![]() ![]() Right now, though, Trinity is having the time of her life on Drag Race, saying she’s “so elated” to be back in the werkroom. If we continue to build these spaces, it’s only got make Birmingham more inclusive, more accepting, and eventually change will happen. Trans people do exist, queer people do exist, and we have to have safe spaces. It’s super important that we are represented in Birmingham so that people do realize that we do exist. “I’m super proud of our community in the city of Birmingham because it’s more progressive and pushing to get these venues for queer people and people who are allies because it’s super important. “It’s not where I feel our state should be at,” she said. “Alabama, in general, political-wise, is very toxic,” she said. She said that while she’s proud to be from Birmingham, she’s hoping the state at large can catch up to Birmingham’s more progressive politics. I would love to move back eventually one day. So I’ve lived in a lot of different places in Birmingham, and I love Birmingham still consider it my home. “I lived all over I lived in Hoover, I lived in Homewood. It’s like 30 minutes outside of Birmingham, but I moved to Birmingham when I was 18, when I moved out on my own,” she said. RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars contestant Trinity the Tuck might be known by fans as an international drag celebrity but at her heart, she is a drag queen with hometown roots.Īs she discussed with Shadow and Act, Trinity hails from Alabama, from a town right outside of the state’s metropolis and one of the major sites of the civil rights movement, Birmingham. ![]()
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