She’s
a Boy I Knew
reviews
Inside Out: Trans doc She's a Boy I Knew
AUDIENCE FAVORITE / The honesty of Gwen Haworth & family
Denise Sheppard / Xtra / Thursday, May 08, 2008
In her amazing video She's a Boy I Knew, Gwen Haworth documents
her own transition and the reaction of her family.
At a time when small children are thinking about their first day
of school and how to ride a bike, Gwen Haworth (who was at the time
a young boy named Steven) knew that her gender identity was awry.
Even at that oft-innocent age her instincts were to keep those desires
secret from everyone, something she kept to herself for more than
two decades. "I've been aware of this since I was four,"
says Haworth. "That meant 23 years of keeping this secret hidden,
23 years of self-hate and internalized transphobia."
The frustration in her words is palpable. But these days the emotion
that resonates from Haworth is peace, a softness of spirit. This
is no queer tragedy. In fact, Haworth's story is inspiring and worth
celebrating — and comes complete with a happy ending.
The ending however is really just another beginning, in the form
of a touching film entitled She's a Boy I Knew. Haworth's
first- and second-person account of her evolutionary journey pre-
and post-transition takes on a host of brave topics in front of
the camera, asking difficult questions not just of herself but also
her parents, her siblings, her ex-wife and her dearest friends.
As Haworth tells it, being trapped in the wrong body was incredibly
difficult, but having no access to stories of successful transitions
— either on film or in books — meant that the process
was far more difficult and confusing for her and her family than
it needed to be. "When I came out, people important to me didn't
really know what it meant to be a transsexual," says Haworth.
"There were a lot of things to learn, yet there wasn't anything
out there to watch that we were aware of. Trans women are often
seen as monsters or victims in the media.... I always saw either
the victims or victimizers, the serial killers, gender as performance
and that grey zone between what is crossdressing, what is drag.
"There wasn't anything that showed a family experience, to
see other people like them going through the difficult questions
but still being able to be there for each other through hard times.
The suicide rate in the trans community is really high and a large
part of that is through isolation and depression because of not
having those people to fall back on.
"I hope that by showing my family's experience, that would
give other people something to dialogue from."
The award-winning filmmaker decided to make She's a Boy I Knew
her thesis project while finishing up her MFA at the University
of British Columbia. The timing — initially filming her family
just after her fourth surgery and the legally official transition
from male to female — was a conscious decision to document
her family's reaction to her transition over time. "What I
wanted to get across to people was not necessarily the initial surface
level frustration, but rather what was going on inside my family.
If I had made it five years later, people would have forgotten a
lot more, pain would have felt more distant, it wouldn't have been
truthful to the emotion of that time.
"I really wanted this film to be that resource tool that wasn't
there for any of us, and they understood that." Haworth acknowledges
how difficult this process was on her and her family but encouraged
her kin to speak honestly so that others might learn from and relate
to them. "It is not meant to be an objective documentary,"
says Haworth. "It is intended to be very from-the-heart. Seeing
a lot of my transition reflected through my family's eyes, there's
more empathy for everyone."
Some of the most moving moments on film take place in the form
of conversations between Gwen and her military-career father. What
came out of his hardened exterior was pure heart. "It is an
amazing thing that I couldn't have predicted. He could have been
the hardest to access. But he was so there — so many of us
have those silent fathers that don't speak out — and it hits
home to see that."
Haworth's film has been warmly embraced by the Canadian film community.
After its debut at the Vancouver International Film Festival last
fall it won the People's Choice Award for most popular Canadian
film. It also won the Women in Film and Television Vancouver Artistic
Merit Award, the first time that award has been given to a transsexual
woman. Haworth continues to move forward with the aim of getting
the doc seen at every film festival and in every movie house interested
in showing her work. But she is definitely taking time to appreciate
everything as it is unfolding.
"So much of my life has been about this moment. All the hiding,
the fear, the feeling that people wouldn't accept me. I cried so
much making this film, I gushed buckets and buckets.
"I've learned to love and appreciate these people so much
more from hearing their words and learning more about them in the
process."
She's a Boy I Knew screens at 2:30pm on Sat, May 24 at
Isabel Bader.
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