
MEANT TO BE MADDIE chronicles a decade in the life of a North Carolina transgender teenager as she navigates her identity and adolescence with the unwavering support of her family. An intimate and funny coming of age story, Maddie’s journey unfolds against the backdrop of growing anti-trans rhetoric, legislation, and conservative backlash against the LGBTQ community.
Trailer

Synopsis
When Maddie was six years old, she started first grade as a girl, the gender she always knew she was. While she was assigned male at birth, she had been telling her parents, Katie and Craig, about her gender for as long as she could speak. After seeing a therapist with Maddie and watching their child suffer for too long, they agreed that Maddie could transition publicly. Maddie's arrival to school in a dress caused a local TV news crew to film a segment in front of Maddie’s elementary school, without the family’s consent, and claimed “a student who started school as a boy came back this fall as a girl.”
Two years later, North Carolina’s “Bathroom Bill” would catapult the state and trans youth to center stage, and Maddie would be forced to walk across the hall from her class to use the only individual stall. With Trump’s election in 2016, the family was faced with the decision of whether or not to become outspoken activists, risking their safety and their privacy. They chose to fight. This is their story.
“When Maddie was outed in a news report on TV at age six, it took away her choice to ever be stealth. We are reclaiming Maddie‘s power by becoming public advocates for trans and non-binary youth in our state and everywhere.”
-Katie

This decade-long film follows Maddie through adolescence as she and her family work to build a life filled with joy, love, unconditional acceptance and purpose. For Maddie's mom, Katie, that means going to law school at age 45 to become an attorney specializing in trans rights so that she can be ready and able to fight for the safety and sanity of her daughter. While Maddie continues to find her voice in activism, she begins to wish that she can be like every other teenager whose only worries are getting on the cheerleading squad, passing her driving test and hanging out past 10.
The film is based in observational verité: viewers will come along as Maddie meets friends at the pool, does TV and newspaper interviews with her mom, and goes to doctors appointments. They’ll see Katie sworn in as a lawyer and attending a pride march. They’ll ride with Craig on his motorcycle and attend class at UNC Chapel Hill with older sister Grace. Adding to these scenes are interviews our team has conducted over the years, and Maddie’s own narration that will weave everything together, allowing her to look back at these formative ten years of her life.
The film will convey the tension that the family feels; teetering between idyllic moments of youth and adolescence, and contrasted with the harsh realities of politics and transphobia. The cinematic imagery of Maddie and her family paired with the sterile coverage of anti-trans hate.
Sample Scenes: 2016-2017
Characters

Maddie

Katie
Maddie (she/her) is a thoughtful, goofy and compassionate teenager on the cusp of adulthood. She loves cheerleading, spending time with her friends and dreams of her forthcoming independence; she hopes to be living near the beach for college.
Katie (she/they) is an attorney and a force of nature. When not volunteering at name change clinics or pride events, she fights for the rights of her daughters and the LGBTQ community as a Staff Attorney at Legal Aid North Carolina. Sometimes they worry they have overprotected Maddie from the reality she could face.

Grace

Craig
Grace (she/her) is Maddie’s hilarious and sharp-tongued older sister, a queer activist who is steadfast in her support for Maddie and the LGBTQ community as a whole. An ardent Swiftie and musician, she spends her time with friends and family when she’s not in class at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Craig (he/him) is a nurse who loves hunting and riding motorcycles. On the weekends, he can often be found riding in the mountains or coastline of North Carolina. While not as outspoken as Katie on LGBTQ rights, Craig is incredibly supportive of his daughters and just wants them to be happy, safe and healthy.
Sample Scenes: 2021-2023

Director's Statement
Meant to Be Maddie is the most ambitious and challenging project I’ve embarked on; and the one I am the most proud of. That is entirely due to Maddie and her family: the relationships we have built and the love and respect we have for each other. This is truly a collaboration with the participants and it makes for a unique film; one that enables viewers to see inside the lives, feelings and experiences of Maddie and her family. It is a privilege for me to connect with them and share this story, and it is a privilege for the viewers who will get to meet them.
I come from a family of artists and storytellers and believe in the power of story to create social change, which is ultimately how and why I began collaborating with Maddie and her family in 2016 when the bathroom bill was passed.
When we began working together, I thought it would be a triumphant joyful piece about how a family overcame the challenge of a bigoted law and moved forward.But it’s become much more than that, having taken place during one of the most turbulent decades of U.S. history, particularly for the trans community. Despite more youth identifying as LGBTQ than ever before, there are also more laws curbing their basic human rights and taking away healthcare and education.
We hope that trans people and their families will see themselves and their lives reflected in Maddie’s story; that they will be inspired by her joy, hope, and support that she is surrounded by.
But this film is, in a large part, for the cisgender community. We need them to reflect deeply on the overwhelming weight that Maddie and her family carry. They cannot do it alone. It is all of our responsibility to stand up to blatant discrimination.
Why Now?

Map Key
As of December 2024
Blue: states that currently have bathroom laws
Green: states that have bans on gender-affirming care
Purple: states that have sports bans
Red: 530+ anti-LGBTQ bills were introduced in 2024
Sample Scenes: Election 2024

What's next?
With Trump’s re-election, Katie, along with many other families of trans youth around the country, are preparing for the worst. She gathers funds from her savings, requests a loan from her Mom, and goes immediately to apply for passports for herself and Maddie, in case they need to leave. She researches remote jobs and digital nomad visas, and Maddie starts to realize that she might not get to finish high school with her friends, attend prom and walk across the graduation stage. The ability to leave the country is not a privilege Katie takes lightly, but she feels that Maddie’s safety is her utmost priority. The consequences are real; Maddie cannot lose access to her healthcare. She has told her family repeatedly, if it were not for access to this care, she is not sure she would be here today.
The film will premiere during Trump’s administration – the same administration that spent millions of dollars on ad campaigns targeting the trans community. Within the first weeks of his second term, Trump has already signed multiple executive orders targeting the trans community.We are constantly evaluating what this means for the film, and more importantly for the safety of the family. We believe that this film and showing their joy, resilience and the family’s determination to support their daughter and sister are more important than ever. Viewers who think that they do not know a trans person will have a better understanding of the real and dangerous consequences of the anti-trans backlash and rhetoric sweeping the country. It is vital that audiences understand what the trans community is up against.
Film Team
We are so proud of the team we have assembled to make this film.
It is imperative that our team is representative of the people in the film, in order to ensure that we are doing justice to Maddie, and not bringing harm to her or her communities. Our core team is composed of cis women, trans folks and parents of trans kids. We hire consultants and sensitivity viewers from within the trans community to discuss our materials and edits. Some of us are queer, some of us are allies, and some of us are still trying to figure out how we identify. Below you can learn a bit more about us!




Miles Hill (they/he)
Editor
"I'm working on this film because as a trans man who's dealing with a bigoted parent I hope the story of Maddie's parents can inspire parents to accept their trans children. As an editor, I'm excited by the creative challenge of crafting a story that takes place over 10 years and features 4 characters. I love everyone on the team working on this and believe in our collective vision."
Miles is interested in work that furthers transgender liberation. MEANT TO BE MADDIE is his second time editing a documentary feature.
His feature documentary editing debut WHAT WILL I BECOME (ITVS) seeks to unravel a deeply disturbing truth; according to the American Academy of Pediatrics, more than fifty percent of transgender boys have attempted suicide.
Director, Producer, DP
"The project began as a ten-minute film, coming from a place of moral outrage and a sense of responsibility to help Maddie and her family tell their story. Over the past nine years the film has transformed into something much deeper and more personal; they have become my second family."
Anna is a three-time Emmy-nominated filmmaker who is passionate about storytelling that focuses on healthcare and human rights.
Her work has been named a Vimeo Staff Pick and has been recognized by the GLAAD Media Awards, the Webby Awards, the Edward R. Murrow Awards, Pictures of the Year International, and NPPA Best of Photojournalism among others.
MEANT TO BE MADDIE is her first feature film as a director.
Bridgette Cyr (she/her)
Producer, DP
"As a queer documentarian, I strive to amplify the stories of those I love who are often misunderstood and overlooked."
Bridgette is an award winning filmmaker and audio producer. As of late, her work has a focus on access to education, healthcare, and LGBTQIA+ rights in the rapidly evolving American South.
She is a 2024 Southern Producers Lab Fellow with the New Orleans Film Society and was selected for the Investigative Reporting Workshop for Filmmakers at UC Berkeley in 2018.
She is the Director of Photography of SANTUARIO (2018) which won the Jury Prize for Best Documentary Short at the New Orleans Film Fest.
Luchina Fisher (she/her)
Producer
"When Katie first reached out to me, I knew as a fellow parent of a trans child and advocate that I wanted to be involved."
Luchina Fisher is the Emmy Award-winning director/producer of The Dads, a short documentary about five fathers of trans kids bonding on a weekend fishing trip, which won the 2024 Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Short Form Program and GLAAD's Special Recognition Award.
Her feature directorial debut, Mama Gloria, about a Black trans elder activist, was nominated for a 2022 GLAAD Media Award and broadcast on PBS.
Luchina is also the director/producer of several award-winning documentaries and scripted shorts films, and teaches documentary filmmaking at Yale University.
Executive Producers

Julie is the Founder of Secret Sauce Media, her latest venture to produce and invest in
surprising and timeless film projects. She co-founded Chicken & Egg Pictures in 2005 with a
shared belief that diverse women and gender expansive nonfiction storytellers have the power
to catalyze change at home and around the globe. She produced Academy Award®, Gotham,
and Independent Spirit-winning feature documentary American Factory as well as Emmy®
Award-winning USA Gymnastics documentary – Athlete A, both streaming on Netflix. Most
recently, she Executive Produced Lana Wilson’s latest film Look Into My Eyes about psychic
mediums and their clients which premiered at Sundance 2024 and is on HBO Max. Julie lives in
San Francisco, is a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences Documentary
Branch and the Producers Guild of America.

Olympia Stone is an independent documentary filmmaker with a focus on art, artists and collectors. Based in Chapel Hill, NC, her production company, Floating Stone Productions, creates films that explore the personal stories and creative processes of a wide range of artists and collectors, providing viewers with a deeper understanding of their work and inspirations.
Additional Crew

Julia Wall (she/her)
Additional Cinematography, Associate Producer
Julia Wall is a cinematographer, editor and photographer based in North Carolina who is passionate about visual journalism and storytelling in the state. She has worked on documentaries and for local, state and national news outlets there.
Her work has won a MidSouth Regional Emmy, screened at film festivals across the U.S., and been published in The Washington Post, ProPublica, The New York Times, TIME, National Geographic, The News & Observer, The Assembly, and PBS North Carolina.

Alix Adrian (he/they)
Alix is a white decidedly-queer though fluidly-transmasc Northern parent of two adults native to Durham NC. At the LGBTQ Center of Durham, they serve as the Rainbow Family Connections Project Coordinator, a community-level sexual violence prevention program focused on creating protective environments for LGBTQ+ families primarily by increasing community connectedness. This includes co-facilitating the Center’s Transforming Families NC program, which serves families with transgender and gender diverse youth across the state. Alix celebrates all kinds of families. He recognizes that identities develop and change over a lifetime.

Katie Jenifer (she/they)
Katie is a licensed attorney from North Carolina and the proud parent of two queer kids. When their youngest daughter, who is transgender, transitioned in 2013, her family almost immediately began to face obstacles where they felt like having a legal advocate would be beneficial.
They are looking forward to using the film to help educate families around the country.

Tony Zosherafatain (he/him)
Consultant
Tony Zosherafatain is an Emmy shortlisted and GLAAD nominated filmmaker known for his stories about underrepresented and marginalized communities.
His films have screened at domestic and international film festivals, including Nashville Film Festival, Cannes Short Film Festival, Richmond International Film Festival, OutFest, NewFest, and Frameline.
He wrote and directed the critically acclaimed series Trans in Trumpland, which was shortlisted for an Emmy award and nominated for a GLAAD award.

Additional Cinematography
Durham artist, Wilson, has worked as a professional image maker for the past nine years, spending the first half of that time as a corporate photographer and the other half defying artistic convention and upending the status quo.
Their work explores what lies in the shadows behind beauty and sorrow–both personal and communal.
Their raw and frequently somber style is illuminated by their Black trans identity.
Budget
We are raising $350,000 for post production and
our impact and educational campaign.
We have fiscal sponsorship through the Southern Documentary Fund. You can donate to our project there!
Timeline
2016
Research
2016 - 2025
Production
We anticipate 30 remaining film days
2024 - 2025
Editing
&
Impact & Educational Work
2026
Premiere
Behind the Scenes

