Lana Wachowski at the Human Rights Campaign

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The headline is kind of sensational but the video is of Lana Wachowski accepting the Visibility Award from the Human Rights Campaign. She talks about being accepted, coming out and that sometimes you need to do something for others. She's funny, even when relating the bad times and obviously uncomfortable . It's about a half hour long.

I'm in the middle of reading Cloud Atlas at the moment and recommend it to all. It's not your standard novel - the movie opens Friday.

Jamie

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Now I have to read the book...

Andrea Lena's picture

...I've commented before; she has for me the most endearing smile. An expression that feels like it is showing a heart set free. I get moved to tears every time I see her face; the face of how things might be? I'm such a crybaby. Sorry... Here's another view of this adorable girl.

lana_wachowski_a_p.jpg

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

Happy.

I agree Drea I love her smile.


I wear this crown of thorns
Upon my liar's chair
Full of broken thoughts
I cannot repair

I'd only seen still photos of her

Before I watched this video, I had only seen stills of her with that smile shining out of every one. But during the speech she is so uncomfortable and vulnerable; you know that she would rather be almost anywhere else. You see her chewing on her fingers and flicking her hair. (And what hair, kind of psychedelic raggedyann-meets-rasta.) Yet she knows - and tells us - how important it is she be there, be an example. And even through her nervousness she shines.

After hearing her story, with the humour she uses to tell it, I would LOVE to see what she could do with a TG romantic comedy.

Jamie

It's worth watching the video

rebecca.a's picture

The transcript of the video is also available, linked from THR article, but it's worth watching the video from about 5 minutes in, because she's quite charming.

My favorite bits from the video:

I was valedictorian of my class and Mr. Henderson my teacher informed me that I got to give a speech as a result of being valedictorian. I didn’t think this was a very big deal. I’m not sure about this little award thing, either, but. Being painfully shy I declined. I said, “Let someone else be valedictorian.” He didn’t like this answer. He said, “That’s not how this works.” He said he understood how I felt, no one likes giving speeches -- why do we do it? -- but sometimes I had to think not just about myself but about my class and my parents, who would be very proud of me, he said. There are some things that we have to do for ourselves, but there are other things that we have to do for other people.

and

I am completely horrified by the “talk show,” the interrogation and confession format, the weeping, the tears of the host, whose sympathy underscores the inherent tragedy of my life as a transgender person. And this moment fulfilling the cathartic arc of rejection to acceptance without ever interrogating the pathology of a society that refuses to acknowledge the spectrum of gender in the exact same blind way they have refused to see a spectrum of race or sexuality.

and

After school I go to the nearby Burger King and write a suicide note. It ends up being over four pages. I’m a little talkative. But it was addressed to my parents and I really wanted to convince them that it wasn’t their fault, it was just that I didn’t belong. I cry a lot as I write this note, but the staff at Burger King has seen it all before, and they seem immune.

I love love love Cloud Atlas the book, but I didn't like the movie much (I saw it in Toronto a month ago). For all that, my respect for Ms Wachowski has gone up quite a lot. She's got talent as a speaker. And she's got dignity.


not as think as i smart i am

None

Andrea Lena's picture

Cloud Atlas is a 2004 novel, the third book by British author David Mitchell. It won the British Book Awards Literary Fiction Award and the Richard & Judy Book of the Year award, and was short-listed for the 2004 Booker Prize, Nebula Award, Arthur C. Clarke Award, and other awards. (from Wikipedia)

Lana and her brother Andy are the famous sibling directors of The Matrix Trilogy, among several other pictures. She and her brother directed, co-wrote, and co-produced the film. They wrote for Marvel Comics at one time.

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena