
A Monsoon Is About to Hit These Pirates
As she prepared to discuss a part in the upcoming Broadway show 'Pirates! The Penzance Musical' with the director Scott Ellis, Jinkx Monsoon had only one outcome in mind. 'I knew I was going in for a meeting, but I wanted to leave with that role,' she said in a recent conversation.
And she was not coy about it. 'The first thing she said was, 'I've never wanted anything more than this,'' Ellis recalled, laughing.
Now Monsoon is above the show's title in playbills, alongside Ramin Karimloo and David Hyde Pierce. A lifetime of hard work has added up.
'I've done so many freaking things!' Monsoon said. 'I've been a stand-up comedian, I've been a singer and a dancer and a stripper. I think auctioneer is one thing I haven't done.'
A two-time winner of 'RuPaul's Drag Race,' Monsoon, 37, a Portland, Ore., native, has an eclectic résumé that includes cabaret shows, guest starring on 'Doctor Who' and a wildly popular seasonal bauble, 'The Jinkx & DeLa Holiday Show' (created and performed with BenDeLaCreme). When she made her Broadway debut in January 2023 as Matron 'Mama' Morton in 'Chicago,' casual — or perhaps cynical — observers might have assumed she was just another TV personality crossing off another item on her wish list, like headlining Carnegie Hall. (Monsoon did that, too, in February.)
Instead it was a big step toward her end goal. She then took an even bigger step, professionally and personally, last year, when she was cast as Audrey in the hit Off Broadway revival of 'Little Shop of Horrors' and ended up surprising even people who know her well.
'Earnest in the past was a challenge for Jinkx,' her longtime collaborator BenDeLaCreme said in a phone conversation. 'She really got uncomfortable if people weren't laughing for any duration. But when she performed in 'Little Shop,' she was willing to lean into the real pathos of this character.'
This new willingness to expose vulnerability may well derive from an increased sense of confidence in herself: Being cast as Audrey was a major step in Monsoon's decision to medically transition. Her growth as an actress is evident in the new Broadway production of 'Pirates' (in previews at the Todd Haimes Theater), which relocates the Gilbert and Sullivan operetta to New Orleans and adorns it with jazzy arrangements. She plays Ruth, a zany maid who cavorts with a merry band of pirates led by Karimloo and pines for the fetching Frederic (Nicholas Barasch). Monsoon did so well during rehearsals that she earned Ruth an extra number, 'Alone, and Yet Alive,' on loan from 'The Mikado.'
For Pierce, it was all a bit of déjà vu. 'What springs to mind is what it was like to work with Bette Midler on 'Hello, Dolly!' he said over the phone. 'Because Jinkx is a pro and she's been around the block, and she's gifted in so many ways. She's an incredible singer and has found all the different ways to manage her particular style of vocal production. She's a fantastic mimic. And she's just funny,' he continued, with an expletive for emphasis. 'Another similarity is that Jinkx is there for the collaboration, to work with everybody, as was Bette.'
Over the course of two conversations, Monsoon discussed what being an actress means to her, her relatively recent decision to transition and what grounds her performances. These are edited and condensed excerpts from those conversations.
What was the beginning of your acting career like?
I was told in high school I had to tone it down if I wanted to be serious as an actor. In college I convinced myself that I had to give up drag and focus on being malleable and versatile. Guess what? All I got cast as was female roles and some little-boy characters. No one was going to call me in for a female lead. I auditioned for the chaperone in 'The Drowsy Chaperone' in Seattle, and I believe the consensus was there was no way I could do that eight times a week.
Why was that?
I think they thought I had party tricks but not sustainability, because the world has for a long time diminished the talent of drag queens. I did experience push and pull from people wanting to see me for female roles and other people in the creative team being like, 'No, she's a drag queen, she can maybe do it once but there's no way she could carry a show.'
What did you learn from being in 'Chicago'?
I noticed that with the actors, no two performances were identical yet the intention was always the same. I realized it's not about learning the perfect way to deliver the line and then delivering it that way every time without fail — it was about learning the true intention behind the scene and then just having the conversation with the actors. Once I started doing that, I started getting to that nirvana place where I was thinking the thoughts of the character. You're sitting there actually thinking, 'Oh my gosh, I can't believe Roxie Hart just said that.'
Were you surprised to get the call for Audrey?
I've always thought I could play Audrey amazingly, but I never thought anyone would even look at me for her, so I had this dream of playing Audrey II, the plant. I wanted to play its voice until it was big enough, and then it blooms into a personification of the plant and I would be like Poison Ivy. So my agent calls and says they wanted me to audition for Audrey. I was like, 'You mean Audrey II?' He goes, 'No, Audrey.' And I was like, 'Yeah, but the plant is named after her so they want me to audition for Audrey II.' And he goes, 'No, Jinkx, they want you to audition for Audrey. Not the plant, the human being.' I was shocked and stunned.
What was it like landing this dream role?
Being cast as Audrey was what gave me permission to finally begin my medical transition. It was like, 'I think the world's ready to see you as an actress. They don't need to see you as a drag queen, they don't need you to perform maleness for them anymore — they see you as the actress you wanted to be.' The world is at a place where they're ready to see me, and that's thanks to people like Peppermint, Angelica Ross, Laverne Cox, Varla Jean Merman — all of these people who have been playing roles that weren't expected for them to play, and doing it well and showing everyone we're just actors.
So in a way a performance inspired a decision that meant ending a performance?
Drag gave a place for my femininity to live, and for a long time it was good enough. When I came out as nonbinary, it was because I realized I didn't want to keep performing maleness. But being nonbinary I was still setting these rules on myself, like I was adamant about androgyny, about not being too masculine and too feminine. I've always been visibly queer and I was scared that taking it a step further was just going to make my life miserable.
It doesn't look like it did.
Getting cast as Audrey was kind of like, 'Oh, I'm an actress.' I started wearing dresses. I started walking my walk every day — there is something in my mind like, 'This is the walk Audrey would do.' It was slurs being yelled at me and sometimes it was catcalls, sometimes it was lecherous looks. But it wasn't any different from before I transitioned. Like, whatever, I've been called slurs my whole life. But I am now this person I imagined in my head my whole life, that I thought was inaccessible to me. And I just [expletive] love every second of it.
How do you see the character of Ruth?
She's become a very relatable character in spite of her really kooky circumstances. She doesn't really have big flowery speeches or big emphatic monologues like other characters, but I do have a couple songs that really allow for some storytelling and allow you inside the heart and mind of this iteration of Ruth.
You seem to have an unerring sense of how to land a joke while keeping Ruth grounded.
They trust me to know what's funny, and that's because of the years I spent doing what I've done. You don't have to start at the very bottom and crawl on your belly through glass to get to the top — there's plenty of ways and plenty of people have skipped that step. But I started at the very bottom. I was a drag queen performing in dive bars at 17 years old to audiences of four people with a dressing room full of cockroaches. I can't think of more bottom [laughs]. I performed on the streets of Portland, Oregon, for coins and dollars.
Do you think that's why your performances feel so lived in?
You know that song 'I'm Still Here' from 'Follies'? When I get to sing that someday, it's going to be [expletive] real for me. It's real for me now. [laughs] When I sing it at my next Carnegie show, or my last Carnegie show, it is going to be earned. And I'm really excited for that.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Los Angeles Times
an hour ago
- Los Angeles Times
Tony Awards: Hollywood A-listers brought the spotlight to Broadway, but stage thespians carried the day
Broadway finally got its groove back. The 2024-25 season was the highest-grossing season on record and the second-highest in terms of attendance. Hollywood A-listers, such as George Clooney in 'Good Night, and Good Luck,' and Denzel Washington and Jake Gyllenhaal in 'Othello' got in on the action, raising Broadway's media profile along with its ticket prices. Two Emmy-winning alums of HBO's 'Succession,' Sarah Snook in 'The Picture of Dorian Gray' and Kieran Culkin in 'Glengarry Glen Ross,' have been treading the boards, as has Netflix's 'Stranger Things' standout Sadie Sink in 'John Proctor Is the Villain.' And though the experience seems to have been memory-holed, Robert Downey Jr. made a respectable Broadway debut in September in Ayad Akhtar's too-clever-by-half AI drama, 'McNeal.' On Sunday, the Tony Awards paid homage to the astonishing array of acting talent that drew audiences back to the theater. But it wasn't star power that determined the evening's prizes. It was boldness — unadulterated theatrical fearlessness — that carried the day. The ceremony, held at Radio City Music Hall amid the art deco splendor of old New York, was presided over by Tony-winner Cynthia Erivo, a natural wonder of the theatrical universe. One of the turbo-powered stars of the blockbuster screen adaptation of 'Wicked,' she was the ideal host for a Broadway year that owed its success to the unique ability of high-wattage stage performers to forge a singular connection with audiences. Viewers watching the ceremony on CBS were offered a glimpse of the cyclonic energy she can generate in a bubbly opening number celebrating the nominees. It didn't matter that most watching from home hadn't seen the shows name-checked in the specially composed novelty song. The vivacity of the art form broke through the screen courtesy of Erivo's capacity to blast through any barrier with her truthful virtuosity. Will Aronson and Hue Park's 'Maybe Happy Ending' was the evening's big winner, picking up six Tonys, including best musical. Branden Jacobs-Jenkins' 'Purpose,' which received the Pulitzer Prize for drama this year, was chosen as best play in a season showcasing a refreshingly wide range of ambitious playwriting. Anna D. Shapiro's sharply-tuned production of Jonathan Spector's 'Eureka Day,' a bitingly funny satire on the vaccine debate, won for play revival. And Jamie Lloyd's radical reworking of 'Sunset Blvd.' took the prize for musical revival. All in all, it was a strong season for directing. Michael Arden won for his exquisitely humane staging of the futuristic robot musical, 'Maybe Happy Ending.' And Sam Pinkleton was honored for his wild and whirling synchronization of Cole Escola's 'Oh, Mary!' As a critic, I don't usually have to pay for theater tickets, but I got a taste of the ludicrousness when charged $500 to see Washington and Gyllenhaal in a flaccid revival of 'Othello.' Apparently, I got off cheaply compared to a friend who paid even more for a worse seat on the same night. But the price-gouging didn't dent my appreciation for a season that reminded me of the privilege of being in the room where the theatrical magic happens. (Yes, even 'Othello' had its intermittent rewards.) Communing with audiences in the presence of gifted stage performers is one of the last bastions of community in our screen-ridden society. I was grateful that CNN made the agonizingly timely 'Good Night, and Good Luck' available to a wider public, presenting Saturday night's performance live. But watching Clooney and company on TV wasn't the same as being in the Winter Garden with them during the performance. It wasn't simply that the camerawork profoundly altered the visual storytelling. It was that at home on my couch I was no longer enclosed in the same shared space that brought history back to the present for a charged moment of collective reflection. The Tony Awards honored those actors who embraced the immediacy of the theatrical experience and offered us varieties of performance styles that would be hard to find even in the more obscure reaches of Netflix. Cole Escola, the first nonbinary performer to win in the lead actor in a play category, accepted the award for their fiendishly madcap performance in 'Oh, Mary!' — a no-holds-barred farcical display of irreverence that ignited a firestorm of hilarity that threatened to consume all of Broadway. Snook won for her lead performance in 'The Picture of Dorian Gray,' a multimedia collage of Wilde's novel that had the protean 'Succession' star playing opposite screen versions of herself in what was the season's most aerobically taxing performance. Francis Jue, who delivered the evening's most moving and politically pointed speech, won for his shape-shifting (and age-defying) featured performance in the revival of David Henry Hwang's 'Yellow Face.' And Kara Young, who won last year in the featured actress in a play category, repeated for her heightened artistry in 'Purpose,' the kind of extravagant performance no screen could do justice to. Nicole Scherzinger, who was honored as best lead actress in a musical for her portrayal of Norma Desmond in a bracing revival of Andrew Lloyd Webber's 'Sunset Boulevard,' demonstrated the power of theater to seize hold of us when she performed 'As If We Never Said Goodbye' on the telecast. In her Broadway debut, Scherzinger, who came to fame with the Pussycat Dolls, faced stiff competition from Audra McDonald, the six-time Tony winner starring in 'Gypsy.' No performance moved me more this season than McDonald's harrowing portrayal of Rose. In George C. Wolfe's revival, the character is a Black woman struggling not just with her frustrated dreams of stardom displaced onto her children but with the injustice of history itself. McDonald was given the impossible task of performing 'Rose's Turn' on the telecast, her character's Lear-like cri de cœur in song. She delivered, as she always does, but again I wish audiences at home could experience the broken majesty of this number in context at the Majestic Theatre, where theatergoers have been rising up in unison, wiping away tears, to express their gratitude for McDonald's sacrificial generosity. Darren Criss, an alum of 'Glee,' received his first Tony for endowing an outdated robot with a sophisticated taste for jazz with a deft physical life and diffident (yet unmistakable) humanity. His lead performance in 'Maybe Happy Ending' (perfectly in sync with that of his impressive co-star, Helen J Shen) is as responsible for the musical's unexpected success as Arden's staging and Dane Laffrey and George Reeve's Tony-winning scenic design. Natalie Venetia Belcon, the heart and soul of 'Buena Vista Social Club' along with the band, was honored for her featured performance in the musical that tells the story of Cuban musical style that defied history to seduce the world. And Jak Malone, who was responsible for the evening's second most riveting speech, won for his gender-blurring featured performance in'Operation Mincemeat: A New Musical.' These performances, by names you probably don't know all that well, embraced the special properties of an art form that is larger than life and all the more acutely exposed for being so. It takes enormous skill and dedication to find the delicacy in such theatrical grandeur. These artists know that flamboyance needn't preclude subtlety, and that stardom neither guarantees nor bars revelation. Actors from all ranks are clearly hungering for the kind of substance and freedom that the stage can uniquely provide. Off-Broadway has been filled with marquee talents connecting with audiences whose main interest is potent work. Patsy Ferran, starring opposite Paul Mescal in the Almeida Theatre production of 'A Streetcar Named Desire' at the Brooklyn Academy of Music's Harvey Theater, was, hands down, the best performance I saw all year. Andrew Scott in 'Vanya' at the Lucille Lortel Theatre, Adam Driver in Kenneth Lonergan's 'Hold on to Me Darling' also at the Lortel, Lily Rabe in Mark O'Rowe's adaptation of Ibsen's 'Ghosts' at Lincoln Center Theater's Mitzi E. Newhouse and Nina Hoss and Adeel Akhtar in the Donmar Warehouse production of 'The Cherry Orchard' at St. Ann's Warehouse left me feeling, as only theater can, more consciously alive and connected. The speeches at the Tony Awards, for the most part, skirted politics. This reticence was surprising given what we're living through. But there's something deeply political when we gather to look in the mirror that artists hold before nature. The politics are implicit, and this year Broadway reminded us that our humanity depends upon this ancient, timeless art.


Fox News
an hour ago
- Fox News
Hailey Bieber Enjoys Summer Vibes as Justin Bieber Shares Cryptic Posts
Broadway met Hollywood in a dazzling collision of star power at the 2025 Tony Awards. Romeo Beckham is turning heads in Paris after his recent split. Plus, Hailey Bieber is soaking up the sun in bikini bliss while Justin raises eyebrows with cryptic posts about love. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit FOX News Radio
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
‘Hamilton' Tonys Reunion Misses the Mark: Here's Why Fans Are Ticked Off
'Hamilton' Tonys Reunion Misses the Mark: Here's Why Fans Are Ticked Off originally appeared on Parade. The original cast of Broadway's Hamilton returned to the Tonys stage for a special 10th anniversary performance, delivering a medley of the musical's most iconic songs. But some viewers felt the performance missed the mark. Here's why. It was a reunion a decade in the making as the original company members of Hamilton performed a tribute to the musical that reinvigorated Broadway in 2015. Midway into the 78th annual awards show, the cast didn't throw away "their shot" as they gathered onstage at New York's Radio City Musical Hall for a performance that brought the audience to its feet. Participating in this landmark performance were Carleigh Bettiol, Andrew Chappelle, Ariana DeBose, Alysha Deslorieux, Daveed Diggs, Renée Elise Goldsberry, Jonathan Groff, Sydney James Harcourt, Neil Haskell, and Sasha Hutchings. Also appearing were Christopher Jackson, Thayne Jasperson, Jasmine Cephas Jones, Stephanie Klemons, Morgan Marcell, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Javier Muñoz, Leslie Odom, Jr., Okieriete Onaodowan, Emmy Raver-Lampman, Jon Rua, Austin Smith, Phillipa Soo, Seth Stewart, Betsy Struxness, Ephraim Sykes and Voltaire Wade-Greene. The original cast performed a medley of songs from the Broadway musical at the 2025 Tony Awards. They started with "Non-Stop" and "My Shot", then moved into "The Schuyler Sisters," "Guns and Ships," "You'll Be Back," "Yorktown (The World Turned Upside Down)," "The Room Where It Happens," and ended with "History Has Its Eyes on You." Parade Daily🎬 SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox 🎬 However, some fans were highly critical of the blockbuster performance, taking to social media to share their thoughts. Here's what they had to say. "Wishing it was longer but I absolutely loved it," wrote one Tonys viewer on Instagram. "I cried when it ended because it wasn't enough!. Need more!!" penned a second fan. "Also, no actual singing from Jonathan Groff? Come on!" a third claimed. Other fans noticed the omission of one key cast member from some of the tribute's most pivotal moments. "Nice arrangement, but I would have loved to hear/see Anthony Ramos too," a viewer said. Ramos played John Laurens in the original cast. Another fan agreed, writing, "So sad that Anthony didn't have a solo but it was an amazing performance." Hamilton debuted off Broadway at the Public Theater in 2015, transferring to the Richard Rodgers Theatre that year. At the 70th annual Tony Awards, the musical made history with a record-breaking 16 nominations and 11 wins including Best Musical. The musical went on to receive the Grammy Award, Olivier Award, Pulitzer Prize for Drama and a special citation from the Kennedy Center Honors. Its Original Broadway Cast Recording became the first in history to be certified diamond by the Recording Industry Association of America. 'Hamilton' Tonys Reunion Misses the Mark: Here's Why Fans Are Ticked Off first appeared on Parade on Jun 9, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jun 9, 2025, where it first appeared.