A chance encounter in a bar in Austin Texas with an eloquent drag queen was the impetus for filmmakers Antonio Santini and Dan Sickles to embark on a journey that would take them to Puerto Rico to explore the world of transgender people and drag queens. What they discovered and recorded in this fascinating new documentary was how the lives and the dreams of these two groups of people ranged from wanting to be successful beauty queens to simply being able to pass undetected in the street as a woman.
And then there were others like Queen Bee and Alberic Prados who as drag queens live as men by day and then transform into ridiculously glittering women at night to perform in gay bars. One of their number Jason Carrión aka April , succeeds beyond his wildest dreams and gets selected to appear on Ru Pauls’ Drag Race . He is not totally surprised as evidently every season at least one of the contestants on this TV show is Puerto Rican.
What shines through all their stories is the sheer optimism. Even Sophia, a New-Yorker who had moved there because she had been told she would get laid easily (!) and is now a fully-transitioned woman. She is overweight and is hardly glamorous but is determined to succeed in her last remaining ambition of being able to shop in the supermarket without creating attention. And stick-thin Samantha who could only afford less-than-satisfactory black market hormones and has now been forced to temporary stop her transitioning is defiant that society should simply accept her as she is.
Whether is was the filmmakers presence that propelled the girls, or just their luck at being in the right place at the right time, but they were able to record then collectively organize into the Butterfly Trans Foundation in order to improve their lot. They marched on the Capital and their testimony before the State Legislature was so successful that it helped the passing of a piece of Landmark legislation to give their equal rights. This was exactly what some of them like Sandy have always wanted as she could finally stop doing demeaning sex work and get a real job like everyone else.