🐱 Inside the UK's first Down's syndrome drag night

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http://www.itv.com/news/2018-06-07/drag-syndrome-inside-the-uks-first-downs-syndrome-drag-night/

The UK's first drag event featuring performers with Down's syndrome will pave the way for more inclusivity in the arts, organisers say.

"Drag Syndrome" welcomed five newcomers to the drag scene, one of them being Otto Baxter, 30, an award-winning actor and filmmaker.

The Shakespearean actor is no stranger to the stage, but believes the act has helped improve his confidence and self-esteem.

"I've really enjoyed being a drag - I definitely got more confident and I'm more comfortable."

He added: "Being a drag is actually dazzling, darlings."

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Credit: ITV News
Daniel Vais, the event's creative director, believes the project has challenged stereotypes and allowed many people with Down's syndrome to express themselves through a new style of performance.

While London's drag scene has warmly welcomed the event, they are aware they may face criticism.

"I think some people will find it uncomfortable because they feel uncomfortable with a different sex wearing the opposite sex's outfit in general, so it's not because they are Down's syndrome," he told ITV News.

"But you saw the artists are really up for it and this is part of their artistic practice, so this is what we focus on - on ourselves, not the outside."

About 750 babies with Down's syndrome are born in the UK each year and it is a condition that affects people of all ages and ethnicities.

According to the Down's syndrome Association, there are approximately 40,000 peoplewith Down's syndrome living in the UK.

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Credit: ITV News
Otto's mother Lucy revealed her pride at seeing her son - along with his three brothers - channeling their creativity through drag.

"The reason that I adopted four people with Down's syndrome was because I used to go to an old Victorian hospital where people with Down's syndrome were just shut away," she said.

"I recognised that they were very, very talented and very interesting people who we had just shunned - so actually seeing them doing this is just what I dreamed of back then."

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Credit: ITV News
Daniel now plans to take Drag Syndrome to a global audience, with numerous clubs across the world making offers to host the night.

"I think it's new for contemporary culture to include people with learning disabilities in avant-garde culture or in high culture - or in high fashion. It's quite new to everyone, but from what I see - it works really well, really, really well actually."

 
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I didn't watch the video and I already wanna projectile vomit just by reading the title
 
The article literally say's Grand Rapids candidate.View attachment 928698
I know. The thing that they're lying about is in Grand Rapids. The lie isn't in Grand Rapids. The lie is at PinkNews.co.uk. The lie is the act of libel. Where the libel occurs determines who has jurisdiction, and UK libel laws are far more strict than those in the USA. So, if this is a Brit writer, then they are open to legal action, for libel.
 
No one is going to genuinely enjoy seeing ugly people in drag.

Modern culture celebrates ugliness and expects people to applaud and celebrate it out of fear, it's just fucking ridiculous.

The whole idea of modern times seems to be to me that because life is unfair and some people get saddled with bad situations then the whole world has to be made ugly and miserable to bring everyone down to that level, no one can have beauty and joy anymore because of inequality, therefore we have to be happy with ugliness and misery.

Harrison Bergeron is probably the most prescient piece of fiction ever written.
 
How is this any different from me watching the Bearded Lady, Exceptional Bootsie, and the Fireproof Oriental at my local freak show?

How the fuck are these liberals better at being racist and bigoted than me?? I'm getting blown the fuck out here for years now. (:_(
 
Harrison Bergeron is probably the most prescient piece of fiction ever written.

Agreed. Also, check out Facial Justice, the dystopian novel by L.P. Hartley about a grim future in which the "facially over-privileged" are required by law to be surgically uglied-up so they don't make unattractive people feel bad. It was published in 1960.
 
Agreed. Also, check out Facial Justice, the dystopian novel by L.P. Hartley about a grim future in which the "facially over-privileged" are required by law to be surgically uglied-up so they don't make unattractive people feel bad. It was published in 1960.

And Harrison Bergeron was published in 1961, how in the fresh hell did they manage to predict 50+ years into the future so well?
 
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