Beneath the shimmer of sequins and the dazzle of stage lights, five drag queens — Lush Monsoon, Betta Naan Stop, Hash Brownie, Whacker Cracker, and Sickk — grapple with the fallout of a cancelled club performance. Their story unfolds in five chapters, each centering on one queen as they deliver a pre-recorded monologue on what drag means to them. And what emerges is a deeply personal exploration of art, identity, and resilience. This is Superqueens, India’s first drag musical, which debuted in Delhi last year — and it’s more about than just drag. It is perhaps about anyone in Delhi who dreams of making it big, and what those dreams can cost. The musical is as dazzling as it is disarmingly honest. It’s funny, campy, and unafraid to bare its heart. While most of its music numbers unfold “on stage,” where the queens flaunt their fashion and lip-syncing prowess, the real story takes place behind the curtains, in the green room.…