
Now in its eighth year, global drag icons and RuPaul’s Drag Race stars BenDeLaCreme and Jinkx Monsoon are back on tour with The Jinkx & DeLa Holiday Show – a hilarious, unhinged, and queer production that pushes the boundaries of the holiday spectacle. The Jinkx & DeLa Holiday Show has touched down in Chicago once again for a limited engagement this time at the storied Chicago Theatre. For one glittering night, the marquee lights up with the names of drag royalty Jinkx Monsoon and BenDeLaCreme, transforming the historic venue into a festive playground of camp, comedy, and holiday magic.
This year’s show – directed, produced, and written by BenDeLaCreme – is structured as a holiday anthology. Each segment spirals into its own brand of festive absurdity: an homage to Freaky Friday, immaculate conception, and hilarious twists on holiday horror a la The Simpsons’ “Treehouse of Horror.” Every story is bigger than the last and more delightfully deranged, featuring Broadway-style musical numbers, both beautiful and creepily extravagant costumes, and innuendo galore. The pace of the night is relentless in the best way possible: each scene seems determined to outdo the last.
While the show returns each year, it’s reborn anew every season. Jinkx Monsoon and BenDeLaCreme craft a completely fresh production - new themes, script, music, choreography, costumes - supported by months of writing and rehearsal. It takes a village of brilliant, authentic artists to pull off such a one-of-a-kind performance that feels both polished and chaotic. The end result is a show that feels handcrafted with love, humor, and both endless glitter and weed.
Fear not - though the production is reinvented from the ground up each year, one beloved constant remains: Hunky the Elf, played with irresistible charm by Gus Lanza. Far from being sidelined, he’s front and center, anchoring the show with his mischievous energy and magnetic stage presence. And he’s not alone. Joining him is a powerhouse dance ensemble—Chloe Albin, Isaiah Brooks, Jace Gonzalez, Jim Kent, Ruby Mimosa, and Derrick Paris—whose precision, athleticism, and sheer joy transform the evening into something far beyond a two-queen comedy showcase. Together, they expand the world of Jinkx and DeLa into a glittering holiday spectacular, complete with dazzling choreography, ensemble-driven spectacle, and the kind of theatrical grandeur that makes the show feel less like a cabaret and more like a full-scale seasonal event. Over the course of the evening, the ensemble shifted seamlessly from jolly to eerie to sultry - and back again - never breaking a sweat. What makes it truly captivating is that each performer brings their own unique flavor to every vignette, ensuring the group’s cohesion never overshadows their individuality.
Of course, at the heart of the chaos is the dynamic duo of Jinkx and DeLa. Their banter is razor sharp, but even in the craziest of moments and wildest twists of plot, the two maintain a warmth and camaraderie that invites their audience into the joke with them.

Even at their most outrageous - and believe me, the outrageousness is abundant - Jinkx and DeLa never lose sight of the heart. They understand that a true holiday show needs more than glitter and gags; it requires a touch of deeper meaning to resonate.
“How do we keep singing and dancing when the horrors persist?” Jinkx asks.
“The horrors are precisely why we must keep singing and dancing,” DeLa answers.
Amid all the silliness and the spectacle, their show is a reminder that queer joy matters. That communal joy matters. That holiday joy matters, and that everyone can find joy in the holidays.
The Jinkx & DeLa Holiday Show is making the yuletide gay with their queer, communal holiday joy across 30 cities throughout the U.S. and Canada until December 30th, offering the perfect blend of camp, chaos, and heart in what is sure to become your new favorite holiday tradition.
For tickets and more information, visit jinkxanddela.com
[Reviewer’s Note: I’ve been reading a book whose main character is inveigled by Word of the Day; hence, I’ve striven to include as many unconventional and indecipherable words as possible. You’re welcome.]
This is the seventh year of the JINKX AND DELA HOLIDAY SHOW, composed each year by BenDeLaCreme and Jinkx Monsoon as a new, original production. DeLa is also the Director, Producer, Costume Designer (and most likely a whole bunch of other stuff) and she does it all in 4-inch heels! Move over, Ginger Rogers.
Rivalling DeLa for multifaceted, multidisciplinary, multipurpose, and otherwise multiscious effectuality is Gus Lanza, who is backstage manager and merchandise mover-and-shaker, as well as moving and shaking onstage as Hunky the Elf. Last night poor Hunky had a bad cold and sneezed on everyone, but that never vilipended or misprized his sprightly performance. Working with him was a whole stockingful of elves: Chloe Albin, Mr. Babygirl, Jace Gonzalez, Ruby Mimosa, Derrick Paris, and Scott Spraags. The costumes were fabulous; no surprise, as they were designed by BenDeLaCreme, Mr. Gorgeous, and Nova Dobrev; assisting in their creation were Paris Original, Jamie Von Stratton and The Lady Hyde.
The first act was enlivened by a rousing rodeo around Beyonce’s “Texas Hold’em”, and the wonderful song “Secular” – a parody of Wicked’s “Popular” – expressing disgruntlement at all the religiosity circumfusing what should be just a party!
Each year the overall theme of the JINKX AND DELA HOLIDAY SHOW is that Jinkx and DeLa are coming together to put on a holiday show (logical, n’est ce pas?). And every year, that simple premise is blunged with some beloved holiday classic. This year the classic was Nutcracker, and the story developed from Jinkx finding a nutcracker in her Holiday Box to dancing and singing (and ….!) with the Nutcracker himself, whose outsize head (created by Erik Andor) had wonderful googly eyes. His other parts were wood which, as Jinkx found out, never goes soft! though splinters are a hazard.
Jinkx and DeLa shrink (a little bit of Alice in Wonderland thrown in there) and become tree ornaments until they fall off the tree and their clothes fall away, leaving them naked (no problem, they both have terrific tits!). This evolves into Jinkx being kidnapped by the Nutcracker, and for the remainder of the show they go through all sorts of contortions, trying to reunite.
Hunky the Elf always provided a marvelous interpolation, and Country Dancing Santa was a super supplement (even though his batteries kept wearing down), all of them eager to sing and dance with Jinkx and DeLa. I was particularly fond of Clayby (Clay Baby) Jesus.
The final song in the JINKX AND DELA HOLIDAY SHOW is traditionally an anti-holiday anthem, and this year was no exception: Everybody’s Traumatized by Christmas struck home with virtually every gay, lesbian, bisexual, trans, and otherwise queer in the audience (and quite possibly in the cast as well!).
The bad news is that the JINKX AND DELA HOLIDAY SHOW comes but once a year to Chicago (and more than 30 other cities!). But forewarned is forearmed. Now you know to watch for its reappearance on the Auditorium Theatre’s playlist next December … assuming, of course, the incoming administration doesn’t put an embargo on Drag Queen Festivities. They’d probably be wise to do so, as the show would be quite effective in waylaying innocent little boys with the joys of rhinestones even before their school operates on them.
Created & Written by BenDeLaCreme & Jinkx Monsoon
Director BenDeLaCreme
Choreographer Chloe Albin
Movement Direction BenDeLaCreme
Original Compositions Major Scales
Lyrics BenDeLaCreme, Jinkx Monsoon, & Major Scales
Music Production Markaholic & Keith Harrison
Starring BenDeLaCreme & Jinkx Monsoon
with Chloe Albin, Mr. Babygirl, Jace Gonzalez, Ruby Mimosa, Derrick Paris, Scott Spraags, and Gus Lanza as “Hunky the Elf”
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