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''Growing Up Coy'' is a 2016 documentary directed by Eric Juhola and produced by Still Point Pictures. The film documents a landmark 2013 case in which the Colorado Civil Rights Division ruled in favor of allowing transgender six-year-old Coy Mathis to use the girls' bathroom at her elementary school in Fountain, Colorado. The case has been credited with setting off a wave of bathroom bills across the United States in the years following. The film premiered in 2016 at the Human Rights Watch Film Festival and won "Best Documentary" awards at the Raindance Film Festival and BendFilm Festival. It was pitched at the 2014 edition of
Sheffield Doc/Fest Sheffield DocFest (formerly styled Sheffield Doc/Fest), short for Sheffield International Documentary Festival (SIDF), is an international documentary festival and Marketplace held annually in Sheffield, England. The Festival includes film s ...
's MeetMarket. In January 2017, the film was released worldwide on Netflix.


Plot

The film follows Jeremy and Kathryn Mathis and their five children over several years in Colorado. One child, six-year-old Coy Mathis, is a young transgender girl who had come out as transgender in kindergarten. She was able to use the girls' bathroom freely until the first grade when the principal informed the parents that moving forward, Coy would only be able to use the boys bathroom or the nurse's bathroom. Rather than comply, Jeremy and Kathryn pulled their kids from school and worked with the
Transgender Legal Defense & Education Fund The Transgender Legal Defense & Education Fund (TLDEF) is an American civil rights organization that focuses on transgender (LGBT) equality through impact litigation and public policy work. History TLDEF was founded in 2003 by Michael Silverman ...
to file a complaint with the Colorado Civil Rights Division. While awaiting a decision, the Mathises went public with their case and became a magnet for the issue in an international media firestorm, including a notable appearance on ''Katie'' and a spread in '' Rolling Stone''. The film goes on to show how the media pressure put strain on Jeremy and Kathryn's marriage, eventually leading to their separation. In the end, a ruling came down in their favor, enabling transgender people across the state to use facilities that match their gender identity. The ruling was the first of its kind in the United States, and had ripple effects across the country. Shortly after the ruling, California enacted its own law allowing transgender students to pick bathrooms and sports teams they identify with. The
Obama Administration Barack Obama's tenure as the 44th president of the United States began with his first inauguration on January 20, 2009, and ended on January 20, 2017. A Democrat from Illinois, Obama took office following a decisive victory over Republican ...
also issued guidelines that protect transgender students using Title IX as the basis for nondiscrimination. Many states resisted the guidelines and proposed so-called bathroom bills, most of which would force transgender students to use that bathroom that matches their birth certificates. So far, one bathroom bill was made into law,
HB2 The Public Facilities Privacy & Security Act, commonly known as House Bill 2 or HB2, was a North Carolina statute passed in March 2016 and signed into law by Governor Pat McCrory. The bill amended state law to preempt any anti-discrimination o ...
in North Carolina.


Reception

The film has been written about in major publications and lauded for its timeliness and sensitivity around a controversial topic. Cara Buckley of '' The New York Times'' wrote that the film could not be timelier, with transgender issues at the fore. Nigel Smith of '' The Guardian'' wrote that the film was urgent viewing and more than a simple advocacy film. Daniel Walber of ''NonFics'' wrote that the film is a real interrogation of what happens to those who take on the important legal battles of our time. Juhola and Stulberg ask the audience to quite seriously consider what we expect from our civil rights heroes, particularly the ones who do not get to fly home to the big city after the battle. Their message is not simple or straightforward, but contemplative and admirably honest.


References


External links


Official Website

Growing Up Coy
at the Internet Movie Database {{authority control 2016 films Transgender law in the United States 2016 LGBT-related films Discrimination against LGBT people in the United States Transgender in the United States Transgender-related documentary films LGBT rights in the United States Films about trans women 2010s English-language films 2010s American films American LGBT-related documentary films