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  • Lucas' Search For His Identity

    LUCAS' SEARCH FOR HIS IDENTITY

    Hartford Courant
    Sept 20 2005

    Smith Grad Is One Of Four Transgender Students In Sundance Series

    By ROGER CATLIN, Courant TV Critic It was a simple choice for the
    Oklahoma high school senior to attend Smith College in Northampton.

    "Academically it's one of the top schools in the country," says the
    student, who graduated from Smith with highest honors in May. "It's
    one of the only schools that offer a neurosurgery major. And it had
    very good financial aid. It just happens to be a women's college."

    The gender issue wasn't quite as black and white for the student,
    born as Leah 22 years ago but more recently known as Lucas.

    He didn't realize there was such a thing as transgender students -
    and that he was one - until he got there. Not that it was some kind
    of campus fad.

    "It's not something that suddenly happened to me," Lucas says by
    phone from his home near Tulsa. "I spent my entire life with a certain
    problem. I didn't have any language to use to understand where I was
    coming from.

    "As a young child, I was more masculine, and I had trouble relating
    to people in ways they could understand. When you're 2, you hardly
    know what transgender is.

    "The issue has been there my entire life," Lucas says. "That made it
    very identifiable when somebody gave me a word for it. That's when I
    realized it. I started taking steps to let people I knew that I knew."

    At first that came in making more visible the transgender support
    group at Smith. It comes with a wider impact in a new eight-episode
    series that follows Lucas and three other transgender students from
    other campuses.

    "TransGeneration" begins tonight on Sundance Channel, in cooperation
    with the Logo network.

    It's produced by World of Wonder, maker of such films as "The Eyes
    of Tammy Faye," "Party Monster" and "Monica in Black and White."

    "They have a way of looking at characters who might be challenging for
    audiences or people might have preconceptions about and finding a way
    to really humanize them," says Adam Pincus, senior vice president of
    original programming at Sundance, who said he got the idea for the
    series from a New York Times article.

    "One of the things that we've been trying to do with the documentary
    work is to find stories and characters who are really pushing things
    in new directions and challenging the status quo," Pincus says.

    "These kids are pretty radically redefining what their gender identity
    means to them. And they're smart, and they're articulate."

    Besides Lucas, the subjects are:

    Gabbie, 21, a male turning female at the University of Colorado,
    entering her junior year, the only one of the four to undergo surgery
    during filming.

    Raci, 20, a male-to-female entering her sophomore year at California
    State University in Los Angeles, who was most reticent to tell her
    fellow students what the camera crews were about. "They're doing a
    documentary on women in college," she'd fib.

    T.J., 24, a graduate student at Michigan State University, an activist
    who has the most trouble getting accepted by her parents, who are of
    Armenian descent.

    "The only thing these four have in common is that they're dealing
    with an issue of gender in some way," says Jeremy Simmons, director
    and supervising producer of "TransGeneration." "These are four very
    different experiences we're showing."

    "We're almost like polar opposites," Lucas says of his fellow subjects,
    whom he met at an early screening of the film.

    The producers said they tried to reach out through groups and on the
    Internet to find the right people. In the case of Lucas, it was his
    roommate, Kasey, whom they had originally come out to interview a
    year ago. After months of filming, Lucas says, "We didn't know who
    was going to be the focus until after the school year ended."

    Why agree to do it?

    "I guess overall I wanted people to appreciate the aspects of me
    that they can relate to that didn't have anything to do with gender
    reassignment," says Lucas, who adds that he's been a fan of documentary
    film and Sundance.

    Parents of all the subjects eventually become part of the series, and
    Lucas' mother emerges as "so incredibly likable," Pincus says. "It's
    so counter to what some people's preconceptions would be about what
    that woman's reaction and experience of her son is," he says. "She
    goes through a whole process that you see in the course of the show."

    Now that it's about to be seen, "my mom is very anxious," Lucas says.

    "She's worried someone she knows is going to see it, which is
    understandable. My dad is not so anxious about that, but he's extremely
    aware on how it's being marketed."

    The series' promotional catchphrase is: "Four college students
    switching more than their majors."

    "He doesn't understand that you have to trivialize the issue to create
    public interest," Lucas says.

    Lucas says he feels a little anxious in advance of his life's being
    shown on national TV. "But mostly I'm excited in a positive way."

    As he decides his next move in his graduate education, he says he
    feels more comfortable in Oklahoma, ironically, than he did in the
    famously liberal enclave.

    "I'd come home and just be read as male," he says. "Then I'd go back
    to Northampton, and there'd be so many lesbians there, they'd know
    me as female."
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