Christine Beatty | |
---|---|
Born | 1958 San Mateo, California, US |
Occupation | senior software engineer |
Years active | 1989-present |
Known for | transgender author, musician, activist |
Website | www |
Christine Beatty (born in 1958 in San Mateo, California) [1] is an American writer, musician and transgender activist. She is one of the first trans women to perform and record as a heavy metal musician. [2] [3] [4]
Beatty's writing may be found in Spectator Magazine , Transgender Tapestry magazine published by International Foundation for Gender Education (IFGE), the Bay Area Reporter , TransSisters and other LGBT publications. [5] [6] [7] [8] She contributed stories to anthologies Beyond Definition: New Writing from Gay and Lesbian San Francisco [9] and Herotica. [10] In 1993 she published a semi-autobiographical collection of short stories and poetry, Misery Loves Company, an insight into the lives of transgender people and other disenfranchised members of San Francisco's underground community. [1] [11] [12]
In 1994 she co-founded and performed in Glamazon, one of the first transsexual-fronted heavy metal rock bands. [1] [6] [13] The band performed for the first time in San Francisco at Bottom of the Hill in February 1995, [14] recorded its only released CD in 1995–1996, [15] and moved to Los Angeles in 1999. [16] [17] [18] [19] [20]
Beatty uses journalism and public speaking [21] [22] to advocate for the transgender and LGBT communities. Her articles and letters advocating for the transgender community were regularly published in Bay Area Reporter, the San Francisco Bay Times and other LGBT publications. [5] She testified before the San Francisco Board of Supervisors regarding transgender concerns and served on the San Francisco Task Force on Prostitution. [23] In December 1991 she established San Francisco Gender Information, a database of resources for transgender people. [24] In 2004 she performed in an all-transgender presentation [25] of Eve Ensler's play the Vagina Monologues which was featured in the 2006 documentary Beautiful Daughters. [26]
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Christine Jorgensen, born George William Jorgensen Jr., was an American actress, singer, recording artist, and transgender activist. A trans woman, she was the first person to become widely known in the United States for having sex reassignment surgery.
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Susan O'Neal Stryker, best known as Susan Stryker, is an American professor, historian, author, filmmaker, and theorist whose work focuses on gender and sexuality and trans realities. She is a professor of Gender and Women's Studies, former director of the Institute for LGBT Studies, and founder of the Transgender Studies Initiative at the University of Arizona. Stryker is the author of several books and a founding figure of transgender studies as well as a leading scholar of transgender history.
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Cecilia Chung is a civil rights leader and activist for LGBT rights, HIV/AIDS awareness, health advocacy, and social justice. She is a trans woman, and her life story was one of four main storylines in the 2017 ABC miniseries When We Rise about LGBT rights in the 1970s and 1980s.
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Angela Lynn Douglas was an American transgender activist and singer. She was a transgender woman who performed as a rock musician and was a prominent pioneering figure in transsexual activism during the 1970s. She founded the Transsexual Action Organization (TAO), the first international trans organization. She wrote articles about the state of trans politics at the time for the Berkeley Barb, The Advocate, the Bay Area Reporter, Come Out! and Everywoman, in addition to TAO's Mirage magazine and Moonshadow Bulletin. She expressed racist attitudes at various points in her life, and at one point became active with the Nazi party.
Divas Nightclub & Bar was a San Francisco nightclub located at 1081 Post Street in the Polk Gulch neighborhood of San Francisco, California, where it was located since 1998, prior to closing. With three floors, the club catered predominately to trans women and their admirers, until it closed on March 30, 2019. Prior to its location at 1081 Post Street, Divas had opened in 1989 across the street at the corner of Post and Larkin, under the name Motherload.