User:Lwollert/Sandbox/List of transgender people
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The people on this list have been selected because their fame or notoriety was in some way due or connected to their transgender identity or behaviour.
Contents |
[edit] Living individuals
A
- Courtney Act, (1981 - ) Singer, gender illusionist, Australian Idol semi-finalist [1]
- Calpernia Addams, (1971 - ) actress, author, autobiographer, entrepreneur, transsexual activist, fiddle player [2]
- Allenina, (1973 - ) transsexual actress[3]
- Nadia Almada, (1977 - ) Transsexual Big Brother UK 2004 winner,[4] [5] and also appeared on Big Brother Australia
- Charlie Anders, (???? - )transsexual author[6] (Also published as "Charles Anders")
- Enza "Supermodel" Anderson, drag performer
- Buck Angel, world's first FTM transsexual porn star
- Alexis Arquette, actor, musician, member of the Arquette family of actors
- Nina Arsenault, writer, columnist
- April Ashley, model
- Estelle Asmodelle, actress, author, dancer & Australia's First Legal Transsexual
B
- Mianne Bagger, golfer, transsexual woman
- Dana Baitz, musician (pianist, producer, songwriter)
- Ben Barres, neurobiologist
- Georgina Beyer, New Zealand's (and the world's) first transsexual mayor (1995) and member of parliament (1999)
- Alexandra Billings, actress; singer; professor
- Joan Jett Blakk, drag performer
- Maddie Blaustein, New York-based VA and comic book writer
- J. S. G. Boggs, Florida-based money artist
- Sister Boom-Boom, drag queen
- Sylvia Boots, actress
- Kate Bornstein, transsexual author, playwright, performance artist and gender theorist
- Ana Paula Botelho, actress
- Jennifer Finney Boylan, transwoman, author, and educator
- Namoli Brennet, transgendered folk singer
- Sam Brodie, competitor in UK Big Brother 7
- Sara Davis Buechner (née David Buechner), concert pianist
- Lady Bunny, drag performer
- Charles Busch, drag performer
C
- Meryn Cadell, writer and singer-songwriter
- Patrick Califia, a writer
- Loren Cameron, transman, photographer
- Wendy Carlos, American transsexual composer and electronic musician
- The Lady Chablis, drag queen
- Cecilia Chung, Activist, San Francisco Human Rights Commissioner
- Angela Clayton, British trans woman, physicist and campaigner
- Roberta Close, Brasilian transsexual model
- Greg Coker, U.S. Musician/Gender Illusionist
- Lynn Conway, transsexual computer scientist, electrical engineer and transgender advocate
- Caroline Cossey, also Tula, British transsexual model, author, and Bond girl
- Jayne County, U.S. rock singer (previously famous as 'Wayne County')
- Roberta Cowell First British male-to-female transsexual
- Molly Cutpurse, English author
D
- Vaginal Davis, drag queen
- Kimberly Devine, actress
- Michael Dillon, physician
- Dreuxilla Divine, drag queen
- Colin Kennedy Donovan, genderqueer/trans disability writer and anti-racist activist
- Michelle Dumaresq, transsexual professional mountain bicyclist
E
- Julian Eltinge, drag performer
- Bulent Ersoy, Turkish transsexual singer
- Jade Esteban Estrada, performance artist
F
- Leslie Feinberg, transgender activist and author
- Bibiana Fernández, Spanish transsexual actress, model, performer
- Chiya Fujino, Japanese writer
G
- Jamison Green, transman, writer & educator
H
- Lauren Harries, famous as child prodigy 'James Harries'
- Harisu, transsexual model, singer and actress
- Jenny Hiloudaki, Greek transsexual model
- Alina María Hernández, "Cachita" on Univision's "El Gordo y La Flaca"
- Clover Honey, drag queen
- Mary Ann Horton, (also Mark Horton), transgendered (bigendered) Internet pioneer
- House of Diabolique, drag queen
I
- Dana International, Israeli best female singer, Eurovision 1998 winner,
- Kim Coco Iwamoto, transgendered woman elected to the Hawaii Board of Education; the highest transgender elected office holder in the United States as of November 2006, according to the media [2]
- Eddie Izzard, comedian, "executive transvestite"
J
- Andrea James, transwoman, entrepreneur, film producer, screenwriter, actress, and activist
- Michelle Josef, Canadian musician
K
- Kamikawa Aya, or Aya KAMIKAWA Tokyo municipal official (first transgendered person to seek elected office in Japan)
- Roz Kaveney, writer and editor[7]
- Parinya Kiatbusaba, also known as Parinya Charoenphol and Nong Thoom, kathoey (transwoman), Muay Thai (kickboxing) champion, model and actress.
- Andreas Krieger, transman, athlete
L
- Mado Lamotte, drag performer
- Danny La Rue, drag performer
- Lisa Lawrence, actress
- Jennifer Jane Leitham, transsexual jazz bassist
- Sophia Lamar, actress, model, singer, clown of God, top chef
- L.E. Leone, newspaper columnist and musician
- Amanda Lepore, transexual icon and model
- Hedda Lettuce, drag performer
- Miss Shangay Lily, drag performer
- Shirley Q Liquor, drag queen
- Vladimir Luxuria, member of the Italian Chamber of Deputies, first transgender member of Parliament in Europe
- Lypsinka (John Epperson), drag queen
M
- Christine Mancini, drag performer
- Mimi Marks, Chicago transgender entertainer
- Brini Maxwell, drag performer
- Deirdre McCloskey, noted American Economist, argued The McCloskey critique
- Siobhan Meow, member of Howard Stern's entourage, The Wack Pack
- Annah Moore, musician, artist, author
- Angela Morley, (née Wally Stott), composer and conductor
- Jan Morris, transsexual author, winner of English Golden Pen Award for a Lifetime's Distinguished Service to Literature
- Sally Mursi, first legally accepted Egyptian MTF-transsexual, see [3] and [4]
N
O
- Terri O'Connell, stock car racer, previously participated in NASCAR under the name J.T. Hayes
P
- Larry Paciotti, porn movie director, transvestite
- Dee Palmer, (née David Palmer), transsexual musician
- Pauline Pantsdown, Australian drag queen and musician
- Grayson Perry, artist whose work sometimes features his female alter ego, Claire. Winner of the 2003 Turner Prize for art
- Charles Pierce, drag performer
- Rachel Pollack, transsexual author
- Genesis P-Orridge, androgynous musician, performer, artist
- Fay Presto, magician
R
- Jennifer Diane Reitz, computer programmer, cartoonist and gender rights advocate
- Dr. Renee Richards, transsexual, professional tennis player
- Martine Rothblatt, transhumanist author.
- Joan Roughgarden, professor of biology; evolution and ecology expert
- RuPaul, AKA RuPaul Andre Charles, American drag queen
S
- Ali Saleem, Pakistani TV personality better known as Begum Nawazish Ali, drag artist
- Antonia San Juan, Spaniard actress.
- José Sarria, drag performer, first LGBT person to run for elective office in the USA, activist, noted fund raiser for AIDS services
- Lily Savage, drag performer
- Erik Schinegger, 1966 women's world champion downhill skier for Austria
- Scott Turner Schofield, writer, performer
- Kemal Shahin, UK celebrity, Big Brother contestant and former esctoday.com news editor
- Steve Stanton, city manager of Largo, Florida, in process of being fired.
- Sandy Stone, transgender activist and author
- Margaret Stumpp, transsexual co-manager of Quantitative Management department at Prudential Financial Inc.
- Jolene Sugarbaker, drag queen
T
- Terre Thaemlitz, musician
- Nong Thoom, Thai kickboxing champion, coach, model, and actress. Subject of the 2003 movie, Beautiful Boxer
- Pussy Tourette, drag performer and singer
U
- Miss Understood, drag performer and entrepreneur
- Pieter Dirk Uys, drag performer
V
- Kelly Van Der Veer, transsexual Big Brother Holland contestant
W
- Stephen Whittle, British trans man, lawyer, writer and educator
- Holly Woodlawn, U.S. drag queen, part of Andy Warhol's Factory and featured in Lou Reed's "Walk on the Wild Side"
X
- Jin Xing, transsexual Chinese dancer
[edit] 20th and 21st century individuals
A
- Gwen Araujo, U.S. pre-operative transsexual girl, murdered 2002 [5]
- Valerie Arkell-Smith, British soldier [6]
B
- Danielle Bunten Berry, U.S. software developer, formerly Dan Bunten, author of several titles for Electronic Arts in the 1980s, died of lung cancer
C
- Fulvia Celica Siguas Sandoval the person with the most Gender Reassignment Surgeries in the world and perhaps the first transsexual in Peru
- Coccinelle, French transsexual performer
- Jackie Curtis, U.S. drag queen who had a friendship with the famous pop artist, Andy Warhol
D
- Candy Darling, part of Andy Warhol's Factory and subject of The Velvet Underground song "Candy Says", and Lou Reed's "Walk on the Wild Side"
E
- Ethyl Eichelberger drag performer, actor, performance artist
- Lili Elbe, Danish transsexual, one of the first women to undergo a crude form of sexual reassignment surgery, through five operations which were completed by 1930. Fifteen months after her final surgery, she either died from complications or faked her own death to avoid the media attention. She is the subject of the 1933 book Man Into Woman, although it is likely she was never biologically male, but rather born intersexual, supposedy with rudimentary ovaries which would conflict with the speculative diagnosis of Klinefelter's Syndrome
- Bella Evangelista, also known as Elvys Perez, drag performer who was murdered in Washington, D.C. [7]
F
H
- Tyra Hunter, U.S. transsexual woman, died 1995
J
- Marsha P. Johnson, transgender activist, involved in Stonewall (UK), co-founder of Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (STAR).
- Christine Jorgensen, one of the first Americans to have sexual reassignment surgery in 1952
K
L
- Cam Lyman millionaire transman, disappeared in 1987, found murdered in 1997.
M
- Glen Milstead, actor and drag performer also known popularly as Divine, star of many John Waters films
N
- Elizabeth Anne Nelson, transgender activist and writer, born James Lind, died 1998, Nelson was a prolific author of transgender fantasy fiction and co-founder of the publishing house, Reluctant Press
R
- Sylvia Rivera, transgender activist, resisted police at Stonewall on June 27, 1969
- Terri Rogers, English ventriloquist
- Craig Russell, Canadian actor and female impersonator Outrageous
S
- Jeanette Schmid, World famous whistler
- Shabnam Mausi, Eunuch politician from Madhya Pradesh, India
T
- Brandon Teena, U.S. transsexual boy who was murdered, subject of the film Boys Don't Cry [10]
- Billy Tipton, a physically female jazz musician who lived as a man.
V
- Susanna Valenti, a self-identified heterosexual transvestite who wrote columns for Virginia Prince's underground magazine, Transvestia, from 1960 to 1970. Valenti transitioned from a life of periodic cross-dressing to full time living as a woman during a time when the categories of transgender were in flux and the subject of much contestation.
W
- Edward D. Wood, Jr., film-maker, transvestite
[edit] Earlier historical individuals
It is often difficult to construe the gender and sexual identity of pre-modern individuals. In many societies, those whom Western society might consider homosexual or bisexual are or were considered transgendered. Therefore, see also List of famous gay, lesbian, or bisexual people.
Many of these persons cross-dressed during wartime for various purposes. Such people are covered under the article Crossdressing During Wartime.
B
- Herculine Barbin, 19th Century French hermaphrodite
- James Barry, female bodied surgeon who lived as a man throughout his/her life, according to some accounts in order to be able to practice medicine.
E
- Elagabalus, Roman Emperor
- Chevalier d'Eon, French diplomat (1728-1810) who claimed to have been born a girl and later adopted a female persona.
[edit] Fictional individuals
A
- Azure C., a transsexual model on the American soap opera The City. The first transsexual portrayed on American soaps, she was played by Carlotta Chang from 1995 to 1996.
B
- Baron Ashura from Mazinger Z series
- Bel Thorne from the Vorkosigan Saga of books, one of a genetically engineered human race called "herms", who are true hermaphrodites, featuring both male and female sexual anatomy, as well as functioning breasts.
- Birdo, Nintendo's Super Mario Bros 2 character who, according to the original manual, "...thinks he is a girl...He'd rather be called 'Birdetta.'" Eventually sticking with Birdo, she is currently accepted as female and is rumoured to be dating Yoshi.
- Patrick "Kitten" Braden, the heroine of Patrick McCabe's Breakfast on Pluto, which takes place in Ireland during the height of the IRA. Made into a [[film in 2005 starring Cillian Murphy.
- Bree, a pre-operative male-to-female transsexual played by Felicity Huffman in the 2005 film Transamerica.
- Myra Breckinridge, transsexual character in two best-selling novels by Gore Vidal, Myra Breckinridge and Myron, and a well-known film.
- Bridget, biologically male but raised and dresses as a girl. Appears in the Guilty Gear series of fighting games.
C
- Liane Cartman, parent of Eric Cartman and local hermaphrodite in the fictional town of South Park
- Chloe, pre-operative transsexual nightclub singer from the comic book How Loathsome by Ted Naifeh and Tristan Crane.
- Hayley Cropper, transsexual character in the popular British soap opera Coronation Street. First transsexual portrayed on British soaps, since 1998.
- Claire, an African-American transgender character played by actress Sheryl Lee Ralph on Showtime's Barbershop: The Series in 2005
D
- Henry "Hildegarde" Desmond, a hetero male who dresses as a woman to live in a budget "women's hotel" in the TV sitcom Bosom Buddies. Portrayed by Peter Scolari.
F
- Frank N. Furter, the transvestite antagonist of the cult musical Rocky Horror Show and Rocky Horror Picture Show.
G
- Herbert Garrison, schoolteacher in the fictional town of South Park, who, in the Season 9 premiere, underwent sexual reassignment surgery.
H
- Judge Constance Harm, from The Simpsons makes mention of when she was a little boy.
- Emily Howard, the "unconvincing transvestite" character in the BBC sketch show Little Britain.
J
- Geraldine Jones, an African-American character played by comedian Flip Wilson of his NBC-TV variety show The Flip Wilson Show from 1971-1974
M
- Dorothy Michaels, a male actor posing as an actress in the film Tootsie. Portrayed by Dustin Hoffman.
- Montana Moorhead, a transsexual actress formerly named "Milton" in the film Soapdish. Portrayed by Cathy Moriarty.
- Ava Moore, transsexual character in the American drama Nip/Tuck, played by Famke Janssen from 2004.
- Roberta Muldoon, a large muscular transexual woman (former male football player) in The World According to Garp. Portrayed by John Lithgow in the film version.
N
- Nuriko (born Chou Ryuuen), biologically male but living as and referred to as a woman throughout the course of the anime and manga series Fushigi Yūgi. Expresses a wish to be reincarnated as a woman.
O
- Orlando, An Elizabethan era immortal from the novel of the same name by Virginia Woolf. After 200 years, Orlando changes from a man to a woman. Also a 1993 film.
- Princess Ozma of the Land of Oz, temporarily changed into a boy, later restored to girlhood.
R
- Hedwig Robinson, "internationally ignored song stylist" and lead role in Hedwig and the Angry Inch
- Roni, played by Tyra Banks on the CW show All of Us during the 'O Brother Where Art Thou' episode aired on February 24, 2004.
S
- Angel Dumott Schunard, street performer, suffering from AIDs, in the broadway musical Rent.
- Stephen - female character in The Well of Loneliness, a novel by Radclyffe Hall. Commonly thought of as a lesbian, modern reading of the text identifies Stephen as transgendered rather than a lesbian.
^ Edith 'Edie' Stokes, an African-American transgender character played by actress Veronica Redd during The Jeffersons fourth season in 1977.
T
- Nao Tsurumoto, a 15-year-old female from season 6 of the Japanese television drama 3 Nen B Gumi Kinpachi Sensei who despises her female body and knows she is male inside. The season focuses heavily on Nao's trials and peer reactions throughout the 22 episode span. Played by Aya Ueto.
U
- Pauline Urthiel, Plasma Physicist from Larry Niven's Known Space universe. Appeared in the Gil Hamilton detective story Arm. In the story she, along with husband Lawrence Muhammad Ecks (X?), is on a short list of suspects in the murder of prominent scientist Raymond Sinclair, the inventor of a very mysterious (and very deadly) device.
V
- Dono Vorrutyer from the Vorkosigan Saga books, who was born Lady Donna, but surgically had her sex changed to male to prevent her loathed cousin Richars from inheriting the Countship.
W
- Reni Wassulmaier, a filmmaker and DJ in the Grand Theft Auto video game series. She/He was an avant-garde film director of bizarre movies before moving to Vice City in 1984 to shoot "edgy" pop music videos. She/He soon gets another sex change and moves to back to Europe to work in the exotic pornography industry. Fourteen years later she/he moved to Liberty City to be a DJ on the Flashback 95.6 radio station.
- Kip "Buffy" Wilson, a hetero male who dresses as a woman to live in a budget "women's hotel" in the TV sitcom Bosom Buddies. Portrayed by Tom Hanks.
Y
- Sadako Yamamura, the genetically male psychic villain of the Ring series of novels. Victim of a birth disorder causing "her" to have a vagina and breasts. Her physical appearance was that of a very beautiful young woman. (Note: There is no evidence that the version of Sadako portrayed in the Ringu movie series, and it is even less likely that Samara Morgan of the American remake has the same condition)
Z
- Zarf is a transgender rock star on All My Children. He/She is played by Jeffrey Carlson
[edit] Mythological figures
A
- Achilles, as a young man, is sent by his mother to live in the court of Lycomedes disguised as a young woman to keep him safe from war.
- Alfhild, beautiful maiden in Norse mythology who dressed as a man to avoid marrying King Alf
B
- Brihannala, Eunuch in the Hindu epic Mahabharata
C
- Caeneus, born as the woman Caenis, an immensely strong warrior mentioned in Ovid's Metamorphoses. He asked to be, and subsequently was, transformed into a man after being raped by Mercury (sometimes Poseidon in some versions) as a girl. In the versions of the story in which Caenus is raped by Poseidon he is later granted immunity to all mortal weapons by sea god, who feels guilty.
I
- Iphis, according to Ovid's Metamorphoses, was born female and raised as a boy by his mother to avoid death at the hands of her father. He eventually appealed to the Egyptian god Isis and was changed into a male, so that he could marry his love, Ianthe
J
- Pope Joan, who according to legend was a cross-dressing woman elected Catholic Pope (given the name "John VIII"), whose reign was variously attributed to several periods of history. She allegedly died or was murdered in childbirth during a papal procession. There is no evidence for her existence, and the story originates from a much later date than the purported events.
T
- Tiresias, soothsayer to Oedipus from Greek mythology changed into a woman and back in an unrelated tale
Y
- Guan Yin, Bodhisattva of Compassion, who has both been depicted as male and female, and, according to the Lotus Sutra, has the ability to change form in order to help people.
[edit] Books
- Wheelwright, Julie (1989). Amazons and Military Maids: Women Who Dressed As Men in Pursuit of Life, Liberty and Happiness. London: Pandora Books. ISBN 0-04-440494-8
- The Mirror Makes No Sense, March 2006 ISBN 1-4259-2404-2
[edit] See also
- Transgender Law Center
- National Center for Transgender Equality
- List of transgender-related topics
- Transgendered musicians
- List of gay, lesbian or bisexual people
- Transgenderism
- Category:Transgender and transsexual people
- Category:Transgender people and behavior
- Transgender in film and television
- LGBT comic book characters
- Gay young adult novels
[edit] References
- ^ [1]
- ^ Calpernia Addams, Mark 947: A Life Shaped by God, Gender, and Force of Will (Writers Club Press, 2002). ISBN 0-595-26376-3
- ^ Transformation Magazine (USA) 14 February 2001, Iss. 35, by: Marlayna Lacie, "Boy-Girl of the Month - Allenina's Asian Baroque"
- ^ http://observer.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,6903,1287951,00.html#article_continue
- ^ Press For Change: UK: Nadia's Conundrum (Digital Spy)
- ^ Charlie Anders' Press in regards to Choir Boy
- ^ Kaveney, Roz. About Roz Kaveney. Glamourous Rags. Retrieved on 2007-03-16.
[edit] External links
- National Center for Transgender Equality
- Transgender Law Center
- Transsexual Road Map
- Remembering Our Dead
- Successful TransMen
- Transsexual Women's Successes
- The Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Historical Society
- The Transgender Buddhist community online