via YouTubeArts+Culture / Cult VaultRuPaul explains the difficulty of go-go dancing in 1988A straight-talking Ru talks selling her body in one of artist Nelson Sullivan’s surviving mini-docsShareLink copied ✔️August 10, 2015Arts+CultureCult VaultText Trey Taylor Before she was Mama Ru or the ineffable, larger-than-life host of RuPaul’s Drag Race, RuPaul was just your average queen milling about New York’s dirty streets. Multimedia artist and documenter of New York’s 80s downtown scene, Nelson Sullivan, often trained his lens on her, trailing her wherever she went. There are countless Ru-centric diary videos on YouTube by Sullivan, but this little-circulated one from 1988 really stands out. If the only Ru you know is the shellacked blonde who tells queens to “lip sync for your life”, then this Snapchat-style documentary will give you a flavour of RuPaul before Drag Race. Known for her flawless looks, this more (ahem) DIY Ru looks a lot more bargain bin than Fifth Avenue honey. “Even as a kid, I’ve always admired and taken my fashion aesthetic from the world of prostitution,” she told us back in June. “I always loved what prostitutes wear (laughs). In the 80s my look was a combination of street-walker and soul train dancer.” In the video, Ru gets frank about the reality of working the club circuit and exchanging her body for cash. “I let all these men touch me, just because I wanted the money,” she says. “Ain’t that terrible? What am I gonna do? I’m in show business, you know? I gotta live, right? I had a lot of drinks. I said to myself, ‘What do you want?’ These guys, they look at you, they want to touch you. Charge them for it, damnit! What’s so damn wrong with that?” Watch below: Escape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.TrendingMet Gala 2026: Dazed editors pick who they want to see on the red carpetFrom Michaela Stark to Gabe Gordon – and a classic McQueen showpiece – the Dazed team are manifesting these looks on the Met stepsFashionFilm & TVWhat do sex workers actually think of Euphoria?Oakley FashionGoing ‘field mode’ with Roger ScottBeautyNude awakening: Meet the young people embracing naturismLife & Culture‘She was secretly the landlord’: Readers on their housemate horror storiesArt & PhotographyThe most loved photo stories of April 2026Life & CultureThe case for wiping your Instagram grid PolaroidArt & PhotographyThree Dazed Clubbers on documenting a complete digital detoxFashionTechno-fascist fashion: Why Silicon Valley is moving into menswearEscape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy