Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

She ran a charm school for transgende­r youths

- By Harrison Smith

Long before the Stonewall rebellion launched the modern LGBTQ rights movement in 1969, Gloria Allen was out and proud, immersing herself in ballroom culture while attending weekend drag events on Chicago’s South Side.

“When I came out of my mother’s womb I was out,” she liked to say. “The only time I entered a closet was to get me an outfit and a pair of pumps.”

Ms. Allen, a Black transgende­r woman, grew to become a beloved elder of Chicago’s LGBTQ community, known for offering guidance and support to younger generation­s of trans people, many of whom were African American or Hispanic.

By 2012, she had started running a charm school for transgende­r youths, providing lessons in etiquette and comportmen­t while instilling confidence and strength in her students. Her pupils — many of whom were homeless or at-risk — called her “Mama Gloria” or simply “Mama.”

“I cooked for them, listened to them and taught them etiquette. I thought of them as my chosen children,” she told People magazine last year.

Based out of the Center on Halsted, an LGBTQ community center in the Lakeview neighborho­od of Chicago, Ms. Allen’s school lasted only a few years — she was not paid, and she often used her own money to prepare students’ meals — but inspired a hit play, “Charm,” by Philip Dawkins. It was also chronicled in a 2020 documentar­y about her life, “Mama Gloria.”

“It was hard to go places with Gloria because she was a celebrity,” Mr. Dawkins said, recalling their friendship in Chicago. “Everyone actually felt like they knew her. We couldn’t walk down the street. People were always coming up to get a hug or give a life update.

“After they left, she would look at me and say, ‘That’s my child.’ She was the mother of queer Chicago.”

Ms. Allen was 76 when she died June 13 at her home in Lakeview, where she lived in an apartment complex for LGBTQ seniors. The cause was respirator­y failure, said her friend Luchina Fisher, the writer and director of “Mama Gloria.”

The idea for a transgende­r charm school emerged out of Ms. Allen’s time at the Center on Halsted, where she met teenagers who were loud and, as she told it, a little rude, with an approach to fashion and etiquette that was far different from someone who had been taught to wear gloves and a fancy hat for formal occasions.

“I may be sounding oldfashion­ed, but I would see these young people wearing negligee-type clothes on the street and I would say, ‘How could they leave the house looking like that?’” she said in a 2012 interview with Chicago Tribune columnist Dawn Turner.

While Ms. Allen could have come across as patronizin­g and condescend­ing, her pupils “heard her in a way that didn’t sound critical,” said Ms. Fisher. “It sounded like, ‘Oh, here’s somebody who actually cares about us, who sees us and wants to help.‘ “

“At that point in time, there was some trans visibility, but there was still a lot of misinforma­tion, a lot of hate,” Ms. Fisher added. “And here was Gloria, first of all an elder, which many young trans people hadn’t seen or experience­d before, reaching out to them and offering her time and her experience and her heart. She heard what was on their minds. She heard what had happened to them. And she said, ‘You’re important, and I see you and I love you, and I want you to succeed.’”

Meeting with her students once or twice a week, Ms. Allen would teach them how to apply makeup and artfully hold a conversati­on. She also spoke about safe sex practices and domestic abuse, drawing on her own experience­s, and checked in on those who were preparing to undergo gender-affirming surgery, as she had in her 30s.

Through her lessons on table manners and etiquette, Ms. Allen “became the Emily Post of Halsted

Street,” as Tribune theater critic Chris Jones wrote in 2015, reviewing the premiere of “Charm” at Steppenwol­f in Chicago. The play was inspired by six months that Mr. Dawkins spent sitting in on Ms. Allen’s classes and was later mounted in cities including Washington and New York, where it ran offBroadwa­y in 2017.

The show and subsequent documentar­y helped bring wider attention to Ms. Allen, who received the 2014 Living Legend Award at the Trans 100, a celebratio­n of transgende­r advocacy. Last year, she was honored by SAGE, an advocacy group for LGBTQ elders, with the Carmen Vázquez Award for Excellence in Leadership on Aging Issues.

Ms. Allen was also cited by President Joe Biden at a White House ceremony two days after her death. Before signing an executive order intended to protect LGBTQ Americans, he mentioned Ms. Allen alongside fellow activist Urvashi Vaid as someone “who paved the way for us” in the battle for equality.

“I feel so blessed because I never thought I would make it to the age of 30,” Ms. Allen told the Tribune last year. “I never thought that, because I had been in so many bad relationsh­ips where I was beaten up. It was rough.”

“I’m not going to go through life hating people for what they did to me,” she added. “I’m not gonna let that happen, and I overcame it. Besides, all I want to do is put on a beautiful dress and a pair of hot pumps and go on about my business and travel.”

Survivors include four brothers and a sister.

Ms. Allen worked for many years as a licensed practical nurse at the University of Chicago Medical Center (for a time, she also tried to launch a music career as a singer), and she was a private nurse’s aide before starting her charm school.

One of her lessons to students was straightfo­rward, if not always easy: Be yourself.

“If you’re yourself,” she said in the docuseries “Been T/Here,” released by the Chicago nonprofit OTV/ Open Television, “people will learn how to love you.”

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