and the studio judges. Two fortunate artists that will compete with the other ten will be chosen by a public vote.

Coming from different European countries and backgrounds, the drag contestants of Eurostars will have the opportunity to share their personal stories and get closer to the viewers. The series will feature astonishing talent, as well as plenty of banter and comedy! 

Meet the judges of EuroStars 2021

The big winner of Season 1 will be chosen by the total score of the 30 judges spread across Europe. The judges’ panel will include drag stars from all over the world, many of them coming from RuPaul’s Drag Race, Drag Race Holland, Canada’s Drag Race and RuPaul’s.

Drag Race UK. Eurovision participants will also be part of the judges, including Rasmussen, the Danish representative at Eurovision 2018, and one of the backing vocalists at Eurovision 2019, Dinah Yonas Manna. 

The three resident judges of EuroDrag, Drag Race Holland contestants Sederginne, Janey Jacké, and drag king LoUis CYfer, will also have a saying in the crowning of EuroStar’s Season 1 winner, as will the host and founder of EuroStars, Linda Gold. The public will have the opportunity to vote for their favourite contestant by using an online poll.

Meet the contestants of EuroStars 2021

The 33 contestants of EuroStars 2021 have been announced, and they are all impressive! Find out the representative of the 33 European countries competing here.

England will be represented by Black Peppa, a previous EuroDrag winner. Black Peppa is a brilliant drag queen, model, dancer, and designer from Birmingham with Caribbean heritage and a front runner of EuroStars 2020. 

“My style is very hard to put into one sentence but I can best describe it as fetish punk glamour meets Futurism, with a sophisticated twist of haute couture in there,” Black Peppa told EuroDrag.

The drag stars of the future are about to be discovered on EuroStars Drag Contest 2021, and they will take the world by storm. Although the best will win, everyone embarking on this journey will share the glory! 

Get ready for Europe’s most established drag competition that will feature all types of drag. 

Starting May 1st, airing live on LatestTV, also available on streaming services, including Sky, Amazon Prime, Virgin Media and Revry; you can’t and certainly don’t want to miss it!

Categories
real talk

Violetta J’adore: “Drag was a revelation for me that I stumbled upon by pure accident. Now I can’t live without it.”

Violetta J’adore by Grand Gareth for GiGi Magazine, 2021

An insightful glimpse into the life of a 24-year-old drag queen from Cyprus. Hear her inspiring story; how drag changed her life and the struggles of being a gay person in Balkan countries. Meet English teacher on paper, and drag queen at heart, Violetta J’adore. 

“My husband and I always joke around that I have three personalities. My first name is Vassilis, and my middle name is Theodoros. Vassilis is a shy, depressed little kid from Cyprus. Then we have Violetta, the very social, expressive, and crazy, over the top drag queen. Theodoros is placed right in the middle of Vassilis and Violetta, trying to keep a balance. Violetta is passionate, glamorous, versatile and fucking lives to perform. 

Drag was a revelation for me that I stumbled upon by pure accident. Before drag, my life was pretty miserable, and that’s not an understatement. I wasn’t the same person by any stretch of imagination; I was shy, antisocial, an introvert really. Thanks to drag, I became more expressive. I was finally able to express myself through performing, which incorporates everything that I love: acting, dancing and, of course, glam. 

I was first introduced to drag culture in my 20s when I went to Spain for an Erasmus grant in 2017. I was studying Psychology at Universidad Europea de Madrid. I also worked at a club in a gay area of Madrid called Chueca, and there was this custom to pass around flyers dressed in drag to promote the venue. Because the club didn’t have any drag queens to do this job, they asked me if I could do it, and I thought, “why not?” Soon after, I got my first gig as a drag queen in that club. I then decided, “okay, this is a thing now; I’ve got to do it!” Now, almost four years later, I have performed in six different countries, and I can’t imagine my life without drag. 

Meanwhile, I’m an English literature teacher doing my PhD at the University of Portsmouth. People used to tell me that drag will ruin my career as an English teacher. That it would destroy my reputation, that everything stays online and that I needed to look out for my future. To be honest, I used to worry about that too, until my last job in Brighton as a language school teacher. My boss literally helped me pick out my heels for one of my shows, which he then even attended and watched. 

I currently live in Brighton, and I walk around in my 7-inch heels, fully drag-dressed, confident, and only get compliments. When I lived in Athens after my Erasmus grant finished in 2018, I would ride the underground in drag make-up and feel scared. I would cover myself with a hoodie, looking down so that nobody stared at me. In my homeland, Cyprus, the situation is even worse when it comes to queer; I wouldn’t feel safe at all walking around in drag there. At the age of 16, I got beaten to the ground, while all I did was walk out of a gay club in Limassol with my friends. I remember my friends ran away, but I stayed calm. I was asked, “are you a man?” I replied, “yes,” and I got fucking beaten up. I became scared, but every fight against homophobia is worth it. I’ll never deny or alter myself to please other people. 

My friends have been very supportive of me, and I love them to bits for that. In my family, only two people know that I’m a drag queen: my cousin and my mother. I’d say that Cyprus is a very closed-minded community. They aren’t up to speed with what’s happening in the rest of the world. For example, my mother had a misguided opinion on drag; she thought it was similar to stripping. Now, she’s gradually trying to understand. Throughout the years, I’ve learned that not everyone in your life has to like what you do; they just have to accept it and not comment. It’s about you, as long as you’re happy with yourself and your life. People either have to get on board, or they have to get out of your life, duh! 

Violetta J’adore performing in Brighton, 2019

When I get on stage and perform in drag, the adoration and rush I get from the audience are literally mind-blowing. I’m very detailed when it comes to my performances, from the make-up and the outfit to the song and the concept. During quarantine, I’ve even learned to make my own wigs out of natural hair. Drag to me is creativity, it’s expression, and it’s love. I take my performances very seriously, and I still get anxious before getting on stage. 

I wouldn’t be happy if I had to let go of Violetta. As a teenager, I dealt with many mental issues, and it was tough for me to express myself as a gay bipolar person. When Violetta came into my life, I realised that I could communicate my feelings and thoughts by performing through her. At first, I only saw Violetta as a persona, an alter-ego of mine that I could channel whenever I pleased. But four years down the road, she’s now a part of me, something that I need in my life. 

Since lockdown, I’ve been practising drag on social media, though I do count on going back to live performances in May. I’ve actually already planned out my next steps. I’m the event manager of the “Funny Boyz” event at “Le Village” in Brighton. The “Funny Boyz” is a franchise of drag cabaret events across Europe, part of the EuroDrag and EuroStars international televised competition. I’m thrilled to be working with them; you can make reservations already, and I promise you, you’ll have the time of your life! Nobody does it like drag queens, and that’s a fact! 

Covid has almost killed drag in a way. We are getting ignored by the government rules; it’s like we don’t exist. Until October, I was fully booked to perform in clubs and pubs, and then, in just one day, everything got cancelled. I was counting on those shows; they are my livelihood. Many people quit drag because it doesn’t pay during a pandemic, and many venues have shut down. While the government can pay those, who work in hospitality, (as they should), they forget about the performers. Performers have been deeply affected during these difficult times too. 

I won’t give up, though. I have too many looks that I need to show people. I aspire to be the best I can, and no pandemic will stop me. That’s the thing I love most about Violetta; she keeps me on my toes; there’s excitement every single day. As the years go by, Vassilis is catching up to Violetta. I don’t see a peak in my drag journey; I just want to keep learning new things every day. Things about myself, about Violetta, and the world. But like I wouldn’t say no to a Vogue cover.”