Venue faces backlash after cancelling 'Drag Syndrome' performance

The owner of the venue claims that the decision was made to protect the performers from been "exploited".

drag syndrome

The British drag group ‘Drag Syndrome’ was planning to perform at the Tanglefoot Building in Grand Rapids, Michigan, in September of this year, but the owner of the venue, Peter Meijer, sent a letter to the group and cancelled their performance under the reason that he wanted to protect people with down syndrome from being “exploited” on stage.

“The differently-abled are among the most special souls in our community, and I believe they, like children and other vulnerable populations, should be protected,” Meijer wrote in the letter.

Peter wrote in the letter that he talked with “the differently-abled, people who had family members with Down’s syndrome, and members of the LGBT+ and artist community,” and everyone brought up the possibility of ‘Drag Syndrome’ artists being exploited.

Meijer wrote that people with down syndrome might not consent to doing drag, even though they’re performing in drag and saying that they want to perform in drag.

“The involvement of individuals whose ability to act of their own volition is unclear raises serious ethical concerns that I cannot reconcile,” he wrote. “I cannot know, and neither can the audience, whether the individuals performing for ‘Drag Syndrome’ are giving, or are in a position to give, their full and informed consent.”

Recently he was called out by DisArt, a Grand Rapids organisation that promotes “expressions of Disabled cultural identity.”

“It didn’t matter that these Artists have long-standing, successful, internationally acclaimed careers,” the group wrote in a statement. “It didn’t matter that after founding ‘Drag Syndrome’, one of the original members was awarded an MBE by Queen Elizabeth II.

“It didn’t matter that another performer has won Best Actor award at the Cannes Film Festival. It didn’t matter that the artists are also accomplished actors and filmmakers, painters, dancers, singers and most important of all, human beings. None of that mattered in the decision to exclude their performance.

“Exclusion is discrimination, it is self-preservation, it is exploitation for political gain. It is not protection.”

‘Drag Syndrome’ performer Justin Bond responded with a video on Instagram.

“I don’t want people in America to think that Daniel is abusing us,” Bond said, referring to Daniel Vais, the group’s creative director. “I know most Americans think it’s terrible. You’ve got Down syndrome, you don’t have what it takes.

“But I think we do have what it takes because we deserve the right to be in drag and to perform.”

Another group has pulled out of its performances at the Tanglefoot. The Curiosity Theatre dropped three of its scheduled September and October performances.

“This is not a decision we make lightly but the censorship made by Peter Meijer of the UK group ‘Drag Syndrome’ is in direct contradiction to the mission of Curiosity Theatre to include all voices and bring new ideas to Grand Rapids,” said the group’s executive director Krista Pennington in a statement.

DisArt said that ‘Drag Syndrome’s show will go on, but it has not yet found a venue.

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