![]() I mean, she could use all the goodwill she can get. Olivia clocks her for still padding drag body, but I applaud that level of commitment. In fact, Kahmora is in a green screen suit, with only her face showing. It's not quite second lobster, but it's far from the juiciest role here. ![]() Kahmora's task is to play a talking tree. Kahmora is such an unmitigated disaster, everyone looks like Meryl Streep by comparison. She regrets it almost immediately into filming when it becomes clear she can't handle remembering the lines, nor does she catch the references in the script.Įlliott and Olivia are fine, if uninspired, but it hardly matters. Team “Misery Loves Company” (Olivia, Elliott, Denali, Kahmora)Įager to prove herself to the winning queens, Denali nabs the leading role for herself. Just in time for Hallmark Channel aficionados to start their withdrawals, the RuPaulmark Channel is here with three new holiday-themed trailers featuring the queens. The stakes are set, and Ru has taken the liberty of splitting the gals into three teams for a group acting challenge. When Ru arrives to introduce this week's challenge, she also comes bearing bad news: Someone WILL go home this week. There's no blood spilled here, but it's a taste of Tamisha's edgier side. Lala Ri, in interview, tells us back in Atlanta, Tamisha is known to fight. Clearly outmatched, you can almost see the flames swelling behind Tamisha' eyes. Well, there is a moment in which Elliott tries to snipe at Tamisha for voting her off in the Loading Dock. It all just feels like going through the motions. Elliott hides to eavesdrop on the ladies talking about her. The winners talk some low-grade trash about the Pork Chop gals. The time has come for the joining of the two halves of the cast, and you know how this goes. She helped carry an episode with an overly-long, lackluster challenge, but all the girls deserve some credit for elevating the proceedings on and off the mainstage. Rosé, Gottmik, Tina Burner, Olivia and Denali have made big impacts already, but no one comes close to outdoing Symone. Even beyond that, in just a few short challenges, several queens seized the opportunity to show exactly what they can do. The split gave everyone more screentime, and the result was a strong first impression for all. This season's COVID-triggered format change gave us more time to fall in love with season 13's queens. "To the young queer babies trapped in those rural parts of the country, thinking you can’t do anything or your dreams are too big," she wrote on Instagram.What's striking about Symone's meteoric rise (and we'll dive deeper into her many shining star qualities shortly) is how it's against the backdrop of such fierce competition. Since joining Drag Race, she's been using her platform to reach out to fellow queer people from small towns. Symone started doing drag and performing at age 18. "All the fear that Reggie (her name out of drag) had, Symone did not," she told the cast. Now, she's the first queen from the state to appear on the show. ![]() As she shared with her Season 13 sisters, her first public appearance in drag was at junior prom in conservative Conway, Arkansas. Symone, 25, made it to Drag Race because she believed in herself. Her standout acting performance in "God Loves Flags" was impressive as is, but she truly clinched the victory when her durag became the billowing cloth behind her on the train-themed runway. But the confidence boost certainly helped propel her to her second consecutive win on Jan. 8 episode of Drag Race, Symone didn't need to hear RuPaul say she has "star quality." She already knew that.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |