Age, Biography and Wiki
Yvie Oddly (Jovan Bridges) was born on 22 August, 1993 in Denver, Colorado, U.S., is an American drag queen. Discover Yvie Oddly's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is She in this year and how She spends money? Also learn how She earned most of networth at the age of 30 years old?
Popular As | Jovan Jordan Bridges |
Occupation | Drag queen |
Age | 30 years old |
Zodiac Sign | Leo |
Born | 22 August, 1993 |
Birthday | 22 August |
Birthplace | Denver, Colorado, U.S. |
Nationality | American |
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 22 August. She is a member of famous with the age 30 years old group.
Yvie Oddly Height, Weight & Measurements
At 30 years old, Yvie Oddly height not available right now. We will update Yvie Oddly's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
Physical Status | |
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Height | Not Available |
Weight | Not Available |
Body Measurements | Not Available |
Eye Color | Not Available |
Hair Color | Not Available |
Who Is Yvie Oddly's Husband?
Her husband is Doug Illsley (m. 2023)
Family | |
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Parents | Not Available |
Husband | Doug Illsley (m. 2023) |
Sibling | Not Available |
Children | Not Available |
Yvie Oddly Net Worth
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Yvie Oddly worth at the age of 30 years old? Yvie Oddly’s income source is mostly from being a successful . She is from American. We have estimated Yvie Oddly's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 | $1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2023 | Under Review |
Net Worth in 2022 | Pending |
Salary in 2022 | Under Review |
House | Not Available |
Cars | Not Available |
Source of Income |
Yvie Oddly Social Network
Timeline
When asked about the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, with its required social distancing and stay-at-home orders (starting in March 2020), Oddly remarked that it brought her back to her roots of being creative at home with her roommates. She also feels it frees her to tell more complete stories via video when she can layer performances atop one another, “[until now] I haven't really had a whole lot of time to invest back into the artistry of my drag and to do one-off performances and really throw my all into the creative concept.”
Yvie Oddly, the stage name of Jovan Bridges, is an American drag queen, performer, fashion designer, and singer from Denver, Colorado, who came to international attention in 2019 when she won the eleventh season of RuPaul's Drag Race (RPDR). In June 2019, New York magazine named Oddly as one of the top 100 drag queens on RPDR. Oddly has been on the worldwide Werq the World drag concert tour since 2019.
Oddly committed to drag after seeing Sharon Needles on the fourth season of RuPaul’s Drag Race which aired in 2012, stating that “[Sharon Needles] was spooky. Her makeup was terrible. She was more dedicated to art and wit than being a glamorous female impersonator.” Prior to this, Oddly didn't embrace all the opportunities that being a drag artist offered as she considered herself just a “skinny, black, gay guy.”
Oddly was announced to be on season eleven of RuPaul's Drag Race in January 2019; it was her third time to apply as a contestant. She is the second queen from Denver to compete on Drag Race, after Nina Flowers. During the competition Oddly was noted for her eccentric and conceptual looks, her performance ability and her quirky and outspoken personality, she quickly became a fan and judges favorite. Oddly said the time of the competition was somewhat lonely as she wasn't able to talk to friends or family. She spoke about her motives for competing on the show:
“It starts to be seen through this two-dimensional perspective of what we expect from drag ... because I’ve seen a formula building up, where if you have a lot of money and you wear something really sparkly ... the general public is going to fall in love with you. I wanted to shake that up and remind people that this art form is a queer art form.”
Oddly was the winner of the second episode main challenge with Scarlet Envy. She spent six weeks in a row placing in the top of the competition which makes her the queen with the most times in a row placing in the top after Jinkx Monsoon with eight times. In the eighth episode, however, she and Brooke Lynn Hytes both “bombed” on Snatch Game, the show’s parody of celebrity-led Match Game. Hytes, who was also doing very well up to then, and Oddly were the bottom two queens and had to lip-sync battle to Demi Lovato's "Sorry Not Sorry."
In May 2019, Honey Davenport featured Oddly in the Pride-themed song and music video "Stan for U." Oddly released her first single with Cazwell, "Weirdo", on May 22, 2019. The music video was released the day before, and was directed by Assaad Yacoub. It includes Oddly's dancers including drag daughter Neurotika Killz and Oddly's drag husband Captain ButtPirate Morgan.
In the season finale, held in Los Angeles’ Orpheum Theatre, Oddly was in the final three and lip-sync battled against A'keria Davenport to Rihanna's “SOS”, which she won. For that she wore a dress decorated with stuffed animals toys and neon fake fur. Oddly then faced off in the final lip-sync against Brooke Lynn Hytes to Lady Gaga‘s “The Edge of Glory”, which she also won. She had already shown she could deliver impressive physical performances, so refrained from stunts or gags, and worked to “connect to the song, and deliver a strong artistic performance that would hopefully still get my voice out as an artist.”
For the final battle Oddly wore a distinctive headpiece with mirrors that from the front made her look like she had three faces, and on the back was a second mask, the headpiece was made by Darrell Thorne, while Kristi Siedow-Thompson designed the dress. Her parents, who hadn't spoken to one another in years, sat together in the audience in support. Oddly was declared the winner of Season 11 of Drag Race, and “America’s Next Drag Superstar”, on May 30, 2019. She encouraged the audience to, “Follow your oddities and fly your freak flag!”
Oddly's win is the latest in a series of title wins by black queer and trans people in drag pageants and leather competitions, a turnaround for LGBTQ communities. She feels that queer people of color have not been credited enough for their contributions to queer culture. Oddly is “part Black, part Caucasian, and some part Native American.” Additionally she says, “there’s been so much debate on my race: whether or not I’m Black, whether or not colorism is at play.” Her anger at being disrespected by the gay community because she's Black prompted her to get into drag.
Oddly is a part of the 2019 North American leg of the Werq the World tour, a multi-year international drag concert tour hosted by Michelle Visage and featuring RuPaul’s Drag Race queens. The tour will visit seventeen cities throughout North America, including five in Canada, which is getting its own competition, Drag Race Canada. It began in Los Angeles during RuPaul's DragCon LA and will end in September in New York City during RuPaul's DragCon NYC. The tour will continue to major cities in Asia, Australia and New Zealand, ending in November.
In June 2019, Oddly performed at Denver's PrideFest, the city's annual LGBTQ pride parade and festival, and hosted “Drag Nation” at her home bar Tracks. Her first post-win U.K. performance was at Bournemouth’s DYMK. As part of Stonewall 50 – WorldPride NYC 2019, the world’s largest LGBTQ event, Oddly will perform at the June 26th Opening Ceremony benefiting the Ali Forney Center, Immigration Equality, and Services & Advocacy for GLBT Elders (SAGE), and at the LadyLand Festival June 28.
In June 2019 World of Wonder, the production company behind RuPaul’s Drag Race, announced Oddly will star in her own reality show series, Yvie Oddly’s Oddities aired worldwide on WOW Presents Plus. It follows the bargain-hunting queen to thrift stores where she shops for “throwaway items to turn one queen’s trash into her jaw-dropping fashion treasures”. Oddly explained that, “Drag is all about the power of transformation.”
In July 2019, she was criticized for no longer doing selfies after shows citing being physically exhausted; she later added that she had to set boundaries. Her genetic condition Hypermobile Ehlers–Danlos syndrome (hEDS) results in chronic pain so she foregoes post-show selfies for more meaningful interactions. Appearing on Drag Race, let alone winning, put Oddly on a steep learning curve to transform every aspect of her drag art into a business. It also forced her to re-evaluate what she could physically do—as contorting her body in performances takes a toll—while still delivering a drag experience for her audiences. Oddly stated,
“It’s about taking a step back and having a conversation with whatever you’re doing. A lot of people are just go, go, go. But you need to see what things are working, what things aren’t working, and how to manipulate them in your favor, and think about the people that you’re actually making it for.”
In September 2019, at RuPaul's DragCon NYC, Oddly was named as one of a rotating cast of a dozen Drag Race queens in RuPaul's Drag Race Live!, a Las Vegas show residency from January to August 2020 at the Flamingo Las Vegas. The show will feature RuPaul's music and seven of the twelve queens: Oddly, Aquaria (winner of season ten), Asia O'Hara (season ten), Coco Montrese (season five, All Stars season two), Derrick Barry (season eight), Eureka O'Hara (season nine and ten), India Ferrah (season three), Kahanna Montrese (season eleven), Kameron Michaels (season ten), Kim Chi (season eight), Naomi Smalls (season eight, "All Stars" season 4), and Shannel (season one, All Stars one).
In 2018, Oddly was both the manager at her Denver home drag bar as well as a drag queen, and was looking to transform her drag into a full-time job. She felt the time to make a drastic life change was imminent even if her audition tape did not get her onto RuPaul's Drag Race.
In 2017, Oddly said she uses drag to confront gender roles. In 2018, when asked about her drag aesthetics, Oddly said she likes to shock and surprise with something the audience has not seen before, including dramatic looks, even employing unconventional and found materials. In 2019, she described herself as a drag queen who blends "artistry, fashion, performance and concept". She draws inspiration from French fashion designer Thierry Mugler, British designer and haute couturier Alexander McQueen, and 'terrorist' drag queen Christeene.
Oddly was the winner of the Ultimate Queen of Denver pageant in 2015. Later that summer, Oddly became a cast member of Drag Nation; opened for pop star Mya on the Main Stage for PrideFest; and performed in Bohemia's The Prohibition of Lust. She was also in the music video for Adore Delano's "Negative Nancy" in 2017.
In the penultimate episode, the final five queens wrote, recorded, danced, and performed a verse in a single-shot video hip-hop version of RuPaul's “Queens Everywhere”. Out said Oddly's performance was the best with her work on point and well performed. They added, “Her risks, boldness, and weirdo ideas have often landed her harsh critiques and enemies on the show — but at least she’s out here taking risks”. Judge Todrick Hall later apologized for calling her choreography spastic, he was told by fans in the United Kingdom that it was a taboo thing to say in that country. The judges praised her performance, her verse and her final runway look, and she received the best critiques of the night making her the first queen to be named by RuPaul to move to the finale. Of the top four she had the fewest wins, but also the fewest times in the bottom. Oddly is the winner with the fewest challenge wins in RuPaul's Drag Race history.
During the show, she was in a constant rivalry with fellow competitor Silky Nutmeg Ganache. When asked by RuPaul who should go home Silky named Oddly because of her twisted ankle even though Oddly completed the choreography, Oddly named Silky as the one who should leave because she was resistant to critiques from RuPaul and the other judges. Entertainment site Gold Derby held a poll with 94% siding with Oddly. During the March 21 episode, while the queens were being taught some complex choreography for a live production of the political satire Trump: The Rusical, Oddly revealed she had to be careful about dropping to the ground as her joints often popped out of place. She has a connective tissue disorder called Ehlers–Danlos syndrome type 3 which means she doesn't produce as much collagen. Hers is a subtype that is known as hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (hEDS).
Oddly has been diagnosed with type 3 Hypermobile Ehlers–Danlos syndrome (hEDS). With her heightened status, she's found a content community of people living with ‘hEDS’, and other invisible disabilities, who call themselves zebras as they have more exotic diseases than doctors would expect. The condition as well as the chronic pain of her "bones grinding" leave her depleted after performing so she foregoes post-show photo ops for more meaningful interactions.
Oddly started doing drag during college in 2012 when Venus D'lite from RuPaul's Drag Race hosted a workshop on the college campus for Valentine's Day. “I attempted some drag (or ghost) makeup, put on a super-cheap red wig and dress, and backflipped my way through “Scheiße” by Lady Gaga. Her first performances were at Denver’s gay bar Tracks. Yvie Oddly came from her pun to express “being even odder than anybody else”. She soon developed a reputation for having “outrageous and unconventional looks on stage”. Her ingenuity came from financial necessity as making the "most glamorous or the most expensive” looks weren't an option, saying that “I’ve just always liked to work with the materials that I have around me." In 2014 she was an extra in the music video for Sharon Needles's "Dressed to Kill."
Bridges was born on August 22, 1993, in Denver. As a child, he played with his mother's makeup and dressed in his sister's clothes, "When I was a six-year-old boy playing dress-up in my sister's tutus and makeup, my parents were like, 'Take that off.' And I was like, 'Why?' I felt pretty and I'd sleep in a skirt every night." He participated in gymnastics and other strenuous extracurricular activities until he was diagnosed with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome at age 15. He began musical theatre as an alternative.
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