Work hosted the podcast Very That alongside season-three finalist and fellow drag performer Raja.[4] She currently hosts the YouTube podcast Very Delta,[5] following the end of Very That, produced by Moguls of Media (MOM) Podcasts.[6]
Early life
Villarreal's father was a veteran of the Vietnam War who was subjected to Agent Orange during his service.[7]
Career
Work's drag mother is Miss Coco Peru, whom she met in Los Angeles during the beginnings of her drag career.[8] Work started drag on Halloween 1998, at age 22.[9] Her drag name originates from when she attended a drag show and the performing group of queens, who were parodying Designing Women, needed a "bigger" queen to play the role of Delta Burke's character, Suzanne Sugarbaker. After agreeing to and finishing the role, one queen commented afterwards that "you are not Delta Burke, you are Delta Work!"[10]
RuPaul's Drag Race
Work was selected, among thirteen other contestants, for the third season of RuPaul's Drag Race, which began airing on January 24, 2011, on LOGO TV.[11] During the season, Work chose to impersonate Cher (a celebrity which she is not typically known for portraying) for the "Snatch Game" episode, where contestants embody a celebrity, in look and persona, and participate in an improv challenge similar to shows such as Hollywood Squares or Match Game. Bowen Yang wrote: "Delta barely made an attempt at all... Points for the wink at Bob Mackie with her look, but otherwise Delta just waded around in her nothing-doing. Snap out of it!"[12] She placed seventh overall, losing a lip sync performance to Manila Luzon on Donna Summer's "MacArthur Park".[13]Out called the battle "certainly one of the most famous lip syncs" of the show.[14]
After season three, Work was seen as an audience member attending the season five (2013) and season six (2014) finale episodes,[15][16] and was a guest with other Drag Race alumni for the first-episode challenge on season ten (2018).[17] Work became RuPaul's personal wig-stylist, for her judges' panel looks, beginning with the second episode of the ninth season (2017), with season two (2010) alumnus Raven styling her makeup.[18] Work appeared as a guest for the first challenge in the premiere of season eleven (2019).[19]
In a 2023 interview with Joseph Shepherd, Work revealed that she did not work as RuPaul's wig stylist beyond the eleventh season. This was largely because of contractual disagreements over her involvement in RuPaul's Netflix series AJ and the Queen, which led to another wig stylist being hired, who continued to work with RuPaul after that. Work also stated that World of Wonder, the producers of RuPaul's Drag Race, intentionally refrained from submitting her name for Emmy consideration for the eleventh season, despite her having done the same job as the tenth season when she won the award, because she was no longer working with them.[20] According to Work, during her last phone call with RuPaul, she was told in a casual manner, "If anything comes up, I'll let you know."
Post-Drag Race
As a cast member of Drag Race, Work appeared on a 2011 episode of E!'s The Soup with RuPaul, Raja, and Shangela.[21] She made recurring appearances on WoWPresent's internet show Fashion Photo RuView, filling in for Raja or Raven to critique looks from Drag Race alumni and various other celebrities, with her first appearance on November 19, 2014.[22] However, this has ceased since Work no longer styles RuPaul. She also made regular appearances on the web show The Pit Stop, which reviews each weekly episode of Drag Race. She was on its debut episode on August 27, 2016.[23]
Work appeared on the cover of Skorch Magazine in 2013.[24] In August 2015, she headlined Palouse Pride in Moscow, Idaho.[25] On August 6, 2016, she was invited on stage by Adele during a Los Angeles concert, while in full drag as an Adele impersonator. They took a selfie, which quickly went viral.[26][27]
From September 2020 to May 2023 Work co-hosted the conversational podcast Very That on the Forever Dog and Moguls of Media networks, alongside her RuPaul's Drag Race season three castmate Raja,[29] where the duo discussed recent news and answer questions from fans. The podcast's executive producers included fellow RuPaul's Drag Race alumni Alaska Thunderfuck and Willam Belli, who now host their own Drag Race review podcast, Race Chasers.
In July 2023 Work began hosting More Very Delta, a supplement to the main podcast available exclusively to MOM Plus Gold subscribers.[31] In the same month, Work won the award for Best Local Radio/Podcast Personality for the Orange County, South Bay and Westside areas in the 2023 Best of the Southland awards, presented by the Los Angeles Times.[32][33][34]
Music
Delta Work released her debut solo single, "The Walkin' Blues (Walk Right In, Walk Right Out)", on May 12, 2015.[35] She had previously recorded music as part of The Heathers, with Manila Luzon, Raja, and Carmen Carrera. The group released their debut single "Lady Marmalade" on June 6, 2014.[36]
On November 16, 2023, Work released the collaborative single "I Want House" with dance music duo BOY2K, based on a viral monologue from Very Delta.[37]
^Holland, Scott (March 10, 2011). "RuPaul's Drag Race Delta Work Interview". Hot Spots Magazine. Retrieved August 20, 2022. My name was given to me by some queen that hosted a show near where I live. They needed someone to be a Suzanne Sugarbaker character (Delta Burke) and my name came from that. One queen said you are not Delta Burke, you are Delta Work, and the rest is history!