Grammy-nominated transgender singer Jackie Shane dead

Transgender singer Jackie Shane died in Nashville, aged 78.

Transgender soul singer Jackie Shane has died aged 78.

Her producer and friend Douglas Mcgowan told The New York Times her body was found at her home in Nashville on Thursday (February 21), but was unable to confirm the time or the cause of her death.

The American artist, born in Nashville, became a prominent soul singer in Toronto’s gay community in the 1960s, Canadian publication CBC reported.

Jackie Shane received Grammy nomination for Any Other Way

She used to perform in Yonge Street, the heart of the Canadian city’s gay village, where the Pride Parade is held annually.

The singer has disappeared from the public eye for a few decades, between 1971 and 2010, but recently returned to the spotlight after her album Any Other Way was reissued in 2017 and then nominated for a Grammy Award in the Best Historical Album category.

“I have never felt that I had to change or do anything that wasn’t natural to me,” she said in an interview to CBC Radio’s earlier this month. “I will never ever be some kind of wishy-washy creature that pretends or lets others guide me. I guide my life. It is mine. No matter what anyone says, I’m going to be Jackie.”

Jackie Shane began identifying as female as a child

Speaking to the Associated Press in January, Shane said she began wearing female clothing since she was 5 years old and began identifying as a girl aged 13.

“They wondered how I could keep the high heels on with my feet so much smaller than the shoe. I would press forward and would, just like Mae West, throw myself from side to side. What I am simply saying is I could be no one else,” she said, adding that she never faced any issues due to her gender identity.

“Even in school, I never had any problems,” Shane said. “People have accepted me.”

Jackie Shane was a Grammy Nominated transgender soul singer

Label Numero Group remembered Jackie Shane by some of her fierce quotes. (Numero Group/Twitter)


But as a black person living under Jim Crow laws, it was racism that ultimately drove Shane away from Nashville, to seek fortune elsewhere.

“You cannot choose where you are born, but you can choose where you call home,” Shane told AP. “And Toronto is my home.” The singer would however take a break from her career in 1971 to care for her mother, who was still in Nashville.

Shane regretted that decision, as she told CBC radio: “That was a mistake I made because of my love and wanting to take care of her, to be with her as I always had. That’s the mistake I made. I should have let her come to me.”

Jackie Shane quotes reveal independent spirit

The label Numero Group followed the announcement of the singer’s death sharing two of her quotes, both of which show her independent spirit.

One read: “Most people are planted in someone else’s soil… I say to them, uproot yourself. Get into your own soil.”

And the other: “I guide my life. It is mine. No matter what anyone says, I’m going to be Jackie. That’s all I can be.”