This iconic Alien character is canonically trans and fans are only just realising
Briefly

This iconic Alien character is canonically trans and fans are only just realising
"James Cameron's 1986 sequel Aliens opens with Ripley being debriefed by her employers over the destruction of the Nostromo. Behind her, biographies of each of the deceased flash up on a computer screen. Lambert's file includes reams of personal data like her date of birth, height, weight and hair colour, but one important detail stands out. Under gender it states: "Female (unnatural)," before expanding: "Subject is Despin Convert at birth (male to female). So far no indication of suppressed trauma related to gender alteration.""
"Among the small crew of the Nostromo is navigator Joan Lambert, a brilliant bag of nerves played by actor Veronica Cartwright. By the end of the film she and Ripley are the ones remaining aboard the doomed ship, left alone to battle it out against the Xenomorph. Lambert was ultimately killed by the Alien while gathering oxygen tanks, but it wasn't her final appearance in the quadrilogy."
Ridley Scott's 1979 film Alien includes navigator Joan Lambert, played by Veronica Cartwright, who survives alongside Ripley until being killed while gathering oxygen tanks. James Cameron's 1986 sequel Aliens presents a computer file listing Lambert's personal data and marking gender as "Female (unnatural)." The file explicitly notes: "Subject is Despin Convert at birth (male to female). So far no indication of suppressed trauma related to gender alteration." The canonical designation makes Lambert an early, subtle instance of trans representation in major science-fiction cinema, often overlooked by newer viewers.
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