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Cinemablend
Cinemablend
Entertainment
Mick Joest

Why The Wonder Years' Dulé Hill Loved The Drag Storyline In Season 2's Premiere

Dulé Hill and Tituss Burgess in The Wonder Years

Warning! The following contains spoilers for The Wonder Years' Season 2 premiere "One Small Step." Read at your own risk!

The Wonder Years finally made its grand return to television after being bumped to June in lieu of other midseason ABC programming. The Peabody Award-winning series came back with lots of energy and excitement though, and it rolled right into Season 2 with a fun story about  Bill and Dean spending the summer in New York City. Bill was struggling to try to write music for Marvin Gaye, and he ended up getting help from their neighbor Lonnie, who performed in The Village as a drag queen. Dulé Hill was a big fan of the episode and this storyline featuring drag as he spoke about its relevance to the show as well as today's culture. 

Lonnie, who was played by Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt actor Tituss Burgess, ultimately helped Bill translate his southern talent to a New York audience, which won him favor with Gaye in the end. Meanwhile, The Wonder Years tackled Bill's clear discomfort in associating with a gay man, while Dean blissfully remained unaware of the tension between his father and Lonnie. Star Dulé Hill spoke to The Wrap about the episode, and he applauded the show for showing the impact of drag culture long before it became part of the mainstream. He said: 

What I appreciate about the first episode is that we expand the lens when we say, men dressed as women have always been here. They exist. They are valued. They thrive in the world. They own their space and it’s not something new. This country has never been a monolith. We’ve always been a group of diverse, unique, valuable people and the more we can show that and honor that then I think the better things will be.

The three men were able to make conversation in The Wonder Years based on the fact that they all were from Montgomery, Alabama. Lonnie stayed with Dean after he was jumped and locked out of the apartment, and he was able to coax Bill up to his flat after showing him he could prepare a great southern-style meal. 

It takes some time, but slowly Bill is able to let his guard down and allow Lonnie to help him adapt to New York City. By the final moments of the episode, they'd gotten to the end of the summer, and it seemed like there was a pretty good relationship between them. Things were finally going great in New York, but when Bill opened a letter to find Lilian had sent him a boudoir photo, he packed up, got Dean, and made a fast trip back to Montgomery. Dean would later wonder if Lonnie was able to return to Montgomery "boa and all" later in life. 

Dulé Hill felt The Wonder Years made its point well. Once Bill and Dean were able to see Lonnie as more than the man who lives near them who wears a dress, they grew from the experience. It's Hill's hope that others can take that lesson from the premiere: 

My hope is that audiences can receive that and apply that to where we are today. Instead of looking at people as being foreign, or passing judgment, maybe lean in and engage and maybe you might find some ways that you can truly relate to each other and make all of us have a better existence in the world.

The Wonder Years delivered a big message that synched up perfectly with Pride month and all the programming available for that, making it a perfect time for this episode to air. Of course, the fun and lessons, plus the continued spirit of the original series have only just begun as there's still plenty of Season 2 for fans to get through either by watching on ABC or with a Hulu subscription

Those without access to streaming can catch new episodes of The Wonder Years on ABC on Wednesdays at 9:00 p.m. ET. Unfortunately, the two-episode premiere was a one-time deal, but on the bright side, that makes for more episodes to watch weekly over the next couple of months. 

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