Bianca Del Rio is in Stockholm on her Itβs Jester Joke comedy tour, still subject to the fraught human realities of traveling despite her top-tier queen status. And packing β donβt remind her. βAs a drag queen, you travel with so much shit,β says Del Rio (aka Roy Haylock).
Famous for her tart candor, the Louisiana-born stand-up comedianβs success is a result of saying what she thinks and not caring what you think. And you, of course, already know this if you witnessed the self-proclaimed βClown in a Gownβ reign over the other crown-pining contestants during season six of RuPaulβs Drag Race in 2014.Β
Five years later, Del Rio, who has written a book, Blame It on Bianca Del Rio, and starred in her own film, Hurricane Bianca, is still coming out on top. In June, New York magazine named Del Rio one of the top 100 βMost Powerful Drag Queens in America.β Just before bringing her worldwide comedy tour stateside, Del Rio called to defend bachelorettes who celebrate at gay clubs, predict an inevitable Lizzo backlash and roast Drag Race queens who use emotional manipulation to get ahead in the competition.Β
What is the one thing you absolutely cannot leave home without?
Iβm a drag queen β there are so many elements. I definitely need makeup. But a razor, I would assume. The problem is, with drag you have to travel with so much stuff. You have to bring size 12 shoes, extra eyelashes; you canβt really find that stuff just anywhere. Definitely not in Stockholm. So I have to pack a lot of stuff. A lot more than I usually would like to admit.
How many suitcases do you travel with?
Four suitcases. Three of those are drag, one of them is what I call my βboy bag.β Itβs just to have options. The airport struggle β the security, the baggage, all that shit β really does start to wear on you.
And imagine if you went through airport security as β well, maybe you do go through as Bianca.
Iβve never had to fly in drag β thankfully!Β
As a self-proclaimed expert on nothing who has an opinion on everything, I need your take on John Travolta nearly giving Taylor Swift impersonator Jade Jolie a VMA because he mistook her for the actual Taylor Swift.Β
(Laughs) I mean, itβs hysterical. Obviously heβs got delusion problems. Heβs not dealing with a full deck right now. He also is a Scientologist, which goes to show it. And he had that Adele Nazeem moment. Either heβs a drunk or he takes a pill or he just doesnβt f*cking care. I was just glad to see he was not wearing a wig. Thereβs a rarity! So, you know, heβs embracing his non-wig self. Next heβll admit that heβs gay.Β
That he confused them β was it a compliment to Taylor or to Jade?Β
To Jade, because sheβs a Taylor Swift impersonator. I think itβs great. I think itβs an honest mistake, because to be fair I canβt tell any white girls apart.Β
As Bianca, do you ever confuse people?Β
I do meet-and-greets, and when you have meet-and-greets, people are always like, βOh, I just saw you in Stockholm!β or βI saw you in London!β and I have to really think. You do 150 people a night as part of the meet-and-greets, so itβs very hard to remember. Thereβs usually some characteristic that gets me there, but on occasion Iβve been like, βHave we met before?!β And theyβll say, βNo.β Iβm like, βOhβ¦ OK. Thought we did.β So it can fuck with you, with that many people a night. But I really havenβt mistaken anybody for anybody of importance, no.
If John Travolta met you, who knows who you might be mistaken for.Β
Who cares! Iβm not interested! Heβs not high on my list.Β
Who is high on your list?
I think every gay man would say Dolly Parton. Sheβs that rare one that is almost like some mythical creature. Sheβs just one of those who I love not only because sheβs Dolly Parton and Iβve grown up with her, but also sheβs just so fucking funny.
Some people might describe you as a βmythical creatureβ too.Β Β
Emphasis on the word βcreature,β yes. But mythical? No. (Laughs)Β
This is very controversial in gay bars, so I wonder if this translates to your shows. But do you let bachelorette parties come to Bianca shows?
Oh, I donβt care. Whoever buys a f*cking ticket, I donβt give a shit. Gurl, listen: I think people have lost their minds. The gays donβt even wanna be in the gay bars anymore! Theyβre all on a f*cking app anyway. Nobody is even paying attention. And look, at least somebodyβs in the bar. Somebody has to buy a drink to keep gay bars open. You canβt rely on gay men to do that. So look, let the girls come in, let them have a good time. Not like Iβve never told a bitch to shut up. You can do that, but you canβt be offended. Who cares! As long as theyβre there having fun, f*ck it.
Isnβt the point of coming to a Bianca Del Rio show to be offended?
First of all, itβs important to laugh at ourselves. I laugh at myself, and I laugh at everything that I could possibly laugh at. But I think weβve lost that because thereβs so much with social media warriors constantly saying, βYou canβt say thisβ and βIβm offended.β Well, then, f*ck off! If youβre offended by me, then donβt come and see me. Itβs very simple. I donβt like Kim Kardashian, but I donβt spend my life watching her on fucking TV or writing all over her Facebook or Instagram or Twitter saying, βI hate you, youβre a piece of shit.β I just donβt care. You can live a successful life with someone not liking you.Β
Have you always been the kind of person who says what some people really want to say but are too scared to say? Has that always been your style?
Always. Yeah, yeah.
As a kid?
Yeah, as a child everything was always funny to me, and I would always try to find humor in all of it. Itβs just what you have to do. It was just my survival skills. Imagine being different, being artsy, being gay. All that definitely can either turn on you or you can find a way through it, and that was just my way through it, which is being blunt and upfront. And the people who got it β usually the smart ones β understood it.Β
When did you know you could get away with more if you put on a costume?
When I got paid. I always said it, but it wasnβt until the packaging came with it. And itβs not so much that I can get away with more β itβs just whatβs easier for people to accept. For instance, with drag in particular, the average person would think, βI have nothing of interest with a drag queen.β But when they see it, theyβre kind of fascinated by it. So, for me, it was just this evolution into it. I mean, I could totally live my life without being in drag and I probably will. Iβm not doing this forever.Β
What do you think your post-drag life will look like?Β
Thatβs the stupidest question! I have no idea! I know I donβt want to be schlepping around the world in a wig and heels at 60, I can tell you that. Itβs one of those things where Iβm like, look, itβs been 24 years so far, Iβm all right, but I know itβs not forever. And I have no idea. I didnβt plan this far. So I donβt know what the f*ck Iβll be doing. But itβll be something fun, thatβs for sure.Β Β
You once said itβs important to know your limits. What new limits have you set for yourself at 44?Β
I said I didnβt want to do drag at 40 because at the time I think I was 37 and it was right before Drag Race, and so I was working a regular job in New York City during the day making costumes for Broadway and then at night working in a club. So at that point, 18 years of working in the clubs and trying to stay afloat β and the bars were fading, not many people were coming out like they used to, so New York nightlife completely changed and I thought I could wrap this up at 40 and be OK. Iβd had a great 20 years and that wouldβve been that. But then at 38 β well, 37 is when I filmed Drag Race β it shifted everything, it elevated everything, and I was ready for the challenge. But I donβt think I want to stay in that particular game. I mean, no one should. No one should stay in something just because youβve been doing something. You have to trust your instincts and move on. I definitely know this is not something I want to do forever on this level. Itβs demanding β and by no means am I bitching about it. Iβm being realistic here. Options! (Laughs)Β
After your controversial remark during Montreal Pride about Drag Race season 10 contestant Blair St. Clair in 2018, did that have you reconsidering how far to push the envelope?
First and foremost, I have a problem with, when youβre watching a drag show and everybody has an ailment or an issue or loves to tug at your heartstrings to try to get people to like you. Thatβs what I was discussing (during her set, Del Rio said, “You got the one going ‘Ugh, I’m fat.’ Then you got the other one going ‘Ugh, I’m a black queen,'” referencing season 10 contestants Eureka O’Hara and The Vixen. She then mentioned Blair St. Clair opening up about being sexually assaulted: βThen you got that other bitch, ‘I was raped!’ No, f*ck youβ¦β). I was discussing someone being left at a bus stop, somebody being sick.Β
All of that is part of the nonsense of being part of a reality show. And Iβm entitled to an opinion when someoneβs about to lip sync for their life and they start pulling out all this f*ckery. Thereβs a time and place to discuss serious topics. So my joke was about people that find any way to bring up their heartache and pull on heartstrings, thatβs what I was discussing.Β
And so no, I refuse to change anything that I say and do because, like I said, the people who like it, like it, the people who donβt, donβt. But as they have an opinion about me, I can have an opinion about the ridiculousness of a drag show. Itβs my take on it. And Iβm living proof that you can get through the show without f*cking crying in every episode, for cripesβ sake!Β
I laugh at the f*ckery. I laugh at the stunts and gimmicks. Itβs no worse than somebody doing a death-drop. Itβs been done! Just f*cking be entertaining! Iβm so sick of all these sob stories! Thatβs what thatβs about.Β
Iβm guessing that even though you were named one of Americaβs most powerful drag queens, itβs not true that with great power comes great responsibility.Β Β
I think thatβs absolutely ridiculous. Thereβs a list that says Iβm No. 1; thereβs another list that says Iβm the worst drag queen. Thatβs just how it works! None of that means anything. And whatβs this responsibility? Iβm a f*cking man in a wig making a living. Iβm not a f*cking superhero. And donβt put me on a pedestal because I shouldnβt be on a pedestal, because they love to put you on a pedestal and then tear you the f*ck down. You cannot fool me. They love to say youβre amazing. Like, look, this girl Lizzo is the one everybody loves right now. Just give her a year and thereβs gonna be something someone is gonna bitch about and pull out and say βshe did thisβ and say βshe did thatβ and CANCEL her. Thatβs how they are. Thatβs just the world. So look: Iβm not looking for that type of acceptance. And you shouldnβt be putting faith in f*cking people that are on reality shows, for cripesβ sake. Thatβs ridiculous. People that idolize me or Snooki have problems.Β
Referring to the way the queens are depicted on Drag Race versus their actual persona, you said recently, βIβve been behind the curtain. And when youβre behind the curtain, itβs kind of weird to watch.β Do people get a better understanding of who you are from your shows than they did from Drag Race?Β
Yes and no. The thing is you can only be yourself when youβre on television, and of course if you say something theyβre going to use it. So the people that say, βOh, itβs the editingβ? Well, if you didnβt say it, they wouldnβt have the footage. Iβve accepted responsibility for everything I said and everything I did, and sadly a lot of people donβt do that when they leave the show. They have to blame someone, and it wonβt be themselves.Β
If you could have been on a different season of Drag Race, which season of girls would you have wanted to compete against?
I donβt care. I donβt have an opinion. (Laughs) I can’t even remember who was on what season when! Itβs that much of a blur. It was six years ago, and I never watched the show when it was airing. I would watch marathons, but I would never watch it weekly, night after night after night. I never followed. The only seasons Iβm familiar with are four and five; the rest of them have become a blur. And, I mean, a lot of them are my friends, but I canβt remember which season they were on. Iβm also a firm believer that it happened, it was great, I had a great experience and a great moment, but I wouldnβt change any of it.
So if an βAll Stars: Winnersβ season ever happens, would you be interested in competing?
Nope. Why? Would you go back to high school?Β














