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Laverne Cox wrote ‘Transcendent’ because she hoped her story could help: NPR

Laverne Cox wrote 'Transcendent' because she hoped her story could help: NPR

Laverne Cox says that from a young age, “I always had music on my mind.” His new memoir is called Excellent. She is shown above in New York in April 2026.

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images


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Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

For more than a decade, Laverne Cox has been one of the most visible trans women in America. But 15-20 The star says that she spent most of her childhood hiding herself in a mobile phone.

A turning point came when she was in third grade on a church field trip to Six Flags. He bought a paper fan to cool himself and caught his teacher’s attention.

“I was having a Scarlett O’Hara moment, fanning myself,” says Cox. “And then later that day, my mom comes in and tells me she got a call from the school… and (my teacher) said if we didn’t get me into therapy right away I was going to wear a dress and end up in New Orleans.”

When she was 8 or 9 years old, Cox was sent to conversion therapy, where, she says, a therapist suggested she inject herself with testosterone. “The idea was that it would make me more manly,” she says. “Thank God, my mother said no to it.” But Cox knew he needed to leave mobile.

In his new memoir, ExcellentCox writes about her journey from mobile to show business. She recalls being brutally bullied by other children at school – a situation made worse by her mother’s reaction: “My mother … instead of protecting me or taking care of me or asking if I was OK, she made it my fault,” she says.

In the 1990s, she moved to New York City and began auditioning for roles, first as a dancer and then as an actor. He also began experimenting with gender norms; He began his medical transformation in 1998 at the age of 26.

For Cox, writing her memoir is an act of resistance and healing: “After 2023, it became very clear to me that we, trans people, have lost culture,” she says. “I knew this was the beginning of a disaster in terms of policy. … The dehumanization was very clear to me, and so I think I also thought maybe a more humanizing story might help.”

Interview highlights

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He is still angry at being bullied as a child

As an adult, I get angry at boys. I am angry at my mother. I want to protect that little boy. I am very angry. I am very hurt. … There’s also anger about all the kids I’ve met who are trans or queer who are still experiencing this, and anger to know that in states that have passed anti-trans laws, the percentage of bullying has skyrocketed. …There is rhetoric in the media that dehumanizes and stigmatizes trans people. And this creates a permission structure. If, like, your governor and your state legislators are doing it, if your teachers and pundits on TV are doing it, then certainly kids are encouraged to do it. And this makes me very angry.

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