THE LIFE & DEATH OF WESTERLY WINDINA
Sat
26
Sat 26 Oct 1:00 PM
Dendy Coorparoo
Allocated Seating
90 Mins
October
Westerly Windina travels to Bangkok for gender reassignment surgery hoping to finally exorcise her former self: the macho, womanising, visionary and tormented pro surfer Peter Drouyn.
In the 1960s and 70s, Australian surfer Peter Drouyn was on top of the surfing world. Drouyn dominated the international competitive ranks, changed the way modern surf competitions are run, and introduced surfing to China. But behind the macho surf-star persona and the adoration of contemporaries was an athlete who felt ostracized by a culture that was often hyper-masculine and sexist. In the 1980s, Drouyn drifted away from competitive surfing and all but disappeared from the public eye. In 2008, years after nearly drowning in a traumatic and life-changing surfing accident, Drouyn suddenly resurfaced by coming out as a trans-woman on national television. Her new name, she said, was Westerly Windina. “It was a supernova,” Westerly said of her gender awakening. “It just kicked in one night, and suddenly Peter went; Westerly was there.” The surf community, and Australia at large, were astonished. Though she’d once been a top-tier athlete with sponsorships and a burgeoning acting career, Westerly was now living in public housing on Australia’s Gold Coast; alone, poor, and often taunted by her neighbors. The Life and Death of Westerly Windina explores Westerly’s upbringing, her years as a surfing titan, and follows her into a new chapter as she searches for acceptance from friends, family, a still hyper-masculine sport, and most importantly, from herself.
In the 1960s and 70s, Australian surfer Peter Drouyn was on top of the surfing world. Drouyn dominated the international competitive ranks, changed the way modern surf competitions are run, and introduced surfing to China. But behind the macho surf-star persona and the adoration of contemporaries was an athlete who felt ostracized by a culture that was often hyper-masculine and sexist. In the 1980s, Drouyn drifted away from competitive surfing and all but disappeared from the public eye. In 2008, years after nearly drowning in a traumatic and life-changing surfing accident, Drouyn suddenly resurfaced by coming out as a trans-woman on national television. Her new name, she said, was Westerly Windina. “It was a supernova,” Westerly said of her gender awakening. “It just kicked in one night, and suddenly Peter went; Westerly was there.” The surf community, and Australia at large, were astonished. Though she’d once been a top-tier athlete with sponsorships and a burgeoning acting career, Westerly was now living in public housing on Australia’s Gold Coast; alone, poor, and often taunted by her neighbors. The Life and Death of Westerly Windina explores Westerly’s upbringing, her years as a surfing titan, and follows her into a new chapter as she searches for acceptance from friends, family, a still hyper-masculine sport, and most importantly, from herself.