
Ariana Grande, Cynthia Erivo, Chappell Roan and Sarah Michelle Gellar will be guest judges on RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars season 10
The Wicked stars, the Pink Pony Club hitmaker and the Buffy the Vampire Slayer actress are among the famous faces taking seats on the panel in the upcoming series alongside regular judges Michelle Visage, Ross Matthews, Carson Kressley, Ts Madison, Jamal Sims and Law Roach.
In addition, Sing Sing actor Colman Domingo, Jolt star Kate Beckinsale, Hairspray director Adam Shankman, Lopez Vs Lopez star Mayan Lopez, Blackpot actress Devery Jacobs and Swiss event promoter Susanne Bartsch will also be casting their eyes over the 18 contestants.
Grammy-nominated rapper Ice Spice is the premiere guest judge.
A trailer for the series shows Chappell entering the Werk Room and asking the contestants: "Do any of you queers have something sexy I can slip into?"
Cynthia and Ariana are seen together, and said in unison: "The witches will see you now."
The contestants battling it out for coveted crown and septre, $200,000, (S$261,000) as well as a spot in the Drag Race Hall of Fame includes Acid Betty, Aja, Alyssa Hunter, Bosco, Cynthia Lee Fontaine, Daya Betty, DeJa Skye, Denali, Ginger Minj, Irene the Alien, Jorgeous, Kerri Colby, Lydia B Kollins, Mistress Isabelle Brooks, Nicole Paige Brooks, Olivia Lux, Phoenix, and Tina Burner.
For the first time, the series will introduce a brand-new format across twelve episodes: the Tournament of All-Stars.
It will see the queens divided into three groups of six, each competing in their own bracket across three episodes.
[[nid:707436]]
At the end of each bracket, the top three queens with the highest point totals will advance to the semi-finals where they'll go head-to-head with the top queens from the other groups in another round of fierce competition over two episodes.
The tournament will then culminate in an epic Lip Sync Smackdown for the Crown grand finale episode.
Additionally, new episodes of the behind-the-scenes spin-off show, RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars: Untucked, will be available to stream.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


AsiaOne
3 days ago
- AsiaOne
Cynthia Erivo's mouth insured for $2.6m, Entertainment News
Cynthia Erivo's mouth has been insured for US$2 million (S$2.6 million). The Wicked actress — who is known for her distinctive gap in her teeth — has partnered with Listerine on their new Wash Your Mouth campaign and as part of the initiative, the company have made the "bold move" to take out an insurance premium specifically for her "recognisable" mouth. Kamran Shahzad, US head of commercial, oral care at Kenvue, said: "We're ecstatic to collaborate with the iconic Cynthia Erivo to help consumers recognise the importance of mouthwash. "Our new Wash Your Mouth campaign seeks to educate consumers that while brushing and flossing start the oral care routine, Listerine mouthwash completes it. "Together with Cynthia, we're making a bold move to help protect one of the most recognisable mouths in Hollywood because we're confident that Listerine guarantees a healthier mouth." Cynthia has always taken care of her teeth and her oral hygiene routine is a key part of her preparations before going on stage for her concerts. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Cynthia Erivo (@cynthiaerivo) She told People magazine: "I'm the geeky kid who was like, 'I'm brushing my teeth.' I don't think mom ever had to fight me to brush my teeth... "Strangely enough, brushing my teeth and using mouthwash — Listerine specifically — for some reason, really opens me up. "It means that I can breathe really well. It's the last thing I do before I go on stage. I just want to make sure that I feel really fresh. It sort of gives me a restart before I go on and sing or speak. "I take good pride in [my mouth] because of my gap. I think what we tend to do is pick our outfits, put the make-up on or do our nails, which are wonderful, great ways to show who you are externally, but cleaning your mouth adds to that. It also adds to the confidence you might not even be able to see unless you smile." When it comes to other forms of self-care, the 38-year-old star undergoes lymphatic massage to reduce water retention and cupping to "get rid of any toxins". She said: "It's an arduous thing to do, but I love doing it because it always aids the end result, which is what you've seen when I'm in front of people singing or performing. "It all goes hand in hand. Everything adds to the next to make sure that all the parts make the whole, and I can actually be present and do the work the way I want to do it." [[nid:720774]]


CNA
4 days ago
- CNA
American comedian and Saturday Night Live alum Pete Davidson to stage Singapore show in September
Get ready for a night of laughter as Hollywood star Pete Davidson stages a comedy show in Singapore this September. Catch the renowned actor-comedian at The Star Theatre on Sep 26 as he brings his signature laid-back style of humour to Singapore fans. Tickets for the show will go on general sale at 10am on Thursday (Aug 7) via Ticketmaster. However, Live Nation members can get early dibs on tickets with a presale session that's happening one day earlier on Aug 6. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Live Nation SG (@livenationsg) Ticket prices for the show will be announced at a later date. Do note that the event is restricted to those aged 18 and above. Pete Davidson became a household name in 2014 after he became a cast member of the iconic American sketch comedy series Saturday Night Live. Over the years, he has released numerous well-received comedy specials and appeared in movies such as Guardians Of The Galaxy Vol 3, Fast X and Transformers: Rise Of The Beasts. He is also famous for his high-profile relationships, including one with singer Ariana Grande in 2018 and socialite Kim Kardashian from 2021 to 2022.

Straits Times
26-07-2025
- Straits Times
Extra, extra: Read all about the last newspaper hawker in Paris
PARIS – Among the literary cafes and chic boutiques of the Saint-Germain-des-Pres quarter of Paris, an impish man with a wad of newspapers makes the rounds, his trademark cry of 'Ca y est!' or 'That's it!' echoing down narrow cobblestone streets. Mr Ali Akbar of Rawalpindi, Pakistan, is a man with a ready smile who has been hawking newspapers for a half-century. Sometimes, he spices his offerings with made-up stories. 'Ca y est! The war is over; Putin asks forgiveness,' was one recent pitch that caused grim hilarity. From Cafe de Flore to Brasserie Lipp – two famed establishments where food and culture are intertwined – Mr Akbar plies a dying trade in a dwindling commodity. He is considered to be the last newspaper hawker in France. The profession may have reached its zenith in Paris in 1960, when American actress Jean Seberg was immortalised on film with several newspapers under her arm crying 'New York Herald Tribune!', as she strolled on the Champs-Elysees, pursued by French actor Jean-Paul Belmondo. Nobody in French-Swiss director Jean-Luc Godard's classic movie Breathless (1960) is buying The Trib except Belmondo's character, who is unhappy that the paper has no horoscope, but unhappier still to discover that his charm makes little impression on the beauty and faux American innocence of Seberg's character, yet another foreigner smitten by Paris and angling to make a buck. Mr Akbar is one of them, too. 'Sah-yay!' is roughly how his cry to buy sounds. Through persistence and good humour, he has become 'part of the cultural fabric of Paris', said Mr David-Herve Boutin, an entrepreneur active in the arts. Such is Mr Akbar's renown that French President Emmanuel Macron recently awarded him a Legion d'Honneur, the Republic's highest order of merit. It will be conferred at a ceremony at the Elysee Palace in autumn. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Almost half of planned 30,000 flats in Tengah to be completed by end-2025: Chee Hong Tat Asia Death toll climbs as Thai-Cambodia clashes continue despite calls for ceasefire Multimedia Lights dimmed at South-east Asia's scam hub but 'pig butchering' continues Singapore Black belt in taekwondo, Grade 8 in piano: S'pore teen excels despite condition that limits movements Asia Where's Jho Low? Looking for 1MDB fugitive in Shanghai's luxury estate Asia Thousands rally in downtown Kuala Lumpur calling for the resignation of PM Anwar Life SG60 F&B icons: Honouring 14 heritage brands that have never lost their charm Business Can STI continue its defiant climb in second half of 2025? 'Perhaps it will help me get my French passport,' said Mr Akbar, who sometimes has a withering take on life, having seen much of its underside. He has a residence permit, but his application for French nationality is mired in Gallic bureaucracy. A stack of newspapers under the arm of Mr Akbar. PHOTO: DMITRY KOSTYUKOV/NYTIMES Mr Akbar moves at startling speed. A sinewy bundle of energy at 72, he clocks several kilometres a day, selling Le Monde, Les Echos and other daily newspapers from around noon until midnight. Dismissive of the digital, he has become a human networker of a district once dear to writers Jean-Paul Sartre and Ernest Hemingway, now overrun by brand-hungry tourists. 'How are you, dear Ali?' asks Ms Veronique Voss, a psychotherapist, as he enters Cafe Fleurus near the Jardin du Luxembourg. 'I worried about you yesterday because it was so hot.' Heat does not deter Mr Akbar, who has known worse. He thanks Ms Voss with a big smile and takes off his dark blue Le Monde cap. 'When you have nothing, you take whatever you can get,' he says. 'I had nothing.' At his next stop, an Italian cafe, Mr Jean-Philippe Bouyer, a stylist who has worked for French luxury brand Dior, greets Mr Akbar warmly. 'Ali is indispensable,' Mr Bouyer says. 'Something very positive and rare in our times emanates from him. He kept the soul of a child.' Born in 1953 into a family of 10 children, two of whom died young, Mr Akbar grew up in Rawalpindi amid rampant poverty and open sewers, eating leftovers, sleeping five to a room, leaving school when he was 12, working odd jobs and eventually teaching himself to read. Born in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, Mr Akbar left home in his late teens in search of a better life. PHOTO: DMITRY KOSTYUKOV/NYTIMES 'I did not want to wear clothes that reeked of misery,' he said. 'I always dreamed of giving my mother a house with a garden.' To advance, he had to leave. He procured a passport at 18. All he knew of Europe was the Eiffel Tower and Dutch tulips. A winding road took him by bus to Kabul, Afghanistan, where Western hippies, most of them high, abounded in 1970 – but that was not Mr Akbar's thing. He went on by road to Iran where, he said, 'the shah was an omnipresent God'. Eventually, he reached Athens, Greece, and wandered the streets looking for work. A businessperson took pity and, noting his eagerness, offered him a job on a ship. Mr Akbar cleaned the kitchen floor. He washed dishes. He was faced by aggressive mockery from bawdy shipmates for his refusal, as a Muslim, to drink. In Shanghai, he abandoned ship rather than face further taunting. The world is round, and around he went, back to Rawalpindi, and then on the westward road again to Europe. His mother deserved better – that conviction drove him through every humiliation. Visa issues in Greece and eventual expulsion landed him back in Pakistan a second time. His family thought he was mad, but, undaunted, he tried again. This time, he washed up in Rouen, France. It had taken only two years. After working there in a restaurant, he moved on to Paris in 1973. 'By the time I got to Paris, I had an overwhelming desire to anchor myself,' Mr Akbar said. 'Since I began circling the planet, I hadn't met many people who didn't disappoint me. 'But if you have no hope, you're dead.' He slept under bridges and in cellars. He encountered racism. He spent a couple of months in Burgundy harvesting cucumbers. Mr Akbar began hawking newspapers in Parisian streets in the early 1970s. PHOTO: DMITRY KOSTYUKOV/NYTIMES At last, in 1974, Mr Akbar found his calling when he ran into an Argentine student hawking newspapers. He inquired how he could do likewise and was soon in the streets of Paris with copies of satirical magazines Charlie Hebdo and Hara-Kiri, now defunct. He liked to walk, enjoyed contact with people and, even if margins were small, could eke out a living. Fast forward 51 years, and Mr Akbar is still at it. Because Saint-Germain is the home of intellectuals, actors and politicians, he has rubbed shoulders with the influential. From former presidents Francois Mitterrand and Bill Clinton to actress-singer Jane Birkin and author Bernard-Henri Levy, he has met them all. None of this has gone to his head. He remains a modest guy with a winning manner. His main newspaper is now Le Monde, which he acquires at a kiosk for about US$2 (S$2.50) a copy and sells for almost double that. He makes around US$70 on an average day and rarely takes a day off. Newspaper reading remains ingrained in France. Friends may buy two or three copies and slip him €10 (S$15) or invite him to lunch. He has no pension, but he gets by – and his mother got a Rawalpindi garden. Mr Akbar will receive a Legion d'Honneur, France's highest order of merit, at a ceremony at the Elysee Palace in autumn. PHOTO: DMITRY KOSTYUKOV/NYTIMES From an arranged marriage with a Pakistani woman in 1980, Akbar has five sons, one of them with autism and another with various physical ailments. A sixth child died at birth. Life has not been easy, one reason 'I have made it my business to make people laugh', he says. He is deeply grateful to France, which he calls a land of asylum, not least for the education it gave his children. But he believes that as a brown-skinned foreigner, he 'will never be completely accepted'. Some 50 years lat er, Mr Akbar remains on the move. Lose sight of him for a second and he is gone. But then comes the cry, 'Ca y est! Marine is marrying Jordan!', a reference to far-right leader Marine Le Pen and her young protege Jordan Bardella. His jokes are a sales pitch, but they also reflect a yearning for a happier, simpler world . NYTIMES