“RuPaul’s Drag Race” returns to MTV in January, with season 18 serving up a sickening lineup of 14 new queens vying for the $200,000 grand prize, an official Anastasia Beverly Hills Cosmetics collaboration and the title of America’s Next Drag Superstar. Among them is the self-described “sweetest fruit in Philadelphia,” Mandy Mango.
In the “Meet the Queens” special for season 18, Mandy Mango described Philadelphia’s drag scene as “very diverse, very eclectic.”
“We have our teeny boppers, we have our mama whoppers, we have some flippity floppers and some daddy toppers,” she said.
Mandy Mango first began performing drag in college when she performed to “Took the Night” by Chelley during a competition and won. She also said the “Mango” in her name is inspired by the carabao, the Filipino mango, which she said was recently ranked the sweetest mango in the world.
“I think that says a lot about me,” she said. “I’m also fruity. I’m Filipina, and I’m not genetically modified. I’m a first-generation Filipino American. Growing up has always been strange, trying to figure out if I’m Filipino enough, American enough, or not enough either on top of being queer. So drag has really guided my journey in understanding my identity.”
Mandy Mango’s connection to her culture has also shaped her activism and performances. In 2024, she hosted No Arena Drag Show, which aimed to raise awareness and invigorate participation in the movement to oppose 76 Place, a nearly 20,000-seat sports and events venue that the Philadelphia 76ers wanted to build in Chinatown. Plans for the arena have since been abandoned.
“Chinatown is a special place for me and for my art,” Mandy Mango said at the time.
In addition to Chinatown, the drag performer noted during the “Meet the Queens” special that one of her biggest drag inspirations was her mother, a pageant queen in the Philippines.
“She won Best Evening Gown in Miss Baguio Philippines 1987 and I think she should have took the crown, but that’s fine,” she said. “We’ll talk about that another time.”
Drag is not the only talent Mandy Mango has. She also works as a registered nurse in HIV and sexual health.
“I can do venipunctures,” she said. “I can do liver elastography. I can do head-to-toe assessments. I can do subcutaneous, intramuscular injections, subdermal vaccines. I have a lot of talents and skills.”
Audiences will have to wait until Jan. 2, 2026, to see how Mandy Mango will fare against the 13 other contestants, but her comments in the “Meet the Queens” special suggest she is ready to bring charisma, uniqueness, nerve and talent to the competition.
“I am America’s Next Drag Superstar because I’m sweet, I’m smart, I’m sexy and I’m credentialed,” she said. “I might be a part-time entertainer, but I’m a full-time drag queen, and if you think that the responsibility of a drag queen ends at the four walls of a venue, then you are mistaken. I make sure that I advocate for my community in and out of a show, in and out of the clinic, because as queer people, we have lives that we celebrate, lives that we get sad about, lives that we laugh about and I want to take care of that for our community.”
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