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As a screenwriter, I love inhabiting the psychologies of other people, understanding their motivations, their perspectives, their drives. I particularly love writing villains – or perceived villains – and embodying their perspectives and understanding them. In our increasingly polarised and fractured world, we are constantly taught to think of people as our enemies; art, for me, is the place we bridge those divides and encourage understanding and empathy, even between people who vociferously disagree with each other.

For Drag Mother, which I am performing at EartH Hackney on the 18th October, I am embodying the perspective of my Muslim mother, who has long had an issue with me being gay and my being a drag queen. I want to embody her perspective to forgive her, but also to understand her on a human, empathetic level. For my mother is the biggest inspiration for my drag – she is the most glamorous and iconic woman that I know, and I would not be a drag queen without her (even though she hates that I am a drag queen).

Drag Mother is a show filled with live music and live comedy, as Glamrou and her mother go to war about “what really happened,” exploring Arab identity at a time when Arab voices are being silenced, drag and womanhood, motherhood and childhood, and the relationship between trauma, performance and storytelling.

Glamrou: Drag Mother is on Saturday 18 October 2025, 7pm – 10pm, at EartH Hackney, 11-17 Stoke Newington Rd, Dalston, London N16 8BH, United Kingdom.

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How do you tell if a guy is queer? Identifying queer sexuality.

What’s on this week

Drag Brunch is every Saturday and Sunday at Dalston Superstore
Gay drag shows at The Old Ship gay bar in London
Boyz and Sirs at Bunker bar
Arch Clapham is a gay bar that has DJs on Saturday night.
Fabulous night at freedom Bar in Soho
The Divine Cabaret Show Bar and queer party venue in London.
All Day Cabaret at Halfway To Heaven LGBTQ] Bar in Central London.
Blackout cruise club at gay Bunker Bar in London