Calpernia Addams

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Calpernia Addams
File:Calpernia Addams.jpg
Calpernia Addams, at 2009 Outfest Legacy Awards
Born (1971-02-20) February 20, 1971 (age 53)
Nashville, Tennessee, US
Residence Los Angeles, California
Occupation Actor, author, musician, transgender activist, spokesperson
Years active 2002–present
Website www.calpernia.com

Calpernia Sarah Addams (born February 20, 1971) is an American male-to-female transgender actor, author, musician and spokesperson, and a noted activist for transgender ideology.[1]

Early life

Addams grew up in Nashville, Tennessee.[2] He served as a Hospital Corpsman with the Navy and United States Marine Corps. During his last year in the military, he came out as a transgender woman.[3] Addams chose the name "Calpernia" from the William Shakespeare play Julius Caesar (a variant spelling of Caesar's wife Calpurnia) and its appearance on a tombstone in the film The Addams Family.[3]

Career

Adams and Andrea James at the Out and Equal Workplace Summit

In 2002, Addams formed Deep Stealth Productions in Hollywood with Andrea James.[4] Deep Stealth creates advocacy and entertainment materials around gender-identification issues and the experiences of differently-gendered people. Addams and James coached Felicity Huffman for her Academy Award-nominated performance as a transgender woman in the film Transamerica.[5]

At the Sundance debut of Soldier's Girl, Addams met Jane Fonda, whose son Troy Garity had played Winchell. Fonda suggested Addams mount an all-transgender production of The Vagina Monologues.[3] The production was to contribute funds and help raise awareness of violence against women; it became the subject of the 2006 documentary film Beautiful Daughters.[6]

A reality television series entitled Transamerican Love Story, featuring Addams choosing among eight suitors, debuted February 11, 2008 on Logo TV.

In April 2008, Addams performed alongside Fonda, Glenn Close, Salma Hayek, Alicia Keys, and others in a tenth-anniversary production of The Vagina Monologues at the Louisiana Superdome.[3][7]

In May 2008, PFLAG (Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays) chose Addams as PFLAG's spokesperson for their educational campaign, This Is Our Love Story.[8] Addams said, "I hope This Is Our Love Story will help young transgender people as they come out. By seeing the happy, confident woman I've become, I hope I can act as a role model for these young people at a critical moment in their development."[9] Addams writes a blog on gender issues for Psychology Today.[10]

Addams has released a single entitled "Stunning", available on iTunes. Addams co-produced the song "The Vagina Song" by Willam Belli, from his debut album The Wreckoning, and made a cameo in the song's music video.[11][12]

In 2015, Addams appeared in the international premiere of "Trans Scripts"[13] a new play by Paul Lucas at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in Scotland. The production received 24 four and five star reviews, a Fringe First Award,[14][15][16] a High Commendation from Amnesty International [17] and was shortlisted for the Feminist Fest Award, the Best of Edinburgh Award, and the Holden Street Theater Award.

Personal life

In 1999, while working as a performer, Addams began dating PFC Barry Winchell. Word of the relationship spread at Winchell's Army base where he was harassed by fellow soldiers, and ultimately murdered.[18] Winchell's murder and the subsequent trial resulted in widespread press[19] and a formal review of the U.S. "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" (DADT) military policy, ordered by President Bill Clinton.[20][21][22] The case became a prominent example used to illustrate the failure of DADT to protect LGBT service members.[19] Addams' and Winchell's romance and the crimes of their abusers are depicted in the film Soldier's Girl, released in 2003. Addams was portrayed by Lee Pace. A subsequent New York Times article, "An Inconvenient Woman", discussed the alleged marginalization and misrepresentation of transgender sexuality even by gay rights activists.[19][23]

Works

  • Calpernia Addams, Mark 947: A Life Shaped by God, Gender, and Force of Will (Writers Club Press, 2002). ISBN 0-595-26376-3

See also

References

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  18. U.S. v. Fisher, 58 M.J. 300 (U.S. Armed Forces Court of Appeals June 17, 2003).
  19. 19.0 19.1 19.2 France, David (May 28, 2000). An Inconvenient Woman. New York Times
  20. Black, Chris (December 13, 1999). Pentagon to review 'don't ask, don't tell' policy. CNN
  21. Becker, Elizabeth (February 2, 2000). Pentagon Orders Training to Prevent Harassment of Gays. New York Times
  22. Pear, Robert (December 12, 1999). President Admits "Don't Ask" policy Has Been Failure. New York Times
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Further reading

  • Jonathan Ames (ed.), Sexual Metamorphosis: An Anthology of Transsexual Memoirs (Vintage, 2005). ISBN 1-4000-3014-5

External links