LIFE

Bogotá Ballroom Beats Turn Queer Survival Into Glittering Radical Joy

Under neon lights and pounding beats, Bogotá’s ballroom scene has become a refuge where queer and trans Colombians turn dance into protest, makeup into armor, and chosen families into shelter against a city still scarred by machismo and lethal hate.

Ballroom As Sanctuary In A Hostile City

Between lights, sequins, and daring footwork, Bogotá’s LGBTIQ+ community has transformed ballroom culture into a living manifesto. The balls are part party, part battlefield, a place where art becomes a scream, eyeliner turns into a shield, and every spin and dip repeats the same declaration: we are here. On a crowded night in the capital, drag artist Olimpia Chanel glides across the floor as both performer and matriarch. She is the founding “mother” of the Iconic House of Chanel in Bogotá, a ballroom house and chosen-family network for people with diverse sexual orientations and gender identities. Drawing on a legacy born in Harlem more than half a century ago, Olimpia shows that every pose and every stare is also a quiet struggle for dignity, diversity, and self-love. “If there’s something I can find in ballroom that doesn’t exist in other spaces, it would be diversity, sisterhood, and love,” she tells EFE, summing up what keeps people coming back to these underground temples of glitter and defiance.

From Harlem Resistance To Bogotá’s Chosen Families

Ballroom did not start in Bogotá, of course. It was born in the United States in the 1970s as an act of resistance led by Black and Latino LGBTIQ+ communities, especially in Harlem, New York. In those days, racialized queer people faced a double discrimination: one for their sexuality or gender identity, and another for the color of their skin, inside a society soaked in racism and homophobia. Shut out of mainstream drag pageants dominated by white women, a Black trans woman named Crystal LaBeija decided to create her own scene. From her defiant gesture came the ballrooms: safer spaces where people could express themselves freely through dance, performance, clothing, and attitude, without fear of violence or rejection.

That energy took decades to travel south. Ballroom arrived in Bogotá in 2017, at a time when many nightlife venues still quietly denied entry to people whose identities fell outside the heterosexual norm. Even in supposedly “gay-friendly” spaces, trans and gender-diverse people were often refused at the door or harassed once inside. In that climate, ballroom appeared as an unexpected portal: a place to be free, to “mariconear”—to camp, to be flamboyantly queer—while building community at the same time.

From those first nights emerged Colombia’s pioneering ballroom house, the House of Tupamaras, created for people who had been kicked out of their biological homes because of who they are and needed a new nest to root themselves and form another kind of family. “There are many people from the community who are not accepted for who they are in our Colombian context, which is macho, racist, phallocentric, xenophobic, and more,” Olimpia tells EFE. “That forces us to create new spaces where we feel comfortable and know we will be okay.” These houses are not just poetic metaphors. Many of them have a physical space where members live together, share rent and daily life, turning ballroom kinship into bricks-and-mortar solidarity.

Their strength connects with other grassroots processes inside Colombia’s LGBTIQ+ community. One example is the Ley Comunitaria Trans, a community-drafted “Trans Community Law” developed by more than 100 organizations, activists, and support networks to guarantee the right to gender identity and other rights historically denied. Over 1,355 people took part in its national consultation, and the findings were presented in Bogotá in May 2023. The need is urgent. Even though ballroom has been in the city since 2017, violence has not receded. In 2024 alone, the network “Sin Violencia LGBTI” documented 175 murders of LGBTIQ+ people, a grim backdrop to the joy on the dance floor.

EFE/ Angélica Santisteban

New Categories, New Bodies, New Ways To Shine

The first wave of ballroom in Bogotá knew only three categories: vogue, runway, and lip sync. They were designed for anyone who wanted to express themselves, break free, and be seen from the stage. Over time, as more people arrived with their own stories and needs, the movement evolved. Today, the scene boasts a wide range of categories, each a specific window for talent: from fashion and face to gender performance and storytelling through movement.

Trans artist Pia Cañón, known on stage as Baby Lilith, explains to EFE that categories emerge from the diverse individual needs of queer people. The goal is to give everyone a lane where “their being, their art” can surface while feeling part of a community built on sisterhood and mutual growth. Drag artist Valentina Uribe, who performs under the name Microcósmica, sees the same process as a collective journey of discovery. “The fact that there are different categories and different spaces allows us to find what we feel most comfortable with, what we feel most identified with,” she says to EFE. “We get to know other people who teach us different things; it’s a very magical and beautiful process of self-discovery that is also built in community.”

On a given night, that magic is tangible. A newcomer might walk in shyly, unsure of who they are or how to move, and walk out with a house name, a chosen family, and a category that finally feels like home. The competition is real—trophies matter, scores are shouted, judges are scrutinized—but beneath the rivalry runs a current of protection. In a country where being openly queer or trans can still get you killed, being read by a ballroom judge is often a gentler form of judgment than what awaits outside.

Art, Mutual Aid, And The Duty To Care

Ballroom in Bogotá is not only about performance; it is also a quiet machine of mutual aid. During some balls, organizers invite attendees to donate non-perishable food, clothing, school supplies, hygiene products, and sweets. The donations are later delivered to Fundación Sonrisas Sin Fin, a foundation that supports low-income families. Glitter-covered queens and voguing dancers might not look like traditional social workers, but they are weaving a safety net that reaches far beyond the stage.

For many participants and spectators, what makes these nights unforgettable is not just the fashion or the battles, but the atmosphere. “What I like most is the vibe,” says Tatiana, one of the attendees interviewed by EFE. “It feels very original, very free. People are incredibly authentic. These spaces are worth visiting so that diversity can live, because that’s what we human beings are—diverse.” Her words echo what Olimpia Chanel and the other house parents already know. In a Bogotá still shaped by patriarchy and prejudice, ballroom is far more than a trend borrowed from an HBO series or a Netflix documentary. It is a living archive of resistance, a place where young people rewrite their stories in eight-counts and catwalks, and where survival itself can look like a flawless, glittering walk down an improvised runway.

Also Read: U.S. Latinos Lose Faith As Trump-Era Fears Reshape Politics Nationwide

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