What: 🎵 The Interhouse Sports Kiki Ball
When:
Who: 🎤 Prop
Where: 🕳 Botanik Social House
How much:
🎟️ R880.00Webtickets
The field is set, the houses are ready, and the competition starts at the Interhouse Sports Kiki Ball hosted by The House of Vlam.
Will your house dominate the track and snatch all the trophies, or will you have to go back to the drawing board and come back next season?
Categories:
BEST DRESSED
- GP Best Dressed - Sports Couture
RUNWAY
- GP American Runway with a Sports Prop
- GP European Runway with a Sports Prop
- GP Runway Overall
BODY
- GP Model-Thin Body
- GP Muscular Body
- GP Big Boy/Big Girl Body
- GP Body Overall
REALNESS
- GP Trans Man Realness
- GP Femme Queen Realness
- GP Realness Overall
SEX SIREN
- GP Male Figure Sex Siren
- GP Female Figure Sex Siren
Ballroom Culture Overview
Ballroom culture was born in New York City’s Black and Latinx queer communities in the 20th century. Facing racism and exclusion in mainstream drag pageants, Black and Latina drag queens and trans women created their own underground balls where they could celebrate their authentic selves. At these events, known as balls, participants “walk” or compete in categories from vogue to runway fashion to “realness” (embodying specific genders or social archetypes). They organise into houses, essentially chosen families of friends led by “mothers” or “fathers”, that provide support, mentorship and a sense of belonging outside traditional family structures. Over the decades, ballroom became a vital safe space of resistance, expression, and community for LGBTQIA+ people of colour, especially for trans and gender-nonconforming individuals. It offered a world of glamour, family and freedom where they could be themselves without fear. This influence has spilt into mainstream culture (from dance and slang to fashion), but balls remain a proudly underground tradition forged in resilience and creativity.
In South Africa, ballroom culture is blossoming in its own vibrant way. Cape Town’s scene began taking root in the late 2010s, sparked by trailblazers like the late Kirvan Fortuin – a dancer-activist who founded the House of Le Cap (the country’s first ballroom house) in 2017 and hosted South Africa’s first vogue balls. Since then, the local ballroom community has grown into a tight- knit, dynamic family. Regular functions, such as the Legacy Ball and annual Kewpie balls, have emerged, where Cape Town’s houses and performers come together to showcase incredible style, music and dance with a uniquely South African twist. Today, the ballroom scene in Cape Town is thriving and ever- evolving, driven by a spirit of inclusivity, defiance and joy. It offers queer and trans Capetonians a joyful, empowering space to express themselves freely, a celebratory arena of fashion, fierceness and solidarity that continues to grow and reinvent the city’s nightlife.