Jake Shears
Jason F. Sellards (born October 3, 1978), known professionally as Jake Shears, is an American singer, songwriter, musician, and actor best known as the lead vocalist and co-founder of the glam rock band Scissor Sisters.[1][2]
Formed in New York City in 2001, Scissor Sisters achieved international success with their self-titled debut album in 2004, which went multi-platinum and featured the Grammy-nominated hit "I Don't Feel Like Dancin'," a collaboration with Elton John that topped charts in multiple countries.[3]
The band earned Brit Awards, Ivor Novello Awards, and Grammy nominations over their active years through 2012, selling millions of albums globally and touring arenas with their flamboyant, queer-influenced pop-rock style.[3]
After the band's hiatus, Shears launched a solo career with his self-titled debut album in 2018, followed by Last Man Dancing in 2023, while expanding into theater with a Broadway debut in Kinky Boots and co-writing the award-winning musical Tammy Faye.[3][4]
Early life
Upbringing and family
Jason F. Sellards, professionally known as Jake Shears, was born on October 3, 1978, in Mesa, Arizona.[5] His father worked as an entrepreneur, while his mother, Frieda Sellards, was a practicing Baptist who emphasized religious upbringing.[6] He has two older sisters and one older brother, growing up in a family environment marked by conservative values amid rural and suburban settings in the American Southwest and Pacific Northwest.[7] The Sellards family relocated multiple times during his early years, including to San Juan Island in Washington state, where he spent significant portions of his childhood in a rural community north of Seattle.[8] Shears attended Friday Harbor High School there, experiencing bullying related to his emerging traits, before later returning to Arizona.[1] He completed high school at Mountain View High School in Mesa, a conservative area where his flamboyant and goth-leaning personality stood in contrast to the surrounding cultural norms.[9] His parents maintained a conservative household, though the regions included pockets of countercultural influences like local hippies; Shears remained closeted to his family while engaging in activities such as attending Christian youth groups and secretly visiting gay bars in Phoenix during adolescence.[10][11] This dynamic highlighted tensions between familial expectations and his personal development, with early familial and local exposures to music—such as through films and regional scenes—planting seeds for later interests without formal involvement.[12]Education and early influences
Shears relocated to New York City in 1999 after high school, enrolling at Eugene Lang College of The New School to study fiction writing.[8][11] There, he engaged with the city's creative environment, balancing academic pursuits with self-directed immersion in performance and music, though his focus increasingly shifted toward practical artistic expression over formal coursework.[13] His early musical influences drew from 1970s glam rock and disco eras, including artists such as David Bowie, Roxy Music, the New York Dolls, Queen, and ABBA, encountered through personal listening and club exposure rather than structured education. These figures, known for theatricality and boundary-pushing aesthetics, resonated with Shears' emerging interest in queer-coded performance styles, shaping his vocal and stage persona independently of institutional guidance. Elton John and other piano-driven pop icons further informed his self-taught approach to songwriting and flamboyant delivery.[14] Upon arriving in New York, Shears integrated into the underground nightlife and gay club scenes, performing as a go-go dancer at venues like Luxe and the Roxy to support himself while honing performance skills.[15][16] This environment, characterized by drag shows, lip-syncing, and erotic dance, provided practical training in audience engagement and physical expressiveness, fostering his confidence in live settings without yielding immediate commercial breakthroughs.[17][18]Music career
Pre-Scissor Sisters activities
Before forming Scissor Sisters, Jason Sellards, who later adopted the stage name Jake Shears, began performing in the queer nightlife scenes of Seattle during the late 1990s. Under the alias Cubic Zirconium, he participated in drag and performance art shows at venues like 21st Century Foxes, a prominent queer revue space known for its campy, theatrical presentations blending music, lip-syncing, and cabaret elements.[19] These early outings exposed him to influences from house music remixes and drag culture, shaping his flamboyant stage persona without yielding any commercial recordings or tours.[19] In 1999, Sellards relocated to New York City, where he enrolled in fiction writing courses at The New School while immersing himself in the downtown Manhattan art and club scenes. To support himself, he worked as a go-go dancer in gay bars, frequenting East Village haunts that fostered experimental performances amid the city's vibrant queer nightlife.[17][20][21] This period involved informal vocal contributions and songwriting sketches for local underground projects, drawing from house rhythms and shock-art aesthetics, though none progressed to formal releases.[22] His activities remained confined to non-commercial networking in cabaret-style gatherings and club events, prioritizing creative experimentation over professional breakthroughs.[23]Scissor Sisters era (2001–2012)
Scissor Sisters formed in New York City in 2001, with Jake Shears as lead vocalist alongside Ana Matronic on vocals, Babydaddy on bass and keyboards, Del Marquis on guitar, and initial drummer Paddy Boom.[24][25] The band's early sound drew from glam rock, disco, and electroclash influences, emphasizing theatrical performances and themes of queer nightlife. Their self-titled debut album released on February 2, 2004, achieved massive UK success, topping the albums chart and becoming the best-selling album of the year with over 1.59 million copies sold there.[26] In contrast, it peaked at number 102 on the US Billboard 200, highlighting limited mainstream breakthrough in their home market despite topping the US Dance/Electronic Albums chart.[27] The 2004 single "Take Your Mama" reached number 17 on the UK Singles Chart, contributing to the album's momentum through its campy, upbeat glam pop style.[25] Follow-up album Ta-Dah, released in September 2006, also debuted at number 1 on the UK Albums Chart, solidifying their dominance in that market.[25] Lead single "I Don't Feel Like Dancin'," co-written with Elton John, hit number 1 on the UK Singles Chart in September 2006 and earned a Grammy nomination for Best Dance Recording.[28][29] By 2010, Night Work explored themes of pre-AIDS era gay club culture, excess, and nocturnal passion through dance-pop tracks infused with glam elements, though it received mixed commercial reception compared to prior releases.[30][31] The band's fourth album, Magic Hour in May 2012, featured the viral hit "Let's Have a Kiki," which Shears later attributed to pigeonholing the group into novelty territory, straining creative identity and contributing to exhaustion.[32] In October 2012, following tours and amid members pursuing solo endeavors like Matronic's comic book project, Scissor Sisters announced an indefinite hiatus to recharge.[33][34]Solo music projects (2018–present)
Shears released his self-titled debut solo album on August 10, 2018, marking a departure from Scissor Sisters' glam-pop sound toward influences drawn from his recent relocation to New Orleans and sessions in Louisville, Kentucky.[35][36] The record incorporated Southern musical elements, including brass and rootsy textures, reflecting the city's heritage while addressing personal themes of breakup and reinvention.[37][38] Lead singles like "Creep City" and "Big Bushy Mustache" showcased this eclectic blend, earning praise for its eccentricity amid a post-band hiatus.[36] To promote the album, Shears embarked on his first solo tour in 2018, focusing on Southern U.S. venues with a honky-tonk-infused live show that highlighted the record's regional flavors.[39][40] Shears' second solo album, Last Man Dancing, arrived on June 2, 2023, via Mute Records, shifting back toward disco and club-oriented tracks while grappling with persistence amid aging and loss in nightlife settings.[41][42] The 12-track set, produced with a small team, eschewed downtempo ballads for unrelenting dance energy, featuring guest vocals from Kylie Minogue on "Voices" and spoken-word elements from Jane Fonda and Amber Martin.[43][44] Themes centered on hedonistic endurance—Shears described it as an "ode to house-party hedonism" for those "lost... but kept moving anyway"—contrasting his prior introspective work with upbeat escapism rooted in club culture's highs and the toll of sustained revelry.[41][43] In interviews, he positioned the album as a defiant stand against fading vitality, stating, "I'm always the last one standing," while critiquing modern scenes indirectly through its joyful yet shadowed party anthems.[42][45] Promotion included tours emphasizing live dance-floor immersion, blending his disco origins with matured reflections on longevity in hedonistic pursuits.[46]Scissor Sisters reunion (2024–present)
In October 2024, Scissor Sisters announced their reunion after a 12-year hiatus, with frontman Jake Shears, multi-instrumentalist Babydaddy, and guitarist Del Marquis reuniting as a trio to mark the 20th anniversary of their self-titled debut album.[47][48] The initial spark for the reformation originated during the COVID-19 pandemic, when band members reconnected amid reflections on their legacy, leading to plans for live performances without an immediate commitment to new recordings.[48] Founding member Ana Matronic did not participate, citing prior contractual obligations and scheduling conflicts with her solo projects that precluded alignment with the tour timeline.[49][50] The band launched their first shows since 2012 with a European arena tour in May 2025, focusing on the United Kingdom and Ireland, where they performed their 2004 debut album in full across venues including Nottingham's Motorpoint Arena on May 16 and London's O2 Arena on May 23.[51][52] Shears positioned the reunion as a response to contemporary global tensions, including political polarization, arguing in interviews that the band's glam-infused, irreverent pop offered escapist defiance and communal joy essential in "dark times."[53] This contrasted with Shears' prior expressions of regret over the 2012 disbandment, which he had attributed to creative pressures and internal strains following underwhelming reception to their 2012 album Magic Hour, yet he emerged as the primary advocate for revival, emphasizing renewed personal and artistic alignment among the core members.[54][32] Following the tour's completion, Scissor Sisters entered the studio in October 2025 to develop their first new material since 2012, signaling potential for a full album without confirmed release details as of that date.[55] The effort built on tour momentum and fan demand for the group's signature blend of theatrical disco and satirical edge, though bandmates acknowledged uncertainties around long-term cohesion given past dynamics.[56]Performing arts career
Theater roles
Shears made his Broadway debut as Charlie Price, the factory owner protagonist, in the musical Kinky Boots at the Al Hirschfeld Theatre, beginning January 8, 2018, and concluding his limited run on April 1, 2018.[57][58] Shears co-wrote the lyrics for Tammy Faye, a musical with music by Elton John and book by James Graham, depicting the life of televangelist Tammy Faye Messner and her unconventional empathy toward marginalized groups, including LGBTQ individuals.[59][60] The production premiered at London's Almeida Theatre on October 19, 2022, earning 13 Olivier Award nominations across categories such as Best New Musical and Outstanding Musical Contribution.[61] It transferred to Broadway's Nederlander Theatre, opening in previews October 19, 2024, though it closed prematurely on November 24, 2024, after 24 previews and 39 performances.[62][63] In September 2023, Shears took on the role of the Emcee in the West End revival of Cabaret at the Playhouse Theatre, reconfigured as the Kit Kat Club, opposite Rebecca Lucy Taylor as Sally Bowles; his engagement began September 25, 2023, and was extended multiple times, running through March 9, 2024.[60][64] The production, known for its immersive staging and sold-out performances, had previously secured seven Olivier Awards in 2022 for its creative team and design elements prior to Shears's involvement.[65]Film and television work
Shears has appeared in a limited number of films, primarily in cameo capacities that align with his musical persona rather than substantial acting roles. In Layer Cake (2004), a British crime film directed by Matthew Vaughn, he featured in a brief club performance sequence as part of Scissor Sisters, contributing to the soundtrack with the band's track "Laura". Similarly, in How to Lose Friends & Alienate People (2008), a comedy starring Simon Pegg, Shears had a minor cameo appearance, reflecting his rising profile during the Scissor Sisters' early success. These early screen credits extended into the 2010s with small parts in Seeking a Friend for the End of the World (2012), where he appeared in an ensemble party scene amid the apocalyptic comedy directed by Lorene Scafaria, and The Dramatics: A Comedy (2015), playing the role of Jason in a supporting capacity within the dramedy exploring family dynamics. In Rocketman (2019), the Elton John biopic directed by Dexter Fletcher, Shears portrayed a McDonald's drag queen in a fleeting cameo, capitalizing on his flamboyant stage presence without narrative centrality. More recently, Shears made his described screen acting debut in Pillion (2025), a queer romantic drama directed by Harry Lighton, where he plays Kevin, a submissive character in a BDSM-themed relationship opposite Alexander Skarsgård's dominant biker. The role, which includes intimate scenes emphasizing vulnerability and desire, marks a departure from prior musical cameos but remains a supporting part in the film's exploration of unconventional romance.[66][67] On television, Shears' contributions have been confined to guest spots and promotional appearances rather than scripted acting roles. Notable instances include a self-titled cameo on the Australian soap opera Neighbours and performances on shows like Paul O'Grady Live (2010), where he showcased musical talents over dramatic depth.[68][69] Overall, these endeavors underscore acting as an adjunct to his primary vocation in music and theater, with no evidence of pursuit toward leading cinematic or televisual breakthroughs.Writing and collaborations
Memoir and literary output
In 2018, Jake Shears published his memoir Boys Keep Swinging: A Memoir, issued by Atria Books on February 20.[70] The book traces his trajectory from a bullied adolescent outsider in small-town Kentucky and early struggles in New York City to achieving global fame as the lead singer of Scissor Sisters, emphasizing the raw mechanics of ambition amid underground nightlife.[70] Shears reflects on behaviors in his twenties—such as intense partying, casual sexual encounters, and body dysmorphia—that he describes as unhealthy and self-destructive, contributing to emotional instability and a pattern of excess that strained personal relationships and mental health.[71] [15] Central to the narrative are Shears's experiences with queer self-acceptance, framed against recurrent depression and romantic breakups, which he causally connects to a restless, nomadic existence post-Scissor Sisters' 2012 hiatus, including a relocation to New Orleans as an attempt to recalibrate after years of performative highs masking internal voids.[71] [72] These admissions underscore a retrospective causal realism: the adrenaline-fueled excesses of youth propelled his rise but precipitated burnout, prompting introspection on how unchecked hedonism eroded self-awareness and stability.[14] As of October 2025, Boys Keep Swinging remains Shears's sole published literary work, serving as his primary vehicle for such unfiltered self-examination without subsequent memoirs or prose expansions.[73]Songwriting for musicals
Shears co-composed the music for the stage adaptation of Armistead Maupin's Tales of the City, which premiered at the American Conservatory Theater in San Francisco on May 21, 2011.[74] Collaborating with Scissor Sisters keyboardist John Garden on the score and drawing from the creators of Avenue Q for the book and direction, Shears integrated his pop influences into character-driven songs that advanced the narrative of 1970s San Francisco's bohemian and queer subcultures, distinguishing the work from standalone pop tracks by emphasizing lyrical specificity to plot points and ensemble dynamics.[75] [76] In a departure from his prior band-oriented songwriting, Shears focused on lyrics for Tammy Faye, a biographical musical about televangelist Tammy Faye Bakker (later Messner), with music composed by Elton John and book by James Graham.[59] The production debuted at London's Almeida Theatre on October 7, 2022, before transferring to Broadway's Nederlander Theatre, where previews began on October 17, 2024.[77] Shears' contributions melded glam-pop flair with emotional introspection, prioritizing songs that propel the story of Bakker's resilience amid scandal and fame, such as reflective ballads contrasting the high-energy production numbers typical of his Scissor Sisters catalog.[78] This collaboration highlighted Shears' shift toward theater-specific composition, where melodic hooks serve dramatic arcs over dance-floor immediacy.[79]Personal life
Relationships and identity
Shears has been openly gay since the formation of Scissor Sisters in the early 2000s, with the band's music often reflecting queer experiences and nightlife.[80] He was in a long-term relationship with director and producer Chris Moukarbel from 2004 to 2015, after which he experienced a period of singledom and relocated from Los Angeles to New Orleans in 2015.[81] [16] In January 2025, Shears confirmed he is dating West End performer Jon Reynolds.[82] In a 2023 interview, Shears stated that he does not intentionally infuse queerness into his music, describing it as an automatic element arising from his identity rather than a deliberate imposition, and emphasizing universal themes like partying over explicit identity politics.[83] This approach aligns with his broader rejection of forced categorizations, as evidenced by reflections on Scissor Sisters being labeled a "gay band" despite appealing to diverse audiences through escapist, inclusive energy.[84] Shears' music with Scissor Sisters has been credited in interviews with influencing fans' personal coming-out experiences, providing anthems that resonated amid societal stigma during the 2000s.[85]Lifestyle and challenges
Shears has publicly discussed his struggles with body dysmorphia, which persisted into adulthood despite his glamorous stage persona as Scissor Sisters' frontman. In interviews promoting his 2018 memoir Boys Keep Swinging, he described ongoing battles with body image, noting that the pressures of performance exacerbated feelings of inadequacy about his physique, even after achieving fame.[71][15] This dysmorphia, linked to early bullying over his effeminate traits and later intensified by the hyper-sexualized gay nightlife scene, contrasted sharply with his escapist, flamboyant public image.[72] The memoir details Shears' hedonistic lifestyle in his twenties, characterized by frequent substance use and intense partying amid Scissor Sisters' rise in the early 2000s club circuit. He recounts episodes of drug experimentation and casual sex as integral to the era's creative and social milieu, but attributes subsequent depression and anxiety to the emotional toll of such excesses, including burnout and relational instability.[86][87] These behaviors, while fueling artistic output, fostered a cycle of escapism that masked deeper vulnerabilities, leading to periods of profound melancholy post-hiatus.[72][88] Following a personal breakup in 2015, Shears relocated from New York to New Orleans as a deliberate coping strategy, seeking geographic and cultural renewal amid lingering depression from the split and career uncertainties. The move, which he credits with reigniting his songwriting, served as a pivot from self-destructive patterns toward therapeutic outlets like memoir-writing and moderated social habits.[86][17] By 2018, he emphasized owning his narrative to abandon unhealthy mechanisms, implying a shift toward sobriety, as evidenced by later claims of clear-headed experiences amid past temptations.[86] In recent reflections, Shears has addressed aging within nightlife contexts, noting a tempered engagement with partying by 2023, prioritizing emotional processing over excess to sustain well-being. This evolution underscores a causal progression from youthful indulgence to reflective moderation, informed by therapy and creative discipline rather than abrupt cessation.[89][90]Reception and legacy
Achievements and cultural contributions
As the frontman of Scissor Sisters, Jake Shears played a central role in the band's chart success in the United Kingdom, where their self-titled debut album peaked at number one upon release in 2004, selling over 1.2 million copies.[25] Subsequent releases Ta-Dah (2006) and Magic (2012) also reached number one and number two respectively, while Night Work (2010) entered at number three, marking three top-five albums overall.[25] The group earned a Grammy Award nomination for Best Dance Recording for their cover of "Comfortably Numb" in 2005.[91] Shears' solo career extended his influence in dance-pop, with his self-titled debut album in 2018 praised by critics for its opulent, New Orleans-inspired disco tracks that evoked Scissor Sisters' hedonistic energy.[92] His follow-up, Last Man Dancing (2023), featured collaborations including Kylie Minogue and received acclaim for blending house party vibes with darker undertones, scoring four stars from NME for revitalizing club-oriented pop.[93] Scissor Sisters' camp aesthetics and overt queer themes, as articulated by Shears himself, advanced the integration of gay cultural elements into mainstream pop, providing anthems that resonated with audiences navigating identity amid early-2000s conservatism.[94] This impact is evidenced in fan recollections of the band's role in personal self-acceptance, with Shears noting in interviews that their music "pushed the needle culturally" by prioritizing unfiltered exuberance over conformity.[95] The band's 2024 reunion announcement, timed for the 20th anniversary of their debut, responded to sustained public demand for their escapist performances, leading to a 2025 European arena tour.[47]Criticisms and internal conflicts
In a 2019 interview, Jake Shears attributed the Scissor Sisters' 2012 breakup to the unexpected success of their single "Let's Have a Kiki," which he said created a creative impasse by locking the band into a hyper-specific, slang-laden camp aesthetic that proved difficult to surpass or evolve beyond.[96][97] Shears explained that the song's viral popularity in gay club scenes exhausted his lyrical direction, stating, "I didn't know what the fuck to say after that song," highlighting internal fatigue from an identity overly tethered to niche, performative queer vernacular rather than broader artistic growth.[98] Shears has reflected on the band's promotion of exuberant, hedonistic queer nightlife culture—evident in tracks celebrating unbridled partying and excess—as mirroring his own youthful excesses, which he later deemed unhealthy. In an 2018 interview, he admitted that his behavior in his 20s, amid the band's rise, "wasn't particularly healthy," linking it to the toll of constant touring and substance-fueled revelry that the group's music often glorified.[99] This self-criticism underscores a potential downside to the band's oeuvre: its normalization of boundary-pushing indulgence may have amplified personal and creative burnout, though external detractors have been sparse and often tied to broader dismissals of their flamboyance as gimmicky rather than substantive.[100] Despite substantial UK commercial success—their 2004 self-titled debut album reached number one there and sold over 1.6 million copies—the Scissor Sisters achieved only modest U.S. penetration, with the same album peaking at number 102 on the Billboard 200 and total domestic sales around 150,000 units.[101] Analysts and band members have attributed this disparity to the group's overt queer themes and pansexual imagery appealing more to urban, liberal audiences abroad than to America's culturally conservative mainstream, confining them to a perceived niche rather than crossover stardom.[102]Discography
Albums
As the lead vocalist of Scissor Sisters, Jake Shears contributed to the band's four studio albums, released via Polydor Records. The self-titled debut album, released on 24 May 2004, topped the UK Albums Chart and became the best-selling album of the year, later certified 9× Platinum by the BPI for sales exceeding 2.7 million copies in the UK.[25][103] Ta-Dah followed on 18 September 2006, also reaching number one on the UK Albums Chart.[104] Night Work, issued on 28 June 2010, peaked at number two in the UK.[105] Magic Hour, the final band album, was released on 28 May 2012 and likewise achieved a number two position.[25]| Album Title | Release Date | UK Peak Position |
|---|---|---|
| Scissor Sisters | 24 May 2004 | 1[25] |
| Ta-Dah | 18 September 2006 | 1[104] |
| Night Work | 28 June 2010 | 2[105] |
| Magic Hour | 28 May 2012 | 2[25] |
| Album Title | Release Date | Label | UK Peak Position |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jake Shears | 10 August 2018 | Freida Jean/Absolute | 20[107] |
| Last Man Dancing | 2 June 2023 | Mute/Boy Keep Swinging | 18[107] |