In 2000, Shane Jenek went from drinking vodka and orange juice at the Brisbane City Rowers to dancing in gay bars on Sydney’s Oxford Street.
In the years since, Shane (who uses the pronoun ‘they’) has become an international drag queen, competed in RuPaul’s Drag Race, won 2018’s UK Celebrity Big Brother and was the runner up of 2019’s season of Dancing with the Stars, Australia.
They also competed in the inaugural season of Australian Idol in 2003, and in the years since has become one of the country’s most recognisable LGBTQIA+ icons.
If these accolades sound strangely familiar to you but you don’t recognise the name, that’s probably because you know Shane by their stage name: Courtney Act (a play on the words, ‘court in the act’).
This year sees Courtney join comedians Joel Creasey and Zoë Coombs Marr, and Studio 10 presenter Narelda Jacobs as a host of SBS’ live Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras coverage.
But back to Sydney in 2000, at just 18, the now 38-year-old star who was in the city to visit NIDA – one of Australia’s most renowned performing arts schools – was taken to Stonewall, a gay bar on Oxford Street, by a friend.
“It wasn’t until I got to Sydney that I realised I liked boys,” they tell Mamamia.
“A friend who I had known from Brisbane took me to Stonewall and I was just in a strange denial. I was like ‘it’s not just one of those gay bars, is it?’ and she said, ‘trust me, you’ll love it’.”
It was also where Shane would have their first kiss.
Top Comments
"“I learnt that it’s okay for boys to express their femininity and it’s okay for girls to express their femininity.”"
What an odd thing to say. How about girls expressing their masculinity?
I assumed that's what he actually said, and the second 'femininity' was a typo.