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Protecting-Drag
FILE - Chicago drag performer Jo Mama joins several black drag queens to lead the "Drag March for Change" in the Boystown neighborhood on the North Side of Chicago, June 14, 2020. About 10 drag artists from around the United States are banding together to protect and promote their art form. Qommittee announced its formation Wednesday, May 29, 2024 ahead of June’s LGBTQ+ Pride Month. (Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Chicago Sun-Times via AP, file)

The art of drag has become a target. With Pride Month nigh, performers are organizing to fight back

About 10 drag artists from around the United States are banding together to protect and promote their art form

By Jeff Mcmillan
Published - May 29, 2024, 12:47 AM ET
Last Updated - May 29, 2024, 12:47 AM EDT

“Drag is joy, but it’s under attack. Our very existence, our self-expression, our art — all of it is being threatened. And we’ve had enough.”

That’s the opening salvo of Qommittee, a group of drag performers banding together to protect and promote their art form, as it announced its formation ahead of June’s LGBTQ+ Pride Month.

“We’ve always had to fight tooth and nail for our place in this world,” the group said in a news release Wednesday. “But now, we’re also battling a tidal wave of hate — doxxing, harassment, death threats, armed protests, bombings, and even shootings."

Qommittee consists of about 10 drag performers nationwide who have experienced, directly or indirectly, threats, harassment or violence related to their art form. One had a venue firebombed in Ohio; one performed at Club Q in Colorado Springs and helped victims the night of the shooting there that killed five people; and one worked at Club Q and at Pulse Nightclub in Orlando, where a gunman killed 49 people in 2016.

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