Magazine

Inside RuPaul’s Dramatically Glamorous Beverly Hills Manse

The legendary drag queen tapped AD100 designer Martyn Lawrence Bullard to reimagine the palatial property

Disco balls by Omega Mirror Products hang above a Martyn Lawrence Bullard Atelier table and chairs in Schumacher Faux Bois fabric in the ballroom. Curtain fabric from Bullard’s collection for The Shade Store. A Herb Ritts photograph of RuPaul takes its place among the galaxy of divas on the walls.

Art: Herb Ritts/Fahey/Klein Gallery

Given the outsize scale and spectacle of the ballroom, one might expect the space to be used for high-octane revelries packed with legions of glitterati. Not so, it turns out. “I entertain on television, not at my house. When you live such a public life, you need boundaries,” RuPaul insists, emphasizing his preference for intimate gatherings and small dance parties with close friends. Nevertheless, spots for gracious entertaining abound, chief among them a black-and-white striped outdoor dining room adorned with fruit trees, topiaries, and chairs in the style of Elsie de Wolfe, another major inspiration for Bullard. “The stripe treatment is meant to feel like a tent. The room has orangery vibes, but technically it’s more of a kumquatery,” the designer muses.

In the kitchen, Martyn Lawrence Bullard Atelier stools in a Schumacher fabric sit beneath pendants designed by Bullard for Corbett Lighting on parquet flooring from his collection for Duchateau. La Cornue range in a shade from the Martyn Lawrence Bullard Color Collection; fixtures by Waterworks. Bespoke cabinetry by Duchateau.

Splashes of orange, RuPaul’s favorite color, also emerge in the kitchen and adjacent breakfast room, the performer’s lacquer-enrobed office, and the ultraluxe primary bedroom, where a Joan Crawford–worthy claw-foot daybed sheathed in orange velvet rests beneath a chandelier that echoes the draped plaster confections of Dorothy Draper. “The bedroom is very glam, very romantic, but in a weird way it still has some masculinity to it,” Bullard avers. Two enormous closets—one for male attire, the other for drag—accommodate the entertainer’s predictably vast collection of suits and gowns, and a queen’s ransom in sparkly bijoux. “It feels like you’re skipping into Bergdorf’s, the chicest boutique you could dream of,” RuPaul says of the kaleidoscopic closets.

RH chaises in a Perennials fabric; landscape architecture by James Hyatt Studio.

Landscape architect James Hyatt reconceived the garden to underscore the ambience of classic Beverly Hills luxury and the neoclassical motifs that adorn the interiors, adding a graphic zellige-tiled spa to the pool and covering the hillside with a range of drought-tolerant plants. “We were going to do more planting on the pool terrace, but Ru wanted to be able to roller-skate and dance. We tried to capture the sense of joy he exudes,” Hyatt explains.

One of the most felicitous spaces in the home is a petite powder room on the ground floor wrapped in a custom de Gournay wallpaper featuring cameos with silhouettes of the drag doyenne sporting various wigs. The gilded cameos neatly encapsulate the extraordinary meeting of the minds that animates the performer’s Tinseltown Shangri-la—in a word, flawless. “The house is a touchstone to remind me to inspire people to feel the magic that’s seemingly so elusive these days,” RuPaul asserts. “It’s meant to be whimsical and fun. None of it is to be taken too seriously—except for love and kindness.”

This story appears in AD’s June 2023 issue. To see RuPaul’s Beverly Hills home in print, subscribe to AD.