Road show tranny
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Lauren Harries teeters into the lobby of the London hotel where we meet, her long, gym-honed legs accentuated by vertiginous heels and a skirt so short that it makes the commissionaire blush. A snug cashmere sweater accentuates her large bust and tiny 24 in waist. Her hair — a tumble of blonde curls — and her striking broad smile are the only giveaways of something still more remarkable than her appearance. For Lauren first sprang into the public eye as a precocious year-old antiques expert called James, who famously appeared on the Antiques Roadshow and Wogan. That was in the late s — and the intervening years have not been easy. Even this new life as a woman has been, at times, traumatic, as she explains today in a rare interview.


Trans* Identities and Lives Glossary




Trans* Identities and Lives Glossary | Gender and Sexuality Center
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The Tranny Roadshow
Standing tall in a pair of black-and-white wedge sandals, year-old Linda Bedore put a harmonica to her bright red lips and began to play. Bedore was one of nine self-identified transgender performers to take the stage in Driscoll Ballroom on Thursday night as part of the Tranny Roadshow. The Roadshow, a multimedia variety show organized by transpeople and performers Kelly Shortandqueer and Jamez Terry, has traveled North America since , entertaining and educating audiences about gender and self expression. The show featured a variety of performers, from folk singers to puppeteers to magicians and harmonica players, and was attended by over DU students, staff and community members. The Day of Silence is a national event that encourages students to remain silent for 24 hours in order to bring attention to anti-gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender harassment at schools and universities.





The questions I often hear are about the inner workings of the medical transition. At the age of 2 years, I asked my mom for a Cinderella dress and Barbies, which she gave me, no questions asked. Until that moment, I thought I was the only person in the entire world who felt the way I did: trapped.


It just pisses me off!