Lennox
Lewis' former manager, 61, now called Kellie after transitioning to female over
the past year
The Guardian, Josh Halliday, Sunday 10 August 2014
Maloney, who had managed several European and Commonwealth champions, guided Lewis to the world boxing heavyweight title in 1993. Photograph: The Sunday Mirror |
Frank
Maloney, the former boxing promoter who guided Lennox Lewis to the world
heavyweight title, has revealed that he is undergoing gender reassignment and
now lives as a woman called Kellie.
Maloney,
61, drew broad support from the boxing world after disclosing that she had
undergone hormone therapy, hair removal electrolysis, voice coaching and
specialist counselling for the past two years.
She told
the Sunday Mirror: "I was born in the wrong body and I have always known I
was a woman. I can't keep living in the shadows, that is why I am doing what I
am today. Living with the burden any longer would have killed me.
"What
was wrong at birth is now being medically corrected. I have a female brain. I
knew I was different from the minute I could compare myself to other children.
I wasn't in the right body. I was jealous of girls."
Maloney,
who supported Lewis in his successful bid for the world heavyweight title in
1993, and managed other Commonwealth and European boxing champions, called time
on his three-decade boxing career last October, saying he had fallen out of
love with the sport.
In an
interview across six pages in the Sunday Mirror, Maloney said she had never
told anyone in boxing about how she felt trapped in the wrong body since
childhood.
"Can
you imagine me walking into a boxing hall dressed as a woman and putting an event
on? I can imagine what they would scream at me, but if I had been in the
theatre or arts world nobody would blink an eye about this transition," he
said.
"The
boxing community can think whatever they want about me now. I have come to
terms with my transition but I don't understand it. I hope society will be open
minded."
Maloney, pictured here in 2012, has said 'I was born in the wrong body and have always known I was a woman.' Photograph: Nick Potts/PA |
While some
commentators thought Maloney's announcement might be a hoax, many more rallied
round the retired promoter. Johnny Nelson, the Sky Sports pundit and former WBO
cruiserweight champion, said on Twitter: "Frank Maloney, read your story.
It's your life, don't make others stop who you are. Ignorance is the problem of
others, not yours."
Former
European boxing champion and Olympic bronze medallist Tony Jeffries, who was
managed by Maloney, expressed surprise at the news and added: "Fair play
to him for coming out. #BeHappy #1Life".
Ricky
Wright, one of boxing's chief announcers, said: "So far I've only read
positive feedback for Frank and lots of support from the boxing world. Shows
how far the sport has come."
The former
footballer Stan Collymore added: "I wish Frank Maloney, now Kellie all the
very best. Being who he wants to be after 61 years. Nobody deserves to begrudge
him happiness."
Maloney,
who has three children, told the Sunday Mirror that her marriage had been
breaking down for some time and described the moment she told her wife Tracey.
"As
the words started to come out I wanted to catch them and pull them back in. I
looked at her face and I knew my marriage was over. She was the first person I
had told outside counsellors. I could see what it was doing to her and I had to
release her." The couple have since separated.
Maloney has
been supported for the past year by the transgender group TG Pals. The group's
managing director, Heather Ashton, told the Guardian that she only learned that
her charge was formerly a famous boxing promoter when she accompanied Maloney
to the Sunday Mirror interview.
"For
anyone this is a life changing decision, psychologically and physically, and
that can take a huge toll on a person," Ashton said.
"Kellie
has confided to me that coming out and sharing her story will support and
encourage others to make that first step to get help. The Kellie I know is a
friendly but fairly reserved person, very confident within herself and it seems
to have been a very positive decision.
"I
think generally Kellie's had a positive response, which is what we were all
hoping for. Someone like Kellie going public is a very brave and courageous
decision because there are very many people out there who lack knowledge and
awareness of what having a gender identity disorder really means."
Ashton said
Maloney ran fitness classes for TG Pals and said the former boxing promoter
planned to return in some way to public life by speaking in schools.
"She's
always been very outspoken and vocal in her public life and she's hoping to use
that to take her life forward and support other transgender people," she
said.
Related Article:
"The Akashic Circle" – Jul 17, 2011 (Kryon channelled by Lee Carroll) - (Subjects: Religion, The Humanization of God, Benevolent Design, DNA, Akashic Circle, (Old) Souls, Gaia, Indigenous People, Talents, Reincarnation, Genders, Gender Switches, In “between” Gender Change, Gender Confusion, Shift of Human Consciousness, Global Unity,..... etc.) - (Text version)
“… Gender Switching
Old souls, let me tell you something. If you are old enough, and many of you are, you have been everything. Do you hear me? All of you. You have been both genders. All of you have been what I will call between genders, and that means that all of you have had gender switches. Do you know what happens when it's time for you to switch a gender? We have discussed it before. You'll have dozens of lifetimes as the same gender. You're used to it. It's comfortable. You cannot conceive of being anything else, yet now it's time to change. It takes approximately three lifetimes for you to get used to it, and in those three lifetimes, you will have what I call "gender confusion."
It isn't confusion at all. It's absolutely normal, yet society often will see it as abnormal. I'm sitting here telling you you've all been through it. All of you. That's what old souls do. It's part of the system. …”
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