I Am New Day: Kimberly Reed

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A headshot of New Day filmmaker Kimberly Reed. A trans woman with blonde hair and bright blue eyes smiles widely at the camera wearing hoop earrings. There is a plain orange wall blurred in the background.

My film Prodigal Sons is an autobiographical documentary about my first trip back to my Montana home after coming out as transgender.

I set out to make the film because I felt a responsibility to introduce viewers to what would likely be the first trans person they would “meet.” Frankly, with so much misunderstanding of trans issues, I knew nobody else could get the story right. I also felt a responsibility to make viewers forget I was trans, because only then could the big “TRANS” label on my forehead disappear and allow viewers to humanize someone they’d always seen as different.

I thought the story of my homecoming would be "the film.” But what happened, especially regarding my relationship to my older adopted brother who suffers from a brain injury and mental illness, was much more interesting! Basically, our film is about family, and the love that can hold a family together despite great challenges.

I'm currently completing Dark Money, a documentary about Citizens United and the political nonprofit groups it enabled. More recently, in addition to my filmmaking, I’ve stretched my aesthetic wings and started working in the world of opera, writing libretti and creating films to replace sets.

Learn more about Kimberly's work.

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