April Ashley: Model, actress and trans trailblazer dies aged 86

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April Ashley at the Oldie of the Year Awards in 2018Image source, PA Media
Image caption,

Ashley was pictured at the Oldie of the Year Awards in 2018

Actress, model and activist April Ashley has been hailed as a "trans trailblazer" following her death at the age of 86.

Ashley became only the second Briton to undergo male-to-female gender reassignment surgery, in 1960.

She was later photographed for British Vogue and appeared opposite Joan Collins in the film Road to Hong Kong.

Ashley was made an MBE in 2012 for her campaigning work for the transgender community.

Singer Boy George tweeted: "RIP April Ashley! A force of nature and transgender high priestess!"

LGBT campaigner Peter Tatchell called her "the GREAT trans trailblazer for decades" and a "hero".

Image source, PA Media
Image caption,

April Ashley was made an Member of the British Empire (MBE) in 2012

Image source, PA Media
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She received her honour from Prince Charles in a ceremony at Buckingham Palace

Ashley was born to a working-class family in Liverpool in 1935 as one of nine children, and joined the merchant navy as a teenager.

After repeated suicide attempts, she was put ashore and spent time in a psychiatric unit, before moving to London in 1955 and then to Paris.

While in Paris, she saved money for her gender reassignment procedure while performing at the Le Carrousel nightclub, which was famous for its drag acts.

She had the operation in Casablanca, Morocco, in 1960, and later said becoming a woman made her the happiest she had ever been.

Once back in England, she obtained a passport and driving licence which identified her as female.

As a model, Ashley was photographed for Vogue, while her film credits as an actress included a small role in Road to Hong Kong alongside Bob Hope, Bing Crosby and Joan Collins.

Image source, PA Media
Image caption,

Ashley pictured at a press conference in London in 1970

Image source, PA Media
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Ashley's modelling and screen career was cut short after she was outed as transgender by a newspaper

However, it was not widely known that she was transgender, and her career was cut short in 1961 after the Sunday People newspaper outed her.

In 1963, Ashley married aristocrat Arthur Cameron Corbett in Gibraltar.

Their divorce in 1970 became a landmark legal ruling when the judge ruled that she remained a biological man and it was not possible to legally change sex, which therefore rendered the marriage invalid.

Despite the humiliation, she rallied and opened a restaurant, April and Desmond's, in Knightsbridge - but eventually the attention she received from the court case became too much and, following a heart attack in 1975, she retreated to Hay-on-Wye and later the US west coast.

She returned to Britain decades later, in 2005, when she was legally recognised as female in light of the Gender Recognition Act.

In 2012, a year-long exhibition dedicated to Ashley's life opened at Liverpool Museum.

Media caption,

Exhibition for transgender campaigner and former model

Reflecting on her life in an interview, she said: "They were mad, wonderful times. Why not enjoy them? That's always been my philosophy.

"I know more than anyone how people can judge, but I also know if you are true to yourself, that's all that matters."

She advised the actor Eddie Redmayne, in 2015, on how to play a trans woman for his film The Danish Girl, and was thanked in the film's credits.

Following the news of her death, artist Daniel Lismore said, external Ashley was "a pioneer, hero and icon", while ITV presenter Lorraine Kelly described her, external as "one hell of a classy lady".

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Writer and presenter Juno Dawson tweeted:, external "I met [Ashley] just once, and honestly, it was like meeting the queen. The poise, the grace. An icon."

Radio host Stephanie Hirst said, external "[Ashley's] presence, glamour and pure trailblazing gave others hope," while writer and actor Jake Graf described her, external as "a true hero and legend of the trans community".