The self-consciously risqué bourgeois high jinks of Brandon Thomas's ''
Charley's Aunt (London, 1892) were still viable theatre material in La Cage aux Folles (1978), which was remade, as The Birdcage,'' as late as 1996. in 2012
Dame Edna, the drag persona of Australian actor
Barry Humphries, was the host of several specials, including
The Dame Edna Experience. Dame Edna also toured internationally, playing to sell-out crowds, and appeared on TV's
Ally McBeal. Dame Edna represented an anomalous example of the drag concept. Her earliest incarnation was unmistakably a man dressed (badly) as a suburban housewife. Edna's manner and appearance became so feminised and glamorised that even some of her TV show guests appear not to see that the Edna character was played by a man. The furor surrounding Dame Edna's "advice" column in
Vanity Fair magazine suggests that one of her harshest critics, actress
Salma Hayek, was unaware Dame Edna was a female character played by a man. In 2009, ''
RuPaul's Drag Race'' first premiered as a television show in the United States. The show has gained mainstream and global appeal, and it has exposed multiple generations of audiences to drag culture.
United States In the United States, early examples of drag clothing can be found in
gold rush saloons of
California. The
Barbary Coast district of
San Francisco was known for certain saloons, such as Dash, which attracted female impersonator patrons and workers. In the early 20th century, drag—as an art form and culture—began to flourish with
minstrel shows and
vaudeville. Performers such as
Julian Eltinge and
Bothwell Browne were drag queens and vaudeville performers. The Progressive Era brought a decline in vaudeville entertainment, but drag culture began to grow in nightclubs and bars, such as
Finnochio's Club and
Black Cat Bar in
San Francisco. During this period, Hollywood films included examples of drag. While drag was often used as a last-resort tactic in situational farce (its only permissible format at the time), some films provided a more empathetic lens than others. In 1919, Bothwell Browne appeared in
Yankee Doodle in Berlin. In 1933, came out in Germany, which later inspired
First a Girl (1935) in the United States. That same year,
Katharine Hepburn played a character who dressed as a male in
Sylvia Scarlett. In 1959, drag made a big Hollywood splash in
Some Like It Hot (1959). In the 1960s,
Andy Warhol and his
Factory scene included superstar drag queens, such as
Candy Darling and
Holly Woodlawn, both immortalized in the
Lou Reed song "
Walk on the Wild Side". version of
Wild Side Story, 1973 By the early 1970s, drag was influenced by the
psychedelic rock and
hippie culture of the era. A San Francisco drag troupe,
The Cockettes (1970–1972), performed with glitter eyeshadow and gilded mustaches and beards. The troupe also coined the term "
genderfuck". Drag broke out from underground theatre in the persona of
Divine in
John Waters'
Pink Flamingos (1972): see also
Charles Pierce. The
cult hit movie musical
The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975) inspired several generations of young people to attend performances in drag, although many of these fans would not call themselves drag queens or transvestites. For many decades, American
network television, only the broadest slapstick drag tradition was generally represented. Few American TV comedians consistently used drag as a comedy device, among them
Milton Berle,
Flip Wilson, and
Martin Lawrence, although drag characters have occasionally been popular on sketch TV shows like
In Living Color (with
Jim Carrey's grotesque female bodybuilder) and
Saturday Night Live (with the
Gap Girls, among others). On the popular 1960s military sitcom, ''
McHale's Navy,
Ensign Parker (Tim Conway) sometimes had to dress in drag (often with hilarious results) whenever McHale and/or his crew had to disguise themselves in order to carry out their elaborate schemes. Gilligan's Island'' occasionally features men dressing in women's clothes, though this was not considered drag since it was not for a performance. On stage and screen, the actor-playwright-screenwriter-producer
Tyler Perry has included his drag character of Madea in some of his most noted productions, such as the stage play
Diary of a Mad Black Woman and the
feature film he based upon it. Maximilliana and
RuPaul co-star together in the TV show
Nash Bridges starring
Don Johnson and
Cheech Marin during the two-part episode "'Cuda Grace". Maximilliana,
looking passable, leads one of the investigators to believe he is "real" and sexually advances only to learn that he is, in fact, male, much to his chagrin.
United Kingdom In the United Kingdom, drag has been more common in comedy, on both film and television.
Alastair Sim plays the headmistress Miss Millicent Fritton in ''
The Belles of St Trinian's (1954) and Blue Murder at St Trinian's'' (1957). He played the role straight; no direct joke about the actor's true gender is made. However, Miss Fritton is quite non-feminine in her pursuits of betting, drinking and smoking. The gag is that whilst her school sends out girls into a merciless world, it is the world that need beware. Despite this, or perhaps because of Sim's portrayal, subsequent films in the series went on to use actresses in the headmistress role (
Dora Bryan and
Sheila Hancock respectively). The 21st century re-boot of the series however reverted to drag, with
Rupert Everett in the role. On television,
Benny Hill portrayed several female characters. The
Monty Python troupe and
The League of Gentlemen often played female parts in their skits. The League of Gentlemen are also credited with the first ever portrayal of "nude drag", where a man playing a female character is shown naked but still with the appropriate female anatomy, like fake breasts and a
merkin. Within the conceit of the sketch/film, they are actually women: it is the audience who are in on the joke. Monty Python women, whom the troupe called
pepperpots, are random middle-aged working/lower middle class typically wearing long brown coats that were common in the 1960s. Save for a few characters played by
Eric Idle, they looked and sounded very little like actual women with their caricatural outfits and shrill falsettos. However, when a sketch called for a "real" woman, the Pythons almost always called on
Carol Cleveland. The joke is reversed in the Python film
Life of Brian where "they" are pretending to be men, including obviously false beards, so that they can go to the stoning. When someone throws the first stone too early the
Pharisee asks "who threw that", and they answer "she did, she did,..." in high voices. "Are there any women here today?" he says, "No no no" they say in gruff voices. In the 1970s the most familiar drag artist on British television was
Danny La Rue. La Rue's act was essentially a
music hall one, following on from a much older, and less sexualised tradition of drag. His appearances were often in
variety shows such as
The Good Old Days (itself a pastiche of music hall) and
Sunday Night at the London Palladium. Such was his popularity that he made a film,
Our Miss Fred (1972). Unlike the "St Trinians" films, the plot involved a man having to dress as a woman.
David Walliams and (especially)
Matt Lucas often play female roles in the television comedy
Little Britain; Walliams plays Emily Howard—a "rubbish transvestite", who makes an unconvincing woman. In the UK, non-comedic representations of drag acts are less common, and usually a subsidiary feature of another story. A rare exception is the television play (1968) and film (1973)
The Best Pair of Legs in the Business. In the film version
Reg Varney plays a holiday camp comedian and drag artist whose marriage is failing.
Canada Early representations of drag in Canadian film included the 1971 film ''
Fortune and Men's Eyes, adapted from a theatrical play by John Herbert, and the 1974 film Once Upon a Time in the East'', adapted from a theatrical play by
Michel Tremblay. The 1977 film
Outrageous!, starring Canadian drag queen
Craig Russell as a fictionalized version of himself, was an important milestone in Canadian film, as one of the first gay-themed films ever to receive widespread theatrical distribution in North America. A sequel film,
Too Outrageous!, was released in 1987. In the 1980s, the sketch comedy series
CODCO and
The Kids in the Hall both made prominent use of drag performance.
The Kids in the Hall consisted of five men, while
CODCO consisted of three men and two women; however, all ten performers, regardless of their own gender, performed both male and female characters. Notably, both troupes also had openly gay members, with
Scott Thompson of
The Kids in the Hall and
Greg Malone and
Tommy Sexton of
CODCO being important pioneers of gay representation on Canadian TV in their era. The use of drag in
CODCO also transitioned to a lesser extent into the new series
This Hour Has 22 Minutes in the 1990s; although cross-gender performance is not as central to
22 Minutes as it was in
CODCO,
Cathy Jones and
Mary Walsh, the two cast members common to both series, both continued to play selected male characters. The Canadian film
Lilies, directed by
John Greyson and adapted from a theatrical play by
Michel Marc Bouchard, made use of drag as a dramatic device. Set in a men's prison, the film centres on a
play within a play staged by one of the prisoners; however, as the roles in the play are performed by fellow prisoners, even the female characters within it are played by men, and the film blends scenes in which they are clearly depicted as men performing in their own clothes in the prison chapel with scenes in which they are performing in drag in more "realistic" settings. The short-lived French-language sitcom
Cover Girl, aired in 2005 on
Télévision de Radio-Canada, centred on three drag queens sharing ownership of a drag cabaret in
Montreal. In 2017
Ici ARTV aired
Ils de jour, elles de nuit, a documentary series profiling Montreal drag queens
Rita Baga,
Barbada de Barbades, Gaby,
Lady Boom Boom, Lady Pounana and
Tracy Trash. The documentary web series ''
Canada's a Drag'', launched on
CBC Gem in 2018, has profiled various Canadian drag performers, inclusive of all genders, over four seasons to date. ''
Canada's Drag Race, a Canadian spinoff of the American RuPaul's Drag Race'' franchise, was launched in 2020 on
Crave. The same year also saw the release of Phil Connell's film
Jump, Darling, centred on a young aspiring drag queen, and
Thom Fitzgerald's film
Stage Mother, about a religious woman who inherits her son's drag club after his death, as well as the comedy web series
Queens, starring several real Toronto-area drag queens. 2023 saw the release of the films
Enter the Drag Dragon,
Solo,
Gamodi and
Queen Tut.
OutTV, a Canadian television channel devoted to LGBTQ programming, has aired the documentary series
Drag Heals, the reality competition shows
Call Me Mother and
Sew Fierce, and the satirical reality competition parody
Drag House Rules. It has also been directly involved as a production partner in some American programs, including ''
The Boulet Brothers' Dragula and Hey Qween!''. In 2025,
Documentary and
CBC Gem premiered
Michelle Ross: Unknown Icon, a documentary film by
Alison Duke about Canadian drag icon
Michelle Ross. ==Music==