Mark Benton: ‘I love being a drag queen – possibly too much’

Mark Benton in Smoggie Queens with a red outfit and large white wig
The wonderfully absurd Smoggie Queens is back for season 2 (Picture: BBC/Sam Taylor/Hat Trick Productions)

Not everyone was as convinced by Mark Benton’s BBC comedy Smoggie Queens as he was.

‘I had a friend who said, “I’m not watching drag queens.” I asked him to watch an episode and he messaged me back to say, “I watched all six in one go – it’s absolutely brilliant,”’ he tells Metro.

Created by and starring Phil Dunning, Smoggie Queens is the wonderfully absurd slapstick comedy that thrives on being both cruel and kind and has been cherished by the queer community since its release two years ago.

At its centre is Dickie, a deluded drag act who, despite being unable to book gigs through lack of grace or talent, has the impenetrable self-belief of Mariah Carey and a group of Smoggie (slang term for anyone from Teesside) pals who find themselves in comically obscene situations each episode. 

A particular highlight from series one saw a Titanic-themed brunch turn into a camp bloodbath, including a surreal dance-off to B*Witched’s C’est La Vie.

It’s somewhat of a throwback to a time when comedy’s main objective was to make people laugh; it’s clever, for sure, without trying to be. ‘For me, a lot of comedy at the moment isn’t very funny,’ says Mark.

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‘You watch certain programmes, and you go, “Brilliantly acted, brilliantly written, great storyline, really enjoyable, but does it make me laugh?” And it doesn’t a lot of the time. Smoggie Queens is daft, but it just makes you laugh out loud – that’s what I want from a comedy.’

Clearly, others felt the same. Unsurprisingly, there was an open goal for comedy that was just about out-of-this-world characters being silly, with the first series pulling in 600,000 viewers an episode – no mean feat on BBC Three – and securing Dunning three Bafta nominations.

Last summer, I paid a visit to the set of its second series at a Stockton community centre where Dunning, with genuine surprise, told me: ‘A lot of straight, burly men said, “I love this,” and they weren’t expecting to, and that’s what you wanted to do.’

It’s a comedy about a queer community that’s for everyone. It’s about chosen family, with Benton starring as ‘Mam’, an ageing drag queen who, as the name suggests, is the mother to this group of dopey Middlesbrough misfits. 

TX DATE:,TX WEEK:,EMBARGOED UNTIL:10-03-2026 17:00:00,PEOPLE:Lucinda (ALEXANDRA MARDELL), Dickie (PHIL DUNNING), Mam (MARK BENTON), Stewart (ELIJAH YOUNG), Sal (PATSY LOWE) ,DESCRIPTION:**EMBARGOED FOR USE UNTIL 17:00 HRS ON TUESDAY 10TH MARCH 2026**,COPYRIGHT:Hat Trick Productions,CREDIT LINE:BBC/Hat Trick Productions
Phil Dunning (second from left) stars as Dickie and created the series (Picture: BBC/Sam Taylor/Hat Trick Productions)
TX DATE:15-05-2026,TX WEEK:19,EMBARGOED UNTIL:05-05-2026 00:01:00,PEOPLE:Paula (MONICA DOLAN),DESCRIPTION:,COPYRIGHT:Hat Trick Productions,CREDIT LINE:BBC/Hat Trick Productions
Monica Dolan joins the cast of season two as Paula, Mam’s ex-wife (Picture: BBC/Sam Taylor/Hat Trick Productions)

When Dickie is relentlessly cruel, Mam’s bottomless kindness keeps Smoggie Queens’ glowing warmth shining throughout.

Midway through series one, after a fetish night at a Middlesbrough gay club turns into another typical disaster for the gang, Mam revealed he has a son he hasn’t seen for years, his ex-wife banishing him from their lives once she discovered he was her husband, a father, and Mam.

It was a crushing but beautiful gear change in Smoggie Queens, and one that becomes more focused in this next chapter. Bafta-winning Monica Dolan joins the cast as Mam’s ex-wife, a dream get for the show that was beyond anyone’s wildest dreams.

‘She’s a friend of mine, but the thing about Phil is he loves to try to cast people from Middlesbrough, and I knew Monica was born in Middlesbrough, so technically, she is a Smoggie,’ says Benton.

‘She messaged me and said she loved the show, so I said, “Why don’t you be in it?” She just adds a bit more depth, because that storyline with Mam and their son is so moving.’

TX DATE:,TX WEEK:,EMBARGOED UNTIL:10-03-2026 17:00:00,PEOPLE:Dickie (PHIL DUNNING), Lucinda (ALEXANDRA MARDELL), Stewart (ELIJAH YOUNG), Mam (MARK BENTON), Sal (PATSY LOWE) ,DESCRIPTION:**EMBARGOED FOR USE UNTIL 17:00 HRS ON TUESDAY 10TH MARCH 2026**,COPYRIGHT:Hat Trick Productions,CREDIT LINE:BBC/Hat Trick Productions
Smoggie Queens has been hailed by fans as a heartwarming watch (Picture: BBC/Sam Taylor/Hat Trick Productions)
TX DATE:15-05-2026,TX WEEK:19,EMBARGOED UNTIL:05-05-2026 00:01:00,PEOPLE:Bradley (LEWIS MACKINNON), Stewart (ELIJAH YOUNG),DESCRIPTION:,COPYRIGHT:Hat Trick Productions,CREDIT LINE:BBC/Hat Trick Productions
A third season is yet to be confirmed by the BBC (Picture: BBC/Sam Taylor/Hat Trick Productions)

Also joining this series is a slew of unexpected cameos: Steph McGovern returns as herself, and this time is joined by the naturally comical Soccer Saturday duo Jeff Stelling and Chris Kamara.

‘Kammy steals the show in a lot of ways,’ says Benton. ‘Phil’s given Kammy the punch lines, it’s just hilarious.’

Benton’s presence in Smoggie Queens alone is touching to watch – a straight man throwing himself into a culture arguably so alien to his own and clearly having the time of his life. He’d previously played Edna Turnblad in the UK tour of Hairspray, so Smoggie Queens wasn’t his first time in drag, but it was ‘the first time I properly looked into it’, he says.

‘I love it – probably slightly too much,’ he smiles. ‘The thing is, for me, it’s the nails, because I get the makeup on and the wig and the costume, but as soon as the nails go on, it changes the way you use your hands. It goes into your body, and then the character comes to life from that. I know Dustin Hoffman said it was his shoes, but for me, it’s my nails.

‘Usually a drag queen would be in drag for four hours tops, probably, whereas I’m in drag for maybe 13 hours, so it’s a weird half-life where you’re half Mam and half yourself even off-camera.’

I wonder what Benton has learned from stepping into such a formidable character who has faced adversaries he couldn’t imagine but still fills every room with pure joy in six-inch heels, sky-high wigs and caked-on makeup.

He says: ‘I’ve learned that people are people, and you should accept people for what they are. If they’re good people, doesn’t matter the sexuality or if they put a dress on. 

‘Be nice to people, don’t judge, because you don’t know people until you talk to them and get to know them.’

Smoggie Queens airs tonight at 9pm on BBC Three and all episodes will be available to stream on BBC iPlayer.

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