Former Olympic athlete slams drag shows and compares them to blackface
A former Olympic athlete has sparked debate on social media with a tweet she posted Saturday in which she spoke out against drag.
Sharron Davies, who competed for Great Britain in the 1976 and 1980 Olympics (where she took a silver medal), has in recent years become an outspoken critic of allowing trans women to compete in female sports. Over the weekend, she broadened her criticism to also include drag queens.
“Am I the only person fed up of drag shows? A parody of what a real woman is, like black face. Woman are juggling kids, rushing out a wholesome dinner, doing the laundry & cleaning, holding down a job all with period pains & leaky boobs if breast feeding. Enough of the stereotypes.”
Am I the only person fed up of drag shows? A parody of what a real woman is, like black face. Woman are juggling kids, rushing out a wholesome dinner, doing the laundry & cleaning, holding down a job all with period pains & leaky boobs if breast feeding. Enough of the stereotypes
— Sharron Davies MBE (@sharrond62) December 21, 2019
Related: Drag Race winner makes history with choice of wedding venue in London
The tweet has had over 12.5k likes and prompted 7k comments. Some of her followers have agreed with her. However, many others have criticized her comparison to blackface, and her own – some would argue stereotypical – definition of womanhood.
Among the high-profile names to speak out against the tweet were RuPaul‘s Drag Race’s Michelle Visage.
OR…you can see it for what drag actually IS, which is a celebration and homage of all things feminine, giving power to those who need it! Strong women aren’t threatened by drag queens, but rather empowered by their chutzpah. HAPPY HOLIDAYS!! t.co/Ycux4c8epy
— michelle visage (@michellevisage) December 21, 2019
“OR…you can see it for what drag actually IS, which is a celebration and homage of all things feminine, giving power to those who need it!” said Visage. “Strong women aren’t threatened by drag queens, but rather empowered by their chutzpah. HAPPY HOLIDAYS!!”
Several DragRace queens were also quick to comment.
“STOP ALL DRAG SHOWS!! @sharrond62 is fed up and is suffering from Drag Fatigue!” chipped in Vinegar Strokes. “My love, have you never thought that a majority of Drag Queens are celebrating woman and the fantastic achievements woman have made to shape the world. YOU do nothing but shape a stereotype! TRASH!”
STOP ALL DRAG SHOWS!! @sharrond62 is fed up and is suffering from Drag Fatigue! My love, have you never thought that a majority of Drag Queens are celebrating woman and the fantastic achievements woman have made to shape the world. YOU do nothing but shape a stereotype! TRASH! t.co/oZY66M6xdk
— Vinegar Strokes (@TheOnlyVinegar) December 21, 2019
Only weak minded people view it this way. If you are THAT strong of a woman/mother .. a man dressing up in women’s clothing to lipsync a song shouldn’t even be on your radar. Sounds like straight white privileged ignorance to me.. but what do I know?? I’m just a man in a dress.
— Trinity The Tuck (@TrinityTheTuck) December 21, 2019
Omg, comparing drag to blackface? what an idiot t.co/6VgZfHYqk7
— Blu Hydrangea (@BluHydrangea_) December 21, 2019
High-profile breakfast TV host Lorraine Kelly was also having none of it.
Oh Sharon. You can’t underestimate the power of drag and how it empowers people who often feel like outsiders – they can find their family, grow in confidence, learn to love themselves and be who they really are. It can literally save lives. And it’s such a lot of FUN! t.co/y5LgIcndv9
— Lorraine (@reallorraine) December 21, 2019
“Oh Sharon. You can’t underestimate the power of drag and how it empowers people who often feel like outsiders – they can find their family, grow in confidence, learn to love themselves and be who they really are. It can literally save lives. And it’s such a lot of FUN!”
Related: RuPaul won’t say whether cis women should compete in ‘Drag Race’
Neither was singer and broadcaster, Myleene Klass.
Whilst I have leaky boobs n s**t loads of laundry, I’d like to think this isn’t the only view of womanhood available. I adore drag queens, my daughter is obsessed with them. More importantly, I want my girls to see tolerance from women who have the power to shine a light. t.co/twyYAaEjph
— Myleene Klass (@KlassMyleene) December 22, 2019
Others said they weren’t fans of drag, but comparing it to blackface was wrong.
“Drag is really not OK, it ridicules women, no doubt,” agreed Andreia Nobre. “But blackface led to direct violence against black ppl. Many black women have now explained that we could question drag without comparing with blackface bc they feel it diminishes the fight against racism.”
Davies, 57, – who was previously married to black athlete Derek Redmond – did not accept the criticism.
“With mixed race kids & loads of wonderful friends from all over the world don’t think I can be accused of racism,” she said. “I’m not reducing anyone else’s struggle just saying promoting ridiculous stereotypes is dangerous, as is racism.”
With mixed race kids & loads of wonderful friends from all over the world don’t think I can be accused of racism .. I’m not reducing anyone else’s struggle just saying promoting ridiculous stereotypes is dangerous, as is racism.
— Sharron Davies MBE (@sharrond62) December 21, 2019
Others just ridiculed her specific view of womanhood.
Hmmm who is stereotyping womanhood here? A drag queen painting on killer brows and getting down to some disco or the one who sees us as downtrodden milk maids slaving away for men and children.
Also juggling kids sounds dangerous, but possibly an excellent drag act.
— Hatpin Drill (@PippinDrill) December 21, 2019
You Might Like