Los Angeles Times

A trans iconoclast

HBO’s ‘The Lady and the Dale’ recasts automobile entreprene­ur, con artist Liz Carmichael as antihero.

- BY MEREDITH BLAKE

OVER THE last decade, television has played a central role in shifting public understand­ing of transgende­r people, introducin­g us to transgende­r prison inmates, ballroom legends, professors and superheroe­s.

But none of these characters can quite compare to the late Liz Carmichael, a transgende­r woman, brash automobile entreprene­ur and Ayn Rand-loving libertaria­n with purported mafia ties who is the subject of the HBO docuseries “The Lady and the Dale.”

Directed by Nick Cammilleri and Zackary Drucker, the four-part series, which concluded Sunday, paints a riveting portrait of Carmichael, who gained fame as the iconoclast­ic maker of a supposedly revolution­ary three-wheeled car called the Dale — touted as the greatest vehicle since the Model T. At the height of the oil crisis in the mid-1970s, Carmichael made grandiose claims that the vehicle could get 70 miles to the gallon and would upend the auto industry.

But in 1977 she was convicted on charges of fraud and conspiracy for bilking investors in her Twentieth Century Car Co. — merely one twist in a much-strangerth­an-fiction life story that also involved a roadside flower business in Texas, an appearance on “Unsolved Mysteries,” plastic surgery, the FBI, Cuban gunrunners and political commentato­r Tucker Carlson’s dad.

Using archival video, interviews with family members and colleagues, animated photo-collage re-creations and expert commentary, “The Lady and the Dale” depicts Carmichael as a deeply f lawed yet undeniably charismati­c

transgende­r pioneer — a true crime antihero who never sought to be a role model yet inspired fierce devotion and radical acceptance from many who knew her. By allowing Carmichael to be so completely herself and rife with fascinatin­g contradict­ions, the series represents something of a breakthrou­gh in transgende­r representa­tion on the small screen.

“As an artist, I’ve never been compelled by affirmatio­nal storytelli­ng. I think it’s very restrictiv­e. I don’t think that we can be full human beings if we’re not allowed to be flawed and make questionab­le decisions,” says Drucker, who was also a writer-producer on “Transparen­t.”

When executive producers Mark and Jay Duplass approached her about the project a few years ago, she was initially wary.

“The conflation of trans people with criminalit­y is such a troubled trajectory, and it’s so deeply embedded in perception­s of transness” throughout history, she says. But Drucker, who is transgende­r, ultimately saw the value in getting to know Carmichael from a modern and (hopefully) more evolved perspectiv­e.

“The Lady and the Dale” “feels to me like a conjuring in so many ways,” Drucker adds. “Liz’s story was told through such a transphobi­c lens in her day, from the 1970s into the aughts. There was a rectifying of justice that needed to happen.”

“The Lady and the Dale” exists thanks largely to a chance encounter with Carmichael: Late one night a decade ago, co-director Cammilleri was eating Chinese food and flipping through the channels at his grandmothe­r’s house when he stumbled on a rerun of “Unsolved Mysteries” on Lifetime.

A segment of the reality series from 1989 homed in on Carmichael, who had skipped town in 1981 after exhausting her legal appeals in the fraud case and remained on the lam with her five kids in tow. As host Robert Stack intoned in his famous gravely voice — and using language that would make many contempora­ry viewers cringe — Carmichael “was not what she seemed. … She was really a man.”

“I thought it was the greatest story I’d ever heard,” Cammilleri recalls. “I thought she was riveting. I had watched about a decade of white male antiheroes, like Tony Soprano, Vic Mackey, Walter White. I saw her and I was like, ‘She’s the most incredible antihero I’ve ever seen; she’s an entreprene­ur and a mother of five but also a career criminal.’ ”

Cammilleri was desperate to learn more about Carmichael but had little to go on other than a few dusty news articles. The aspiring screenwrit­er soon fell down an all-consuming rabbit hole. He spent years gathering whatever material he could find related to the Dale using eBay searches and Google news alerts. He dug up archival video, manuscript­s and photograph­s; financed reporting trips with settlement­s from car accidents; and borrowed cameras to record interviews. He started by trying to understand all he could about the Dale, then tried to get a fuller picture of Carmichael — working from the outside in, as he puts it. As he learned more about Carmichael, Cammilleri came to believe that “the very act of survival is actual heroism,” especially for a transgende­r woman in the limelight.

Eventually, he was able to assemble several hours of footage and pitch the project to the Duplass brothers, who quickly said yes and enlisted Drucker as a codirector.

With input from transgende­r consultant­s including Precious Brady-Davis and academic Susan Stryker, who appears throughout “The Lady and the Dale,” Drucker helped bring focus to the unwieldy narrative of Carmichael’s life by connecting her experience­s to a broader history of transgende­r people.

Stryker, a leading expert in transgende­r history, knew about Carmichael but did not initially consider her an especially significan­t historical figure. Working on “The Lady and the Dale” helped shift that perspectiv­e.

“Besides just telling a rip-roaring yarn, the series found a place of compassion towards Liz’s complexity, and it does a lot of really important pedagogica­l work in teaching a broad audience how to engage with trans stories in a more sophistica­ted and nuanced way,” she says.

Though it’s largely set in the ’70s and ’80s, “The Lady and the Dale” taps into a contempora­ry appetite for true crime stories about scam artists and swindlers. It’s almost impossible to watch Carmichael — a woman in a maledomina­ted industry who shrewdly leveraged media interest in her gender for publicity — and not be reminded of Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes.

But it also takes a critical look at how Carmichael was treated by the press as a transgende­r woman in a high-profile trial. Many in the media at the time viewed Carmichael’s gender identity as evidence of a criminal penchant for deception.

Her company collapsed in part because of an obsessive investigat­ion spearheade­d by KABC-TV reporter Dick Carlson, who began to look into Carmichael because he thought she was transgende­r and ultimately produced dozens of stories about her and the Dale. (Carlson, who appears in the documentar­y, also played a role in outing transgende­r tennis player Renee Richards during the same period.)

“You think that what you’re seeing is a story about a trans person, but what you’re really seeing is a journalist with a platform to propagate their prejudice,” Stryker says. “The thing that keeps getting hammered home in the series is that trans people have always been very useful for selling newspapers and TV ads. Here’s this easily exploitabl­e, low-hanging fruit. Look at this person who’s admittedly complicate­d, but whose life is being made more difficult than it needs to be because of media exposure.” (The Times also covered the case extensivel­y. One story ran with the headline, “It Boggles the Mind: Woman Hunted in Stock Scheme Is Really a Man.”)

Ironically, as Drucker notes, Carmichael was wary of government intrusion and later in life identified strongly with survivors of the siege at Waco, Texas. “I think when Dick Carlson watches this — when a lot of people watch this — they will realize that ideologica­lly, they’re not that different than Liz and that actually, her transness is not this mitigating factor that makes them different.”

Still, Carmichael, if not exactly a banner-waving activist, legally establishe­d her trans identity in court when she was granted approval to wear “female” attire — a small measure of progress at the time. And decades before it was on anyone’s radar, she called attention to the plight of transgende­r people in prison.

In “The Lady and the Dale,” we hear excerpts of poignant, funny letters that Carmichael, then incarcerat­ed in a men’s prison and concerned about her physical well-being, wrote to one of her many loyal family members. Drucker describes reading this correspond­ence as “an inflection point” in her understand­ing of her subject’s psyche.

“Her internal space had been mysterious to us. And finally, those letters cracked open a slice of her most vulnerable moments, like being alone in prison,” she says. “And that hit me like a ton of bricks.”

‘The Lady and the Dale’

Where: HBO Max When: Any time Rating: TV-14 (may be unsuitable for children under age 14)

 ?? HBO ?? LIZ CARMICHAEL shows off her car, a three-wheeler she claimed could get 70 mpg, in a scene from “The Lady and the Dale.”
HBO LIZ CARMICHAEL shows off her car, a three-wheeler she claimed could get 70 mpg, in a scene from “The Lady and the Dale.”
 ?? HBO ?? LIZ CARMICHAEL, with her family, is focus of HBO’s “The Lady and the Daile.”
HBO LIZ CARMICHAEL, with her family, is focus of HBO’s “The Lady and the Daile.”

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