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03 January 2012

Hedy Jo Star (1920 - 1999) showgirl, costumier, business woman.

Carl Rollins Hammonds was born in Prague, Oklahoma, the eldest of seven children. He grew small breasts as a teenager, and his mother took him to several doctors including a ‘brain specialist’, but would not consent to exploratory surgery. She was told that Carl would not live past 35, or that he would go insane.

From age 17 Hammonds worked as a half-man-half-woman in carnival, and then as an ‘exotic dancer’, and took the name Hedy Jo Star.

Hedy was drafted in 1942, and was in the press after making a fuss about not cutting her long hair. She served as a female impersonator in the US Army shows.

After the war, she returned to carnival life. She was a friend and colleague with Tony Midnite, and both of them made costumes for other people. Hedy was the owner-manager of the Hollywood State Revue, a troupe of female dancers, one of whom was Vicki Marlane. They played state fairs in summer, and in winter Hedy worked as a hypnotist in nightclubs.

Just after Christine Jorgensen was in the news in 1954 Hedi wrote her autobiography, I Changed My Sex!, which was only a slight exaggeration.

In 1956 she saw a female endocrinologist in New York.
“My face was covered during the examination with a sheet. Then my doctor and her colleagues examined me. Later my doctor explained to me that what she was planning to do was illegal under New York law, which is the reason the other specialists she consulted wished to remain anonymous.”
The doctor put Hedy on estrogen and arranged breast-enhancement. Despite testimony from twelve physicians that Hedy should have gender surgery, the New York State Medical Society refused permission because of the mayhem laws.

In 1958 Hedy, by then two years on estrogen, applied to the Johns Hopkins Hospital. She received an answer by letter three months later:
“We do realize that you are psychologically more comfortable in your role as a female and perhaps it would be wise for you to continue as you have done in the past”
 but her request was refused on the grounds of her not being intersex, and that the surgery “might in actuality constitute mayhem”.

A few years later she saw Dr Harry Benjamin who referred her to Elmer Belt in Los Angeles. She was saving up for this when, early in 1962 and just before Belt discontinued doing genital surgery, a friend referred her to a doctor in Chicago who, after an examination, phoned the Methodist Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, and she had an appointment. The Memphis doctor and four colleagues examined her and then warned her that the operation was extremely dangerous, that she might not survive, and if so may not be able to walk. However the operation was done the next day. Hedy prayed to God “not to let her live to leave the operating table if she was doing wrong and going against His will”. One of the doctors punctured her urinary track and corrective surgery was needed. She was in hospital for 45 days.

Novel Books, associated with The National Insider republished her 1955 autobiography, and she wrote an advice column for the National Insider which also was later published as a book.

Hedy married a doctor from Boston, Dr Ralph Bucinskas (1943 - 2003). They moved to Las Vegas where she developed her career as a costumier. One of her first clients was the impersonator, Kenny Kerr, then just starting his career. She was known for her expensive costumes for dancers, strippers, female impersonators, clowns, burlesque and circus performers, and for Elvis Presley and Anne Margaret.

She died at age 79.
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Some say that her birth name was Joseph Starke.  This is repeated by Ward Hall in his comment on the article in Tribe.   When his comment was reprinted in Side Show World, this datum was removed.   Roy Richmond is Hedy’s nephew and he is able to assure us that this rumor is untrue.

Does anybody have any idea who the female endocrinologist in New York in 1956 was?

Likewise who was the surgeon in Memphis in 1962?  Did he ever do another sex change operation?

Why does nobody mention that I Changed My Sex! precedes Hedy’s operation by 7 years?

Notes towards the social construction of intersex:  Teenage Carl grew small breasts and his mother, being freaked out by that took him to a series of doctors.   However in 1958 the doctors at Johns Hopkins found that Hedy did not meet their definition of intersex.

There are comments in some sources about Hedy having America's first complete sex change even though she did not have genital surgery until 1962.  The implication here is that Christine Jorgensen did not have vaginoplasty in Denmark, and not until a date in the 1960s that is not specified in most sources.  However to even bring up this claim is to totally ignore a) all the persons who had surgery with Elmer Belt b) those who had already gone to Dr Burou in Casablanca c) those who had had surgery in Europe e.g Tamara Rees in the Netherlands in 1954 and Sally Berry in Sweden in 1953-8.

Sandy Stone mentions Hedy Jo Star in her "The Empire Strikes Back", with the quote: "I wanted the sensual feel of lingerie against my skin, I wanted to brighten my face with cosmetics. I wanted a strong man to protect me."   This kind of stereotyped femininity  was expected of 1950s women, cis and trans alike, but nowadays is rather suspect and is even liable to be labeled 'autogynephilic', even in androphilic early transitioners as Hedy definitely was.

15 comments:

  1. Apparently, full sex changes have been going on for much longer than we've been told! The first one my mother and father ever heard of, and openly talked about, was also Chistine Jorgenson. I can't help but wonder why that is? Perhaps I am that much of a threat to society as a male to female.

    You keep on writing, I promise to keep on reading!

    ReplyDelete
  2. The nephew is my father and his name is Roy Richmond, not "Ray". :)

    ReplyDelete
  3. So that means we are related. Hedy is my great great aunt. Her sister Naomi is my great grandma

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    Replies
    1. Naomi is my great grandma

      Delete
  4. and I don't see any info about Hedy's busy and successful years in Boston designing for the Combat Zone dancers. It was Hedy who came up with my Miss Bicentennial costume. I dismissed her idea immediately thinking she was just joking since everything in Boston was red white & blue that year. but after giving it some thought and with her instance I thought it would be hysterical.. The patriotic Stripper. ( julie713@cox.net )

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous29/7/24 00:08

      My roommate designed and sewed costumes for Hedy Jo Star on Boylston St in the 1970s. I'd visit on my lunch hour, and sometimes Hedy would let me try on an accessory. The one I remember best was a huge headdress made of turquoise ostrich plumes! Hedy was always very welcoming, and her husband Buzzy was a great guy. (I remember how she'd answer the phone - every time as I recall - "Star Costume No Rentals.")

      Delete
  5. I'm made a web page about Aunt Hedy Jo Star - it is www.HedyJoStar.com I am going to release her book with my additions. I am not going to use a publisher, they want me to sign my rights away to it. As one is ordered, I will have it bound as a note book style book. DrRoyERichmon@cox.net
    Dec. 22, 2016

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. So why, after avoiding the publisher's and the retailer's cut, do you end up charging more than a regularly published book, and depriving buyers of free postage via Amazon or Book Depository. You are charging C$57 to customers in Canada. That is too much!

      Delete
  6. Hedy Jo was a dear friend of mine for decades. She was very talented and I worked for her for decades! It was so sad to have her pass!

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    1. Anonymous6/3/24 09:46

      I worked for Hedy too. She was creative industrious and had her own style. Fresh out of art school I learned how to fit and cut a garment to any outrageous style or body. She taught me a lot and I didn’t even realise she’d been a man. She and Buzzy were great friends.

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  7. My name is Roy E. Richmond, I'm informing you that I have published a book on my Aunt Hedy Jo Stars life. She was the very first sex change and a successful one in the USA.
    You can visit my web page that contains a lot of information and pictures, and also the cover for the book and link to order one if you wish to. The price is $17.96 plus tax and shipping.

    Please visit the web page and forward to anyone you would think may be interested in learning the true story. www.HedyJoStar.com

    I welcome a call from you if you have any ideas of how to promote her books. 405-204-713 central time.

    ReplyDelete
  8. On typing www.HedyJoStar.com one is immediately transferred to https://drroyerichmond.wixsite.com/hedyjostar. If you then click 'Order Book' one is is warned of 'Adult Content'. Really! Photos of a fully dressed adult woman are 'Adult Content'!!!

    One is then tranferred to www.alpublishing.net. However the HedyJoStar book is not listed on alpublishing's author page for Roy E Richmond: https://www.alpublishing.net/new-page-5.

    There are more books by Roy E Richmond at http://www.treeoflifeok.com/books--e-books-pdf.html.

    Roy E Richmond is a preacher and theologian. As many trans persons have suffered bigotry from preachers and theologians, it would be useful if Roy E Richmond made a clear statement that he does not share such bigotry.

    Dr Richmond, many of your theology books are available on Kindle. Please put the Hedy Star book book on Kindle also.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous1/11/24 15:36

      Zagria, I know it's been many years since you posted this but I stumbled upon these comments while working on our (Hedy Jo's) heritage and family tree.
      Dr. Roy E Richmond, my father, is a "preacher and theologian" as you've stated, but he is also the one living family member of Hedy Jo Star who has attempted to keep her story alive. He has had countless conversations with people who knew and loved Aunt Hedy Jo and he is the one who refused to stop with the Methodist Hospital of Memphis, Tennessee when they assured him they would "never have performed a gender-affirming operation" until he was able to track down her medical records, which we have and are copied in the book, from June 23, 1962.
      Despite all obstacles, including those of family members, Roy proudly shares his love of his aunt through his research and has given way more books away than sells. You can find more about his heart and what he teaches on in any of his books or his teachings when can be found online with a simple search of his name.

      His message is not a religious one, he does not identify as Christian, he teaches Love and that we are all One. I am sorry that you have experienced such bigotry that would make you ask for a statement before you would even consider content provided by him.

      Delete
    2. Some of the links from 2019, especially www.HedyJoStar.com no longer work. The 'adult content' warning has been taken down.

      However there is no statement anywhere on-line that Roy Richmond, a profilic writer of bible books, has anything nice at all to say about trans persons with the one exception being within his family, and whose book he is selling.

      Richmond's daughter, who did not care to give a name, thinks I am unreasonable to ask for such a statement - this at a time when Christians and conservatives are passing anti-trans laws, and spending tens of millions on anti-trans advertising. Yes there are some preachers and writers of bible books who have spoken out against the hatred which they decry as 'not in my name'. Richmond in not one such.

      Most of Richmond's bible books are available as Kindles for a reduced and reasonable price. But not the Hedy Star book! - I requested a kindle version 5 years ago.

      Richmond's book would appear to be a reprint of Hedy Jo Star's 1963 I Changed my Sex. This was her first pre-op autobiography. Post-op she published My Unique Change. This latter is available online as a PDF. Why would one need to read both?

      Incidentally, there is no mention in My Unique Change of a nephew called Roy.

      Delete
  9. Anonymous26/9/24 10:40

    I had a roommate in the late 1970s who was a designer and seamstress for Hedy at Star Costume on Boylston St. I'd meet my roommate for lunch on occasion and sometimes Hedy would let me try on the headdresses! I'm pretty sure that her husband Buzzy (a really nice, low-key guy) was a retired cop.

    ReplyDelete

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