Elizabeth Coffey
The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guideline for biographies. (April 2019) |
Elizabeth Coffey | |
---|---|
Born | 1948 (age 75–76) Brooklyn, New York, U.S. |
Occupation | Film actress |
Known for | Dreamlanders |
Children | 1 (adoptive) |
Elizabeth Coffey Williams (born 1948)[1] is an American actress. Coffey, a transgender woman, had small but notable roles in four of the early films of John Waters, becoming a member of the Dreamlanders, his regular cast.
Biography
Coffey was born in 1948 in Brooklyn, New York, as the oldest of five children.[1] At the age of 5, her family moved to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where she was raised. She went to an Northeast Catholic High School, a private, all-males Catholic, where she often rebelled against the dress code by presenting as a woman, wearing long hair with ponytails, and dating boys.[2] According to her, her parents were "too uptight" to talk to her about her gender identity, at one point confronting her if she was a "queer" and splitting her up from the rest of her siblings. Eventually, they accepted it and let her return to the family.[3]
In 1970, she hitchhiked to Baltimore, Maryland, where she openly identified as a transgender woman.[1] While there, she met filmmaker John Waters while in the basement of a church during the premiere of one of his earlier films, Multiple Maniacs. Upon learning that Coffey was a transsexual, he described to her the idea to include her in his next film as a flasher.
At the time of her first film appearance in Waters' Pink Flamingos (1972), Coffey was a pre-operative transgender woman who had already undergone hormone therapy to develop breasts and female features. She played the part of a beautiful woman who turns the tables on a perverted flasher/voyeur by exposing herself and flashing him, sending him fleeing in shock.[4] Coffey underwent gender confirmation surgery a week after her scene was filmed, becoming one of the first trans women to get gender confirmation surgery from Johns Hopkins Hospital.[1][5] Soon after, Coffey joined his regular cast of the Dreamlanders, Waters' ensemble of regular cast and crew members, also appearing the films, Female Trouble (1974) playing Earnestine, the sorrowful death row cellmate of Dawn Davenport (Divine), Desperate Living (1977), and Hairspray (1988).
Later on, she moved to Rockford, Illinois, where she married and adopted a child.[1] She remains in contact with Waters, inagurating gender-neutral bathrooms at the Baltimore Museum of Art along with him in 2021,[6] and has worked with several AIDS-related charities.[citation needed]
She currently lives in Philadelphia in the John C. Anderson Apartments, an LGBTQ-friendly senior living community, where she co-facilitates TransWay, a trans and gender non-conforming support group.[1][7] She once lived in Rockford, Illinois.
Filmography
- Pink Flamingos (1972) as trans flasher
- Female Trouble (1974) as Earnestine
- Desperate Living (1977) as bartender
- Hairspray (1988) as Dance kid mom
References
- ^ a b c d e f Funk, Mason (2016-08-08). "Elizabeth Coffey-Williams". The Outwords Archive. Retrieved 2023-09-12.
- ^ Wolfson, Jill (1973). "Tete a Tete With a Transsexual". Philadelphia Inquirer.
- ^ Cofrey Williams, Elizabeth. "Trans Woman Reflects On Her Journey: "It Was Real For Me And I Was Okay With It."". I'm From Driftwood. Retrieved 2023-09-12.
- ^ Shock Value, John Waters, p. 129
- ^ "Coming Out As Transgender When There Was No Language To Describe It". NPR.org. Retrieved 2021-10-07.
- ^ Gunts, Ed (2021-10-28). "John Waters and trans activist Elizabeth Coffey unveil the first all-gender restrooms at the Baltimore Museum of Art; museum sets date for new John Waters exhibit". Baltimore Fishbowl. Retrieved 2023-09-12.
- ^ Zipkin, Michele (2020-03-25). "Leaders in trans community share guidelines and resources during pandemic". Philadelphia Gay News. Retrieved 2021-10-07.