Friday, March 31, 2017

The beautifully brilliant Chrysanthe Mum LIVE in "Art is a Drag"!

To know her is to love her . . .
Introducing the lovely Chrysanthe Mum!

Chrysanthe Mum is the fabulous drag queen hostessing at Smiling Bison during 'Art is a Drag 2017'



Chrysanthe Mum  is a featured hostess at The Smiling Bison during the art walk portion of the "Art is a Drag" event (6-9pm)


She will be performing in the "Art is a DRAG SHOW" program at the Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center later that evening (9pm - 12midnight)
Getting to know Chrsanthe Mum
Questionnaire interview (3/31/2017)

Where were you born and raised? When did you move to where you are now?
My seed was planted in Casselberry Florida but I blossomed in Orlando

How did you get your drag name? Did you or do you have others?
My mother's name was Azalea. 
My first drag name was Veronica Heathers. In the early 90s I started doing more of a club kid look and wore flowered headpieces. 
Eventually I took to the name Chrysanthe Mum after my mother.

Glenn Pace as Chrysanthe Mum at the Smiling Bison for "Art is a Drag 2017"

When and why was the first time you did drag? How was it?
My first time in full drag was for a talent show at city lights, and I did Dr. Frankenfurter from Rocky horror picture show. I was scared to death

What has been some of your career highlights?
I've had the privilege of playing some great characters for different events around Orlando throughout my drag career. The biggest highlight was last year I got to work the red carpet in New York City for the premiere of absolutely fabulous and me with my idols

Chrysanthe Mum & Saphyre L'Sweet Cardoza at the Smiling Bison for Art is a Drag

Name something on your bucket list?
To perform the role of brother boy from Sordid Lives, or perform in New York.

If you had a talk show, who would be your first guest? Why?Marilyn Monroe, she broke so many boundaries for women and became such an iconic figure. I'd like to thank her for being such an inspiration
Chrysanthe Mum will be at the Smiling Bison for "Art is a Drag 2017"
What is favorite thing about drag?
Breaking boundaries, I've always pushed the envelope when it comes to modern culture and so glad to see it's so widely accepted now. I love using my art to help charities and try to be a positive role model for young people today

What is your biggest drag pet peeve (for yourself and others)?
No nails or hip pads, it just completes the look.

How has drag changed since you started and where do you see it heading?
Drag was a sub-culture of its own when I first started and now it widely accepted! The sky is the limit, I love seeing what young queens are doing with their looks!

Who are some of your drag inspirations?
Divine, Harvey Fierstein, Miss Sammy , Lypsinka

Any advice for the 'Art is a Drag' team on how we could do all this better?
You all are amazing!

Chrysanthe Mum FaceBook
Chrysanthe Mum Instagram
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Come to downtown Sanford on April 15 to experience great art and great drag during "Art is a Drag"!

#Art #CostumeDesign #Creativity #Artist #ArtisaDrag #ArtWorks #DragQueen #Drag #PerformanceArt #Paintings #ContemporaryArt #Diversity #EqualRights #Tolerance #RiseUp #LiveandLetLive #OrlandoStrong #LGBTQ #Pride #CentralFloridaStrong




Thursday, March 30, 2017

Drag Queen Karaoke! ~ at Buster's Bistro during "Art is a Drag"

Drag Queen Karaoke! Hosted by the brilliant BJ Stephens
With special guest . . . Midori Sour
Drag Queen Karaoke at Buster's Bistro, hosted by BJ Stephens and Midori Sour

Come on down to Buster's Bistro during the art walk portion of Art is a Drag (6-9pm) for some Drag Queen Karaoke, hosted by the hilarious BJ Stephens, accompanied by special guest Midori Sour.


Try one of Buster's exquisite Belgium Beers and the best frites in the region! Enjoy the show with BJ Stephens and Midori Sour, and give it a whirl at the Karaoke mic yourself. It'll be a blast! 
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Busters Bistro
A Contemporary Belgian Beer Bar


Since 2013 Buster’s Bistro has been providing a traditional Belgian experienced laced with a touch of contemporary flare. 

 We feature an exotic mix of the worlds most exquisite beers, top quality food ingredients, and innovative draft cocktails. Our frites are hand cut from fresh peeled russet potatoes and double fried with pride to give you the taste of the World’s best fry, an international food which originated from the homeland. 

 We do our best to make a difference in the community hosting extravagant beer pairing dinners in collaboration with the most renowned chefs in the State to donate the proceeds to charities ranging from local theaters to nation-wide charities aiding in the fight against disease. 

Keep in touch with our events page and social media outlets to help us in these ventures. It is our hope that you will visit and see what we take pride in and become one of our friends and a part of our family.

Happy Hour Daily from 4pm-7pm.
Featuring $1.00 off draught beer.
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Come to downtown Sanford on April 15 to experience great art and great drag during "Art is a Drag"!

#Art #CostumeDesign #Creativity #Artist #ArtisaDrag #ArtWorks #DragQueen #Drag #PerformanceArt #Paintings #ContemporaryArt #Diversity #EqualRights #Tolerance #RiseUp #LiveandLetLive #OrlandoStrong #LGBTQ #Pride #CentralFloridaStrong


Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Thank you to our new sponsor . . . Watermark!

Watermark media is sponsoring "Art is a Drag 2017"

Watermark Rocks!


Art is a Drag appreciates the whole team over at Watermark for supporting this event, the Sanford Art Walk and diversity in the arts in general. We can't thank you enough.


Art is a Drag will be in the April 6th print issue of Watermark and have a banner ad on their onlin page.
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ABOUT WATERMARK ~
Watermark is a multi-faceted media company using opportunities and innovations to communicate and advance LGBT interests, with a corporate emphasis on professionalism while building strong relationships with our readers, customers and community.
Watermark Media was founded by Tom Dyer in Orlando in 1994, and expanded to Tampa Bay in 1995. Dyer is an attorney, former board member of the Metropolitan Business Association and Tampa International Gay & Lesbian Film Festival, and current advisory board member of the Harvey Milk Foundation.
In 1997 Watermark produced Beach Ball at Disney’s Typhoon Lagoon, the first large-scale nighttime party associated with Gay Days Weekend. Watermark publishes a glossy guide to that event – largest annual LGBT gathering in the nation – as well as programs for a Wedding Guide in May and Orlando’s Come Out With Pride in October.
Watermark was a newsmaker in 1998 when it sought to hang rainbow flags throughout downtown Orlando during Gay Pride Month. The city reluctantly acquiesced, but the controversy made national news when televangelist Pat Robertson predicted Orlando would be beset by hurricanes as punishment.
Watermark prints up to 20,000 copies every other Thursday, and distributes them in more than 500 locations throughout Orlando, Tampa Bay, Sarasota and throughout the state. The newspaper donates more than $200,000 annually in free and sponsor advertising to worthy local and national LGBT non-profits.
Watermarkonline.com was launched in 1999. The award-winning newspaper currently maintains offices in Tampa Bay and Orlando and employs a full-time staff of 12, along with several part-time and freelance contributors.
Watermark Publishing Group, founded by publisher Rick Claggett, purchased Watermark in January of 2016.  Rick Claggett is a long-time employee of Watermark Media and former board member of both the Metropolitan Business Association and Come Out With Pride.

Come to downtown Sanford on April 15 to experience great art and great drag during "Art is a Drag"!



#Art #CostumeDesign #Creativity #Artist #ArtisaDrag #ArtWorks #DragQueen #Drag #PerformanceArt #Paintings #ContemporaryArt #Diversity #EqualRights #Tolerance #RiseUp #LiveandLetLive #OrlandoStrong #LGBTQ #Pride #CentralFloridaStrong

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

The "Central Florida Strong" art exhibit at the Historic Sanford Welcome Center

#CentralFloridaStrong



As part of the "Art is a Drag" event, the Historic Sanford Welcome Center is hosting a juried art exhibition of amazing art born out of tragedy depicting the strength, diversity and community of #OrlandoStrong to be displayed in Sanford, continuing to prove that we are #CentralFloridaStrong!


The Welcome Center is still accepting submissions for this exhibit. 
Deadline for submission: April 7  
Application to submit artwork
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Experience the Art and Meet the Queens!

Hostessing at the Historic Sanford Welcome Center is newcomer to "Art is a Drag" . . . India Mirage!


Come to downtown Sanford on April 15 to experience great art and great drag during "Art is a Drag"!

 #Art #CostumeDesign #Creativity #Artist #ArtisaDrag #ArtWorks #DragQueen #Drag #PerformanceArt #Paintings #ContemporaryArt #Diversity #EqualRights #Tolerance #RiseUp #LiveandLetLive #OrlandoStrong #LGBTQ  #Pride #CentralFloridaStrong

Monday, March 27, 2017

Blowing Minds at The Breezeway

Ricardo Mejias' new Witch Series "Dark Fantasy" will be opening at The Breezeway in downtown Sanford for "Art is a Drag" on April 15, 6-9pm

Exploring dark fantasy in a series of witches inspired by DRAG QUEENS ~Kim Chi, Alyssa Edwards ... and featuring local queen, Billy Beam.
Ricardo Mejias exhibits new series of witches at the Breezeway "Dark Fantasy" featuring Billy Beam for "Art is a Drag 2017"



Questionnaire interview with Ricardo Mejias (3/25/2017)

Where were you born and raised? Where do you currently live and work?
My full name is Ricardo David Mejias and i was born in New Jersey, growing up in Neptune. I moved to Florida (Deltona area, where i currently live) when i was 13, roughly 18 years ago.

What is your style of art and how did you develop it? 
 I have been drawing since i could hold a pencil, or, to be more precise, a small lipstick sample i used to draw a dinosaur on a white dresser. My first creation at the age of 2 or so. 
Growing up I watched my older brother (ten years my senior) as he would draw virtual copies of his favorite comic book characters (Gambit of X-Men being the most memorable to date for me). This inspired me to draw my own superheroes. 
Since I was teenager, probably a couple years sooner, I started doing something my brother admitted he couldn't do. I started creating all sorts of things of the mythical and fantasy variety out of my head. This is where I began to study fantasy art, in an effort to enhance my craft. It wasn't until after high school that I started to find my voice as an artist. I learned that there were elements and techniques unique to my art, like a fingerprint. Every artist has a way they carry their brush through a canvas. 
In college (Seminole State College), I was honored not only by being given the opportunity to govern the Art Club as President, but to be  the winner of the 44th annual Student Art Exhibit. This earned a spot on the gallery walls of Seminole State permanently. Since then I have been doing the art walks at Lake Mary and in Sanford as often as I can. 

What has been the most significant influences on your art?
My brother was definitely an initial inspiration as an artist, but there turned out to be many. Several students in my high school (Pine Ridge High School) were vastly more skilled than I thought myself, and I watched them closely. 
My high school painting teacher, for always pushing me to do more than I thought myself capable. My college professors, for pushing me further still and giving me the required skill to create with my own voice. That is just to name a few directly related to the arts. I have been blessed with a powerful support network of friends and family.

Do you have anything special you will be exhibiting on April 15? Did you make anything special to relate to theme "Art is a DRAG"?
For the upcoming show I will be creating a dark fantasy set of witches - the styles are all inspired by my favorite queens Alyssa Edwards and Kim Chi.

Follow Ricardo Mejias' Instagram
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Welcome a newcomer to "Art is a Drag" ~ Sasha Love Bonet and Jazzmine Divine!


Come to downtown Sanford on April 15 to meet Ricardo, Sasha and Jazzmine during "Art is a Drag" at the Breezeway Restaurant & Bar!


#Drag #Art #CostumeDesign #Creativity #Artist #ArtisaDrag #ArtWorks #DragQueen #Drag #PerformanceArt #Paintings #ContemporaryArt #Diversity #EqualRights #Tolerance #RiseUp #LiveandLetLive #OrlandoStrong #LGBTQ #OrlandoGayChorus #Pride #FantasyArt #Surrealism


Sunday, March 26, 2017

Sidewalk Drag Party at The Smiling Bison

Come over to the Smiling Bison to see 

Chrysanthe Mum and Saphyre L'Sweet Cardoza 

partying in the Square!


The Smiling Bison is whipping up Chrysanthe Mum's signature drink for the occasion. The "Mumonade" is made with Tito's vodka, fresh squeezed lemonade, a splash of cranberry juice, with a lemon garnish. 

Anyone and everyone in drag gets a free shot!


Chrysanthe Mum will also be be divining drag names for anyone who wants to play the "Drag Name Game"  ~ for a $1 donation to the Sanford Art Walk.

Saphyre L'Sweet Cardoza will be dancing and prancing all over Magnolia Square. Good luck trying to catch her for an autograph for your DragPort booklets.




Tuesday, March 21, 2017

"Drag Queen Karaoke" with BJ Stephens!

 Singing and styling with BJ Stevens!

BJ Sephens in "Art is a Drag" in downtown Sanford, Florida. Sanford Art Walk


BJ Stephens will be hosting "Drag Queen Karaoke" at Buster's Bistro during the Art Walk portion of 'Art is a Drag', 6-9pm.

At 9pm, run over to the Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center for a classic drag extravaganza to watch BJ Stephens and 12 other featured drag queens perform and entertain you.



Highlights from 1/28/2017 interview with Diego Larenas

When was the first time you did drag?
I actually did drag for the first time while I was in college at the University of Florida. I did it on a dare for Halloween, like everybody else. 

How did you feel?
I felt like everybody else when they first do drag. I thought I was the dolly. I thought I was every inch today's woman. I look back at those pictures and realize I could not have been more wrong. I had this red gown that I made, this big tube I glued together (I still can't sew for shit). I had a  jet black China-doll wig and I painted with this white, white face, thinking I was everything with these black gloves on, navy blue tights and white sandals. 
I entered a talent show at the bar in town. I did well enough that I won. I was a musical theatre major, so I had a little bit going for me. The bar had a deal going, so that if you won the talent show, you got an invitation to a number that Saturday night. That tells you how long ago this was - they not only paid you if you won the talent show but they paid you to perform that Saturday night too. But then you had to sit out the next week. In the end, I ended up winning 6 or 7 of those talent shows. I was getting $50 for winning the talent show and another $75 for performing the following Saturday night - like I said, it was a long time ago, when they used to pay drag queens. 
BJ Sephens in "Art is a Drag" in downtown Sanford, Florida. Sanford Art Walk
The guy that owned the bar thought about it and said to himself "It's cheaper for me just to hire this bitch and put her on show cast, than to keep paying that kind of money for 2 little damn numbers." So he asked me if wanted to work on show cast. When I was at University of Florida, I had 2 part-time jobs. I worked at a Subway sub shop and I was a drag queen. And that was how I worked my way through college. 
I had no drag mother. My drag  just kind of crawled up from the earth like a mushroom. 


How did you learn how to drag?
Being a theatre person gave me the place to start. I did my make-up like theatre make-up, showgirl make-up, not drag make-up. But this was a college town and they were used to seeing a lot of bugger drag. The fact that this was bugger drag, but a little more polished than some. I was really lucky because I worked with a group of entertainers that were really helpful. Many of those girls are still doing it today. I see them sometimes in the different bar-rags and think to myself "Oooohhh, they're still alive!" 
I did that for 2 1/2 years. 

How did you create your drag name?
This is like the third drag reincarnation I've had. When I worked in Gainesville, I was doing drag as Maxine DelRio. 
I was part of a friend's act with 2 other musical theatre people. We used to get together and do all the old Bette Midler stuff and the Andrew Sisters, stuff like that. We were "the unique song-stylings of the inimitable DelRio Trio - Patty, Maxine and Laverne". We thought we were it! Eventually I went off on my own and I kept the name Maxine DelRio ... with my blonde hair and my Nordic self. 
The bar that I was working in was going very very strong into hormones and silicone and it became all about becoming a woman. That's fine. That was their journey. Two of the queens I used to work with have now completed their surgeries and live as women. That was the focus then. 
I was 21 years and 155 pounds and kinda pretty. Imagine me skinny with bones! At that time, everyone was talking to me about getting 'work', going to Orlando and getting tits and touching up the face. 
That is not what I wanted to do. So I thought, "I'm done here". I finished school and put it all in a box. I got out of drag for almost 17 years. 
BJ Sephens in "Art is a Drag" in downtown Sanford, Florida
Seventeen years later, I am living in Orlando and there is a fundraiser show for the Lake County Aids Resource Alliance at one of the bars up in Lakeland. It sounded like fun and a good cause, so I thought "Why not hall the old girl out?" I did and had a great time. Afterwards, the guy who owned the bar came up and said "Would you be interested in another booking?" And I said, "Sure". It was good money. A couple of months later the show director got into a big huge fight, walked out in a huff and the bar manager asked me to take over as Show Director. Did that for 6 years - Show director for a bar called Attitudes in Leesburg. The bar was sold eventually, so that job ended. But one of the people who used to come to our show all the time, bought a bar called The Night Zone. The owners contacted me and asked me to host Saturday night shows. Then I did that for another 6 years. 
I never had to go through normal hoops of trying to wrangle a guest spot at the Parliament House . . . hanging around all the regular drag queens and fetching their drinks, hanging our till 3 o'clock in the morning, sucking up to them hoping they will like me enough to give me a shot. I got booked because I was always more interested in working the mic, working the crowd, acting the fool, carrying on . . . not because I'm the goddess of femininity. Also, I don't show up late and I don't cause drama.

That is one of the good things about RuPaul's Drag Race. It showed it's okay to be a man in drag. You don't have to have breasts, your own waist length hair, hormones, silicones or your adam's apple shaved. It can be about the theatre of it. We're actors, or as Divine Grace puts it, 'we're clowns'. And that's good too.

What is one of your pet peeves in doing drag?
Drag Queens who bring an entourage backstage. 

If you had a talk show who would be your first guest?
Divine Grace. She's intelligent, funny as shit and knows what she's talking about. 

When was the first time you did drag?
I did it on a dare for Halloween, like everybody else. I actually did drag for the first time while I was in college at the University of Florida.

How did you feel?
I felt like everybody else when they first do drag. I thought I was the dolly. I thought I was every inch today's woman. I look back at those pictures and realize I could not have been more wrong. I had this red gown that I made, this big tube I glued together (I still can't sew for shit). I had a  jet black China-doll wig and I painted with this white, white face, thinking I was everything with these black gloves on, navy blue tights and white sandals. 
I entered a talent show at the bar in town. I did well enough that I won. I was a musical theatre major, so I had a little bit going for me. The bar had a deal going, so that if you won the talent show, you got an invitation to a number that Saturday night. That tells you how long ago this was - they not only paid you if you won the talent show but they paid you to perform that Saturday night too. But then you had to sit out the next week. In the end, I ended up winning 6 or 7 of those talent shows. I was getting $50 for winning the talent show and another $75 for performing the following Saturday night - like I said, it was a long time ago, when they used to pay drag queens. 
The guy that owned the bar thought about it and said to himself "It's cheaper for me just to hire this bitch and put her on show cast, than to keep paying that kind of money for 2 little damn numbers." So he asked me if wanted to work on show cast. When I was at University of Florida, I had 2 part-time jobs. I worked at a Subway sub shop and I was a drag queen. And that was how I worked my way through college. 
I had no drag mother. My drag  just kind of crawled up from the earth like a mushroom. 

How did you learn how to drag?
Being a theatre person gave me the place to start. I did my make-up like theatre make-up, showgirl make-up, not drag make-up. But this was a college town and they were used to seeing a lot of bugger drag. The fact that this was bugger drag, but a little more polished than some. I was really lucky because I worked with a group of entertainers that were really helpful. Many of those girls are still doing it today. I see them sometimes in the different bar-rags and think to myself "Oooohhh, they're still alive!" 
I did that for 2 1/2 years. 

How did you create your drag name?
This is like the third drag reincarnation I've had. When I worked in Gainesville, I was doing drag as Maxine DelRio. 
I was part of a friend's act with 2 other musical theatre people. We used to get together and do all the old Bette Midler stuff and the Andrew Sisters, stuff like that. We were "the unique song-stylings of the inimitable DelRio Trio - Patty, Maxine and Laverne". We thought we were it! Eventually I went off on my own and I kept the name Maxine DelRio ... with my blonde hair and my Nordic self. 
The bar that I was working in was going very very strong into hormones and silicone and it became all about becoming a woman. That's fine. That was their journey. Two of the queens I used to work with have now completed their surgeries and live as women. That was the focus then. 
I was 21 years and 155 pounds and kinda pretty. Imagine me skinny with bones! At that time, everyone was talking to me about getting 'work', going to Orlando and getting tits and touching up the face. 
That is not what I wanted to do. So I thought, "I'm done here". I finished school and put it all in a box. I got out of drag for almost 17 years. 
Seventeen years later, I am living in Orlando and there is a fundraiser show for the Lake County Aids Resource Alliance at one of the bars up in Lakeland. It sounded like fun and a good cause, so I thought "Why not hall the old girl out?" I did and had a great time. Afterwards, the guy who owned the bar came up and said "Would you be interested in another booking?" And I said, "Sure". It was good money. A couple of months later the show director got into a big huge fight, walked out in a huff and the bar manager asked me to take over as Show Director. Did that for 6 years - Show director for a bar called Attitudes in Leesburg. The bar was sold eventually, so that job ended. But one of the people who used to come to our show all the time, bought a bar called The Night Zone. The owners contacted me and asked me to host Saturday night shows. Then I did that for another 6 years. 
I never had to go through normal hoops of trying to wrangle a guest spot at the Parliament House . . . hanging around all the regular drag queens and fetching their drinks, hanging our till 3 o'clock in the morning, sucking up to them hoping they will like me enough to give me a shot. I got booked because I was always more interested in working the mic, working the crowd, acting the fool, carrying on . . . not because I'm the goddess of femininity. Also, I don't show up late and I don't cause drama.

That is one of the good things about RuPaul's Drag Race. It showed it's okay to be a man in drag. You don't have to have breasts, your own waist length hair, hormones, silicones or your adam's apple shaved. It can be about the theatre of it. We're actors, or as Divine Grace puts it, 'we're clowns'. And that's good too.

What is one of your pet peeves in doing drag?
Drag Queens who bring an entourage backstage. 

If you had a talk show who would be your first guest?
Divine Grace. She's intelligent, funny as shit and knows what she's talking about. 


Come to downtown Sanford on April 15 to meet BJ Sephens during "Art is a Drag"!
#Drag #Art #CostumeDesign #Creativity #Artist #ArtisaDrag #ArtWorks #DragQueen #Drag #PerformanceArt #Paintings #ContemporaryArt #Diversity #EqualRights #Tolerance #RiseUp #LiveandLetLive #OrlandoStrong #LGBTQ #OrlandoGayChorus #Pride

Sunday, March 19, 2017

Bearonce Bear is back!

Everybody loves Bearonce!  

We are delighted to have Bearonce Bear with us again in Art is a Drag


Bearonce Bear will be hosting at Little Fish Huge Pond during the Art Walk portion of 'Art is a Drag', 6-9pm.

At 9pm, run over to the Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center for a classic drag extravaganza to watch Bearonce and 12 other featured drag queens perform and entertain you.



Highlights from 3/12/2017 phone interview with Diego Larenas

How did you get started in drag?
I started like I believe so many did . . . dressing up in mom's clothes.
But once I was old enough to get into nightclubs ... I will never forget going to Wilds in Orlando, my first drag club. I was in awe!
About 6 years ago, my best friend's boyfriend (now husband) was performing and he needed a backup dancer. He dragged me, and since Beyoncé is my favorite all-time artist it was meant-to-be that Bearonce would be my drag name. 
For that first time (and the next two) I shaved my face, so I wasn't really feeling my name. I'm a bear and shaving didn't fit. Finally I just started keeping my beard.
So, I showed up at The Copa, a club in Ocala, Florida, with my beard and a body suit. It was right about the same time that bearded-drag was becoming a 'thing'. But it took a drag queen I really respected to convince me to rock the body hair. The next time I went to the club I was Bearonce Bear - big, bearded and body hair.

Soon, what started as hobby became something significant as I got booked more and more.
I began to 'make a name for myself' and got on cast at Sawmill Campground. By the time I hosted Ocala Pride 2014 I had fully figured out who my character was.
So, it took me about 3 years to fully settle into Bearonce Bear.

It's so you! I can't imagine Bearonce any other way?
I saw a FB post recently asking "has RPDR (RuPaul's Drag Race) ruined drag?" in the sense that everybody is coming out identical - everybody has the same eye, everybody has the same hair, the same synched waist . . . Obviously, I'm not a pageant queen, although I've been in 3 bar pageants and placed in every single one.

How did that go?
The first one was at this tiny little hole-in-the-wall bar in Ocala called The Pub where I came in second to a female impersonator who's won other crowns before. 

The second one was at The Copa where I got first runner-up again to Raquel Payne.
The third one at Sawmill where I got third runner-up against hardcore female illusionists.

I only placed at all because of my act, my talent. I don't have the gowns. I'm not a traditional pageant queen type.


How was your first time on stage?
I was a nervous wreck. I wasn't sure what to do. I didn't have hips, no padding. Just some thigh-high boots, fishnet stockings, a black one piece, red corset, huge hair and a white feather boa belt. One of the feathers was my demise that night because I stepped on one and slipped flat onto my ass, which then made my wig fall off. But . . . it was one of my biggest money-making nights in my drag career. I was tipped so much for one song it was ridiculous.

Favorite performance of your drag career?

My Heads Will Roll number that I did last year at Art is a Drag 2016.
Katy Perry's Dark Horse, where I come out as a witch, pour vinegar into a caldron with baking soda in it and drink it. I go behind stage and re-emerge as a horse-head helmet and horse legs.


What happened to your leg?
You noticed the boot in all the photos?

I told the "Art is a Drag" team that I wouldn't know the status of my foot when it comes to April 15. I know I'll be in the boot. But if it comes down to it, I have a complete act that I can do with my scooter. I just performed it this past weekend and people ate it up.

Dancing. I was at the Parliament House and was the DD, so there wasn't even alcohol involved. I was doing Ciera's 1,2 Step with my jacket wrapped around my waist. I stepped into the sleeve of my jacket and instead of falling I corrected my step in a way that really hurt, but I didn't stop. I kept dancing. By the end of the night I had a limp. When I got home I put my leg up and put ice on it. The next day it was getting bruised. The day after that it was turning purple and swelling so I went to urgent care. I broke my foot in two places.

The podiatrist said either surgery or a boot for 5-7 months. So, I'm in a boot.


What inspires your numbers?
When I listen to a song I think about how I would produce it.


Do you really think RuPaul's Drag Race did change the game as far as drag pageants go?
100% YES.
Don't get me wrong, I love the show, but I do think it's set up an expectation that is discouraging to beginners - if you're not at that crown-holding level or spotlight level, that you're nobody. There are so many people out there dressed to the nines, painted for the gods, getting 25-75$ gigs, and then they bring these girls in from the shows and pay them $2000-$5000. 

I understand that names are being booked to draw in the crowds, but then the crowd is there to support the person, not the venue. They are bringing in the reality stars like NeNe Leakes and yes the house is packed. But very talented people are getting lost in the mix because people are having to budget around these high-paid headliners and its squeezing out the great local performers.


If you had a talk show, who would be your first guest and why?

Julia Roberts. She is my all-time favorite actress. Whenever you hear her in an interview she just seems real, and that smile.


Pretty Woman is my all-time favorite movie. I have 3 versions of that movie - the original, the 20th anniversary edition and then the 25th anniversary edition with all of the deleted scenes put back into the movie.


Do you have a favorite artist?
Whenever I go to Key West I make a point of going to the Peter Lik Gallery and I love the art of Steve Walker too.


What music do you have in your car?
One of three - Beyonce, Sia or anything tribal dance, like I'm at the club.


What music do you listen to when you're getting ready to go on stage?

Good calming music makes me do a better job with painting my face, like Sia or Adelle. It helps me focus.


Do you have a celebrity crush?
Beyoncé.
I'm a gold-star gay, never had sex with a woman, but Beyoncé transcends gender.

If you had a superpower, what would it be?
Freeze-time. 

What is something on your bucket list?
I want to go skydiving, except you have to be under 225 since you jump tandem. I was 225 when I came out of my mom.

Come to downtown Sanford on April 15 to meet Bearonce Bear during "Art is a Drag"!


#Drag #Art #CostumeDesign #Bears #BeardedBear #BearonceBear #ArtisaDrag #ArtWorks #DragQueen #Drag #PerformanceArt #Paintings #ContemporaryArt #Diversity #EqualRights #Tolerance #RiseUp #LiveandLetLive #OrlandoStrong #LGBTQ


Friday, March 17, 2017

Tatiana Mendez lights up "Art is a Drag 2017"

Tatiana Mendez sparkles as brightly as the jewels on her crown
The Sanford Art Walk presents 'Art is a Drag 2017' with Tatiana Mendez at RabbitFoot Record Store Cafe


Tatiana will be a hostess at RabbitFoot Record Store Cafe with Ashley Satine during the Art Walk portion of 'Art is a Drag', 6-9pm.


At 9pm, run over to the Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center for a classic drag extravaganza to watch Tiffany and 12 other featured drag queens perform and entertain you.







Highlights from 1/28/2017 interview with Diego Larenas

How did you get started in drag? 
I did costumes at my high school and would try on all the costumes, girls and boys, to make sure the construction was good and was sewing them correctly. Next thing I knew I was trying the girls’ costumes on with the heels, then with the makeup, then the wig. Before I knew it there I was stomping through high school at 16, 17 years of age in full drag. 

At the time I didn't know this was drag, I just knew this was fun and I was dressing up like a girl. This was around the time that the first season RuPaul's Drag Race came out. After I saw that, I realized what I was doing was a 'thing', this is DRAG.

Who was your favorite Queen from Drag Race?
Nina Flowers, hands down. She's amazing.

How did you get your drag name?
My best friend at the time told me I looked like a Tatiana. Then later on when I realized I needed a last name, another best friend of mine, we were like sisters, and her last name was Mendez. So I became Tatiana Mendez, named after my best friends.

Tell me about the crown -
I am not into pageants. I don't really like the idea of the competition, it's so intense. But I love performing and where I've moved to recently, the only way to get your name out there was to go do these drag competition.

This particular drag competition was several weeks long (formatted like RuPaul's Drag Race) with different categories. There was a crown and a sash and a permanent position and $1000 cash. So I signed up. Coming up in Orlando is an intense drag scene - you either learn quickly or you fall hard. So after my Orlando experiences, I was well trained and prepared in a place without as many drag queens or as high a bar.

It was fun. I enjoyed it. My favorite challenge was the superhero/girl power week and I did Mystique from X-Men. I was so proud of myself with that costume. It was technically so difficult to make a character look naked while you're in drag. It took me a month to hand-paint the scales on a blue bodysuit.

What were the other categories for that competition?

There was a Lady Gaga week. I won that week with Mary the Night Away, which is a really fun dance hit There was a Broadway week. I tried to do something out-of-the-box and played Rachel Berry from Glee. I played her trying to be on Broadway.

If you had a talk show, who would be your first guest?

Ellen DeGeneres. She is so fun, iconic and positive ... and would bring viewers to my talk show. Ellen's Halloween pranks is a favorite of mine. Plus, she is part of our 'coming out' history.

If you could back and tell your 15 your old self something, what would it be?
I would tell my 15 year old self to quit being so angry. I was so different and everyone had to keep pointing that out. I try to be such a loving person and show everyone I meet kindness. When I was younger and I was so feminine as a boy, I wasn't really called gay that much, I was called a girl. I think it was because of the essence I gave off. They hated me for some reason because of that. It made me so mad.

So, I would tell myself to not be so mad, just stay in your lane. Stay focused on what your doing and don't be so bothered by everybody else.

What was your experience of coming out?
My family always knew. I grew up surrounded by great women. Since I wanted to be a girl, I had great role models for the kind of independent woman I wanted to be.

When it came to them telling me how to be a boy ... like, not to roll my eyes, being limp-wristed or swishing my hips when I walked, they would say, "Don't do that, you're a boy." But I didn't know what being a boy was. I knew those things were not being a boy, but I was a boy, so what was I to do? When it came to being around kids at school, I didn't know what being a boy was and wanted to be a girl like all the other girls I knew. `

By 4th and 5th grade I knew I had to start hiding, keeping my thoughts and feelings secret.

Do you have a most-memorable performance?
The best performance I ever did was to Take Time by Ledisi. I saw someone in a pageant do that song and it spoke to me, was about my life. So, I found the song, learned it and now any chance I get to be brand new to a club or a crowd it's the first thing I perform. I think "Oh, they're not sick of it".

Come to downtown Sanford on April 15 to meet Tataina Mendez during "Art is a Drag"!


Thursday, March 16, 2017

5 Costume Designers take-over the Courtyard

The courtyard of the Historic Sanford Welcome Center 

will be featuring 5 'wave-making' Costume Designers 

Rich & Norelis

Rich & Norelis, is the husband and wife design company of Richard Dean and Norelis Arroyo Velez Dean.

They both received their Bachelor of Fine Arts in Fashion Design and Merchandising from the International Academy of Design and Technology; however they never met in college since Rich Graduated before Norelis started. 

Rich and Norelis met while working for a local costume company and from there they joined their talents and became the first winners of "judges choice" at the EDGE (Emerging Designer Gauntlet Exhibit) competition for Orlando International Fashion Week 2014. 

Rich & Norelis experience with the costuming of 'drag' have been mostly from the production side of events like Headdress Ball, but it is a genre they would love to design.

They both currently work for the Orlando Ballet where Rich is the Production Assistant/Prop Master and Norelis is the Wardrobe Assistant/Patternmaker.

Richard & Norelis Website
Richard & Norelis Facebook


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Nancy Alonso

Nancy Alonso is a Costume Designer and her specialty is costumes with unconventional materials like Resins, Wonderflex, Fosshape and PVA. Her work includes short films, cosplays and Drag costuming. Nancy will be presenting samples of props, make up and faux leather work as well as hand embroidery for her next project.

Nancy Alonso Website
Nancy Alonso Facebook


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Meagan 'Megelyn' Moreno


Megelyn is a freelance costume designer and seamstress who frequently does contract work for The Orlando Ballet.

Megelyn recently exhibited a mini-collection at both Orlando International Fashion Week 2016 and the One Pulse Charity Fashion Show at the Orlando Eye.


Megelyn designed and created an amazing piece titled "Love Conquers Hate", a tribute piece for the victims of Pulse - an angel in honor of those whom we have lost, as well as those whom were injured—their families and friends, and all who were affected by the horrific tragedy. 

"Love Conquers Hate" was part of the Pulse Charity Fashion Show. The piece won "Best Use of Materials" in the 2017 Trash 2 Trends Fashion Show.

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Russell Reynolds


Russell Reynolds received his bachelors in Fashion Design and Merchandising International Academy of Design & Technology – Orlando

I began doing drag portraying female characters through Cosplay at local comic book conventions. 
Through that outlet, I gained knowledge learning how to adapt the female form onto a mans silhouette to make it appear more feminine. 
I will be showcasing the Cosplay costumes that I have previously made for myself as well as some original pieces to show diversity working with other fabrics. 
Since stepping into drag for the first time, I have had the opportunity to learn makeup tips as well as wig styling; skills that I never imagined myself attempting. 
There is so much going into drag that I would never had known if I had not experienced it for myself.
Russell as an Elizabethan version of Harley Quinn from Batman

Come to the courtyard of the Historic Sanford Welcome Center on April 15 (5-9pm) during 'Art is a Drag' to see the incredible design work of these incredible costume designers


#CostumeDesign #Cosplay #CostumeDesigner #ArtisaDrag #Art #DragQueen #Drag #PerformanceArt #Paintings #ContemporaryArt #Diversity #EqualRights #Tolerance #RiseUp #LiveandLetLive #OrlandoStrong #LGBTQ