Last weekâs episode of RuPaulâs Drag Race UK will go down as one of the most eventful twisty, turny, and chart-topping episodes in the franchiseâs history. It begins with the queens finding out, from their total mid-reality-season-taping isolation, that there is a global pandemic raging beyond the walls of the werkroom. Theyâre sent home, and we smash-cut to seven months later, when they return to the show, only to find out that one of the seasonâs brightest and most compelling competitors, Veronica Green, has contracted COVID and will not be returning. In her place, the first-eliminated queen, cabaret star Joe Black, makes her triumphant return ⌠only to be absolutely torn apart on the main stage by RuPaul in what has already been dubbed online as the âH&M incident.â Did we mention that during all of this, the competitors did a girl-group challenge that resulted in a No. 1 single on the U.K. pop charts? We caught up with Rats: The Rusical star Veronica Green and Brightonâs finest Joe Black to talk eliminations, reads, and drag in the age of COVID.
That was maybe one of the most dramatic and eventful episodes in Drag Race history. Veronica, what was it like to be in the werkroom when that alarm went off and you found out about the pandemic and everyone got sent home?Â
Veronica Green: When the alarm went off, it took me completely by surprise. Everybody was bickering and arguing over nonsense. When you think about what the world was going through, we were bickering over nothing. We didnât know what was going on. And even after the production shut down and I got sent home along with everybody else, I still didnât understand what was happening in the world, because I didnât have a working TV in my hotel room. And to come home to my housemates working from home and just be like, Oh, this is new, and have to be told everything thatâs happening and have to have it drilled in [that] âYou canât leave the house because weâre in lockdown,â just the severity of the situation â it took me a few days for that to compute.
It must have been surreal. Reality-TV contestants and remote monks have to have been the last people on the planet to find out.Â
V.G.: Oh, yeah. I got home from the show, and we were told that we were not supposed to speak to any of the contestants, because at the time it was only going to be a three-week break. But I immediately put my bag down and went out and went and visited Tia Kofi, who only lives down the road from me. And it was like 28 Days Later. There was nobody in the streets, all the shops were closed, nobody on the tube. And I got to her house, and we were talking all about how weird it was. And then I got back to my house later on that night, and my housemates were like, âWhat are you doing? Why did you leave the house? Youâre not supposed to â weâre in lockdown!â And I just didnât understand. I was like, âWhat are you talking about?â They had to tell me, âYou need to stay indoors.â It was just madness. I just didnât grasp it.
And Joe, what was the timeline like for you, between episode one and all of this and returning? Did you speak to any of the other queens?
Joe Black: I didnât know I was possibly going back until about three weeks before they started filming, which is a lot less time than seven months. As Veronica said, we werenât supposed to talk to anyone. But I felt like I was on the phone to Tia Kofi every other day and Lawrence Chaney as well. And also Veronica toward the end.
Veronica, what was it like watching Tiaâs reaction on TV when Ru announces that you wonât be returning to the show due to COVID?
V.G.: It did break my heart a little bit, because we were kind of each otherâs strength in the competition, because we were a little bit underestimated by the other contestants. And we helped each other through it. And to see just how much of a negative effect that had on her, and how it threw her off her game, it really broke my heart to see her be so upset. I wasnât expecting it to hit her so hard.
Speaking of emotional moments, we have to talk about the H&M moment on the runway. You know itâs bad when Ru apologizes after.
J.B.: I donât think heâs ever apologized before. Has he?
I donât know! For Ru to say, âOh, sorry, Mama Ru may have gotten a little heated there â Iâve been isolating in a room for two weeks,â thatâs the closest Iâve ever seen Ru come to saying, âWow, I really was maybe a little too harsh.â What did that moment feel like when it was happening?Â
J.B.: It was dramatic. I didnât realize such a simple dress could stir so many raw emotions within somebody. In the moment, it felt like I was watching television. I was like, Oh, this is a very dramatic episode of Drag Race, isnât it? And then suddenly realizing that I was the one being shouted at by Tyra Banks â you know, the âIâve never screamed at a girl like thisâ moment. That was very strange. I mean, Iâve never been quite so moved by somebodyâs outfit before. But Iâm really glad I could stir that up in RuPaul.
Iâm guessing your seaside runway look from this week is the alternate hometown look you were hinting at after episode one. That was a whole Brighton category basically.
J.B.: Yes, basically it was. When I got my âYou might be on Drag Raceâ call, you try to get ahead with these things as much as you possibly can, and I thought, Theyâre gonna do hometown. So I started planning that look. And then we got told all of the categories, and I saw âDay at the Seaside,â and I was like, Well! Thatâs that one sorted out! If I had done that one for hometown, I wouldâve had to have done another for Seaside, and I think nothing quite says seaside like being covered in seagull shit, windswept, eyelashes on my forehead, covered in ice cream. It would pay off. That was the most fun one. That was one of the ones that I was really hands on with doing. I made the ice cream and the chip cones and wired the tickets and hand-painted the bird shit. There were ice-cream sprinkles on it that were all rhinestones. The level of detail â that was the most fun one for me.
Iâm happy you got to come back and show it off. Iâve never heard anyone describe bird shit so lovingly.Â
V.G.: You said you stoned that yourself. I thought Ellie Diamond did it for you just before the runway.
J.B.: [Laughs.] Even though I knew what I had done in the runway, I knew that I had acted a total clown. Watching it, I still genuinely gave a huge laugh because it was so funny.
Veronica, what did you have planned for this runway category?
V.G.: I lived in Blackpool for two years, so I was thinking something along sand and sand castling. I might put up some pictures. Who knows?
Do either of you have reads that you wish you could have given the other girls during the library challenge? Nowâs your chance.Â
J.B.: Veronica, what would you have said about me?
V.G.: I would have said, âJoe Black: After that performance, never coming back.â
J.B.: Aw. I had a really good one for you, and itâs totally escaping me now.
V.G.: Forgettable! Why me!
J.B.: Thatâs maybe what I would have said, but now that Iâve seen the show, you are anything but forgettable, babe. When I was there, you were very quiet in the werkroom, but watching it back as a viewer, you are a force of nature.
What were your plans for Snatch Game?
V.G.: I was thinking of doing Hilary Devey from Dragonsâ Den. Iâve done her before in performances, so I thought it would be a great choice to do because sheâs funny, sheâs iconic, and it would be great to do a comedy version of her because sheâs pretty much comedy herself. But after I used the wig in the episode-four challenge for the daytime talk show and then Alan Carr clocked it on the runway, I was like, That oneâs out the window now. Iâm not doing that.
J.B.: Along the same lines as Veronica with husky-voiced camp women, I was going to do Tallulah Bankhead. Itâs one of the ones I say to people, and they go âWho?â â30s actress. Quite the wild child. Very husky voice.
Speaking of the theatrical and cabaret sensibility that both of you share, what is the biggest challenge about staying true to your own artistic ability and adapting it to the Drag Race format?
V.G.: The challenge is to make sure that it is very you and to your aesthetic. That when you come out on the runway, people recognize that itâs you. For example, my pig-Medusa look. I knew I wanted to go big and bold with the headpiece and the prosthetics. But because it was going to change my face shape and the silhouette of my head so much, I wanted to stick to a classic Veronica silhouette from the neck down. And I decided to keep it simple, because to go with the concept, youâre not supposed to look at Medusaâs face. But I wanted all eyes on that headpiece. So thatâs another reason why I kept it simple. I love simple, classic beauty. Thatâs definitely a staple of Veronica.
J.B.: I think I stuck very authentically to myself â both of my brief appearances on Drag Race. The pop was always gonna be a problem for me, because itâs absolutely not my wheelhouse. For my show, I wear a sequined fish-tail dress and an ostrich-feather boa with a finger-wave wig or a turban with a spit curl. I stand still in my miserable German cabaret pose. Pop was so far removed. Again, with the H&M-dress fiasco, in my head, I was like, What do the pop people do? Ah, yes, wear a pink short dress. Lovely. Thatâs done! So I donât think I did particularly adapt well to the Drag Race format. But I think by sticking to who I am, Iâve managed to make an impact, because people got to see nothing but me. I didnât do anything that wasnât authentically my interpretation of something, even if it was a very simple dress. All of the times I was told to very much be myself, I was very much myself.
As this season airs, itâs bittersweet because the pandemic is still ongoing. What are your plans for projects going forward, either online or when things like touring and live performance open up again?Â
V.G.: At the moment, live performances are dead in the water. Itâs a struggle right now because Drag Race is a huge amazing platform for us, but weâre having setbacks because weâre not able to go out and utilize the platform to its fullest extent. Having said that, though, I am working on some music, and some stuff has been recorded. So thatâs something thatâs going to be coming out in the very near future. But itâs not what you would expect from somebody coming out of Drag Race. Iâm going back to my theater roots. And Iâve got quite a theatrical-sounding track coming out. So, yeah, keep your eyes and ears peeled for that.
J.B.: I just announced my own gin, which was very exciting. Joe Black Decopunk gin. It goes with the name of the tour Iâm doing in the U.K., hopefully in December. The venues are booked, the tickets are sold, and we will see, hopefully â fingers crossed â that everything opens up a little bit by then and we can actually make it happen. Iâll be releasing music at some point as well and trying to bring the dingy, filthy cabaret experience to peopleâs ears.