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Grace Dunham

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Occupation
  
Actress, poet

Siblings
  
Lena Dunham

Relatives
  
Lena Dunham

Role
  
Actress

Name
  
Grace Dunham


Grace Dunham Lena Dunham39s younger sister tweets about policing

Born
  
January 28, 1992 (age 32) (
1992-01-28
)
New York City, New York, U.S.

Alma mater
  
Brown University Urban Studies Program

Parents
  
Laurie Simmons, Carroll Dunham

Nominations
  
Gotham Independent Film Award for Best Ensemble Performance

Movies
  
Tiny Furniture, Creative Nonfiction, Happy Birthday - Marsha!

Similar People
  
Lena Dunham, Laurie Simmons, Carroll Dunham, Jemima Kirke, Jack Antonoff

Beautifully Handsome: Grace Dunham Realizes That They Don’t Have To Check A Gender Box To Be Free


Grace Dunham ( ; born January 28, 1992) is an American writer and activist. She appeared in the independent film Tiny Furniture (2010), which was written and directed by her older sister, filmmaker and actress Lena Dunham.

Contents

Grace Dunham Lena Dunham talks about coming out for her sister and

Early life

Grace Dunham Diary of a Lunatic Photographer current events where

Dunham was born and raised in New York City. Dunham's mother, Laurie Simmons, is an artist and photographer, and Dunham's father, Carroll Dunham, is a painter. Dunham's older sister, Lena, is the creator and star of the HBO series Girls.

Education

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Dunham attended St. Ann's School in New York City. Dunham wrote for the school newspaper and yearbook and spoke at the graduation. During the senior year of high school, Grace Dunham came out as gay to her sister Lena. Dunham graduated from Brown University in May 2014 with a degree in urban studies.

Grace Dunham Grace Dunham Hides Conspicuously in Bushwick After

As a high school student in 2009, Dunham received the Poetry Society of America's Louise Louis/Emily F. Bourne Student Poetry Award for the poem Twin Oaks, which was judged for the competition by American poet Matthew Rohrer.

Grace Dunham Grace Dunham Photos quotObvious Childquot New York Special

Dunham was a contributing writer for the student weekly The College Hill Independent in Providence, Rhode Island.

Writing and activism

Dunham is involved in a collaborative relationship with transgender activist Reina Gosset; their work together includes public speaking, writing and performance.

Dunham has contributed articles to The New Yorker, and catalog essays for Transgender Hirstory in 99 Objects: Legends and Mythologies at the ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives, UNCOUNTED: Call & Response at Vienna Secession, and Nicole Eisenman's AL-UGH-ORIES at the New Museum, amongst others. In November 2015 Dunham interviewed transgender rights activist Janet Mock for Buzzfeed's Women Of The Hour podcast.

In 2015, Dunham presented the talk "Why Am I Valuable?" during a panel at the Frieze Art Fair in New York.[1] The talk begins:

Some things about me are that I’m white, that I have relatively famous parents, and that my sister is a celebrity. I also have a vagina, which makes people think I’m a woman. I have an intimate relationship with a black trans activist, Reina, who by being in a public collaborative relationship with me validates my perspective and—despite my whiteness, my class, and my proximity to fame—makes my critique of power seem legitimate in ways it otherwise might not. In other words, as a commodity, I have power through my associations with social capital; in addition, I hold a set of marginalized identities which give me intellectual authority and increased use-value in contexts seeking "diversity."

In 2016, Dunham's first collection of poetry and short essays titled The Fool was published. The publication is a free, online-only "web-book" published by Curse of Cherifa.

Film work

Dunham's first film appearance was in the 2006 short Dealing as June, a 13-year-old art dealer. Dealing was written and directed by Dunham's older sister, Lena.

Dunham later starred in the 2010 feature film Tiny Furniture as Nadine, the younger sister of Aura, played by Lena, who also wrote and directed the film. Tiny Furniture, which also featured Lena and Grace's real-life mother Laurie Simmons, was shot at the family's actual home in New York's Tribeca neighborhood and the three characters portrayed by Grace, Lena, and their mother are based loosely on themselves.

Dunham stars as Junior in the forthcoming film Happy Birthday, Marsha! about the transgender activists Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera in the hours before the Stonewall riots. Dunham also appeared in artist A.K. Burns' multi-channel video installation A Smeary Spot.

Controversy

Passages in Lena's memoir Not That Kind of Girl which recount childhood interactions between then seven-year-old Lena and then one-year-old Grace attracted controversy when some commentators perceived them to be overly sexual. Experts described these passages as either too ambiguous to judge, or as describing behavior consistent with normal childhood development. Grace publicly rejected claims by media commentators that the behavior was harmful. On November 3, 2014, Grace responded to these claims over Twitter, saying:

As a queer person: i'm committed to people narrating their own experiences, determining for themselves what has and has not been harmful / heteronormativity deems certain behaviours harmful, and others "normal"; the state and media are always invested in maintaining that / 2day, like every other day, is a good day to think about how we police the sexualities of young women, queer, and trans people

References

Grace Dunham Wikipedia