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Each hole is a goal, and the last winner of RuPaul's Drag Race used his powerful charisma, uniqueness, talent, and talent to fill the biggest emptiness of his life by taking the Crown season 10 Thursday night. After a spectacular two-stroke dazzling blow against her top three finalists, Eureka and Kameron Michaels, 22-year-old New York Queen Aquaria became the youngest victor in the history of Drag Race . with a charming spirit, his signature has awakened his sensitivity and his pyrotechnic flair (literal). The day after his victory, EW caught up with the reigning king to discuss all that is on the horizon at the dawn of Aquaria's age. Read on for the full conversation.
WEEKLY ENTERTAINMENT: Hello Aquaria! Congratulations, I'm so happy for you!
AQUARIA: Helloooooo! I did it! Winner of the winner, chicken dinner! I am so [unintelligible].
I'm sorry, you break a little. So what are you?
I may have earned $ 100,000, but I still have Sprint. So, it's going to be difficult.
Me too, we have a double problem
Well, f- our two dragons!
So, it's the next morning. How are you feeling right now?
I feel good! I just woke up, I'm like, eat sushi from the market, and keep it humble. Where I live, there are not many people who congratulate me for being in the show, but just walking down the street on the way home, everyone congratulated me for winning! I guess more people have a cable here than I thought.
I mean, my daughter, you said: every hole is a goal, and you must have the impression that you have conquered the biggest hole.
There was a big gaping hole in my life, and now I can enjoy everyone's love for me, which is extremely well compared to what I'm used to.
I saw this victory come, is not it?
I entered the season saying that I had to win, and the whole season was just a fight for me to try to convince the producers that I should win.
So you were not really surprised?
I was definitely surprised to have won. I know that I had to overcome a lot of things to get to this point, and watching me win was really a very shocking moment for me. I saw something awesome happening because of my performances and my performance on the night of the final, but sometimes the stats do not matter in Drag Race and sometimes other things a total blank slate for what could happen. I know I did it as far as I could … and to look at it was surreal.
Have you heard of your mother drag, [season 4 winner] Sharon Needles, yet?
She may have sent me a text message I have not seen my phone yet. I literally woke up and went to get some sushi. But it's like that …
As a queen does: she gets up, goes looking for market sushi … just another day in the life of a royal.
Just by staying humble! [Laughs]
Miz Cracker told me that you once told him that you have so many faces that you are a sphere.
That's what I said, yes!
So I wonder The face you exposed during the final, and the one you hope people will see the next year as a reigning queen?
At the finale, I was very dumb all evening. I do not necessarily think I knew how to deal with a lot of my emotions the best way that night. Not that I did not treat them publicly, there was just so much emotion. For me, I was speechless at the time. But for the moment, I know that a black lip suits me well, especially when I smile. So, smile all the time! I could not be happier. This is obviously all I wanted to enter the competition, and I finally put it in the spotlight. Nobody will do it further than I did. It's just a bunch of smiles!
What do you hope to do with the crown? Do you feel that you have the responsibility to make changes, and what types of changes are achievable in the community while you have this platform?
I think we have seen in recent seasons that a substantial change is not necessarily totally possible, given a one – year reign. I think the change has to come from people who need change, you know? All I can do is continue to amplify the voices of others and try to convey the current message. It's the best thing I can do.
When Sasha Velour won, she told me that she considered the drag as a form of activism, and that she intended to use drag it as a tool of resistance. Do you feel the same about the situation in today's political climate, that it is a political or social tool – especially for young people, with whom you have really woven links this season in terms of fan base? always been very political and stimulating societal norms and other aspects of life. And for me, I definitely agree with that. Sometimes my resistance is not as political as others', but I think it comes from a perspective where I'm so used to it. I sometimes forget that my vision of the world is not that of someone else. I'm not like, "Woah, I'm political!" I am more of a person who does it and does not necessarily say it.
In your opinion, what is the ideal world for the trail to exist, because, clearly, we are not in a space at this moment where everyone accepts it
The world in which we live currently continues to try us every day. There are many times when we lose faith in our country and ourselves, and I think that drag is definitely a form of entertainment and a form of hope that tells us that we have to hope for a better future. One of my friends, Evan Ross Katz at Mic, just wrote something very nice about you on Facebook that hit me: "Aquaria wants to understand the others before it's a priority." To be himself understood. " What do you think it means
Aw! I think it's really true. Just as many queer people have experienced, there are times when people at school do not understand us or people do not understand us, so I want to grow up [that way] I'm just accustomed to not being understood. I understand that it's just the life I live. I know that there are so many other perspectives, perspectives and things to learn for me, and I know it's more important than what I have to say or what that is the message that I must convey. I fully understand the weight of the most marginalized people, and that is why I am more able to understand others than to worry about making myself understood. Me, it is something that is much more acceptable in some sectors of society than in others. I am only a little white girl, and it's easy to accept. But it gives me the second to listen to the voices of others.
Do you think it may be for that reason that you were the white queen awake? "Of the season, to the point that some of your sisters of season 10 have said that they wanted" everyone black and Aquaria "win
I certainly did not wake up on Drag Race but there was definitely an outlet as far as viewers were concerned to be present.So, being in the category "everyone black and Aquaria", it was very significant because that came from a lot of girls that I respect the show, and that made me feel and know that all that is perceived about me in the past is really past perception that was wrong.It was kind and it was worth knowing that people did not think I was as rotten as they might have thought
You are, however, the youngest winner of RuPaul & # 39; s Drag Race – and probably the first winner grew up in a drag world with has already been affected by the influence of Drag Race in pop culture. Is the victory a kind of complete tour of what you started in the medium in the first place?
Of course. I've had a lot of reference points to hang out beyond RuPaul's Drag Race but it was something that had so much impact in the media at the beginning of my adolescence. From the second I saw it, I told it … it seemed like the Super Bowl of drag. And I think that continues to do that now. As a drag artist, I knew this platform was the most effective way to get my name out there.
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