Nicole Maines | |
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![]() Maines in 2019 | |
Born | 1997 (age 27–28)[1] |
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Nicole Amber Maines (born 1997) is an American actress, writer, andtransgender rights activist.[4][5][3] Prior to her acting career, she was the anonymous plaintiff in theMaine Supreme Judicial Court caseDoe v. Regional School Unit 26, in which she argued her school district could not deny her access to the female bathroom for being transgender.[6] The court ruled in 2014 that barring transgender students from the school bathroom consistent with theirgender identity is unlawful, the first such ruling by a state court.
As an actress, Maines playedNia Nal onThe CW superhero seriesSupergirl (2018–2021) in thefourth throughsixth seasons. She is the first to portray a transgender superhero on television. She currently plays the recurring role of Lisa in thesecond season ofYellowjackets (2023–present).
Maines and her brother Jonas were adopted at birth asidentical twins by Kelly and Wayne Maines in 1997;[1] one of their biological parents was Kelly's second cousin.[1][7] Though they spent their early years inGloversville, New York, they grew up inPortland, Maine.[1] Maines wasassigned male at birth and started showing signs of gender variance at a young age; when she was two years old, Maines reportedly asked her mother questions like "When do I get to be a girl?" and "When will my penis fall off?"[1] She preferred playing with toys intended for girls and identified with female characters in cartoons and movies.[8] Maines herself said she knew she was not a boy as young as three years old[9] and started explicitly telling her family who she was by the age of four.[10] Her brother, Jonas, accepted her gender identity from a young age. While the two were still in elementary school, Jonas reportedly told their father, "Face it, Dad, you have a son and a daughter."[8]
Maines says she chose the name Nicole (Nikki for short) after the characterNicole Bristow, one of Zoey's sidekicks on the Nickelodeon showZoey 101.[11] She initially wanted to be called Quinn from the same show, but she kept making spelling errors when writing the name, so she settled on Nicole.[1] She chose her middle name, Amber, just because she liked how it sounded. Maines did not officially change her name until later because of the Maine law that any name change must be announced in the newspaper, and she and her family wanted to keep her identity private for her safety. The judge accepted their petition to the name change law, meaning that Nicole was exempt from having to publish her name change in a newspaper. A few days later, she officially became Nicole Amber Maines.[1]
In July 2015, Maines hadgender-affirming surgery in Philadelphia, a month after graduating from high school.[1][8]
Maines attended high school at Portland, Maine'sWaynflete School, and attended theUniversity of Maine alongside her brother Jonas.[1] However, according to her father, Maines chose not to return in the fall of 2018 in order to pursue acting.[12]
Maines was popularized by the 2015 bookBecoming Nicole: The Transformation of an American Family byWashington Post writerAmy Ellis Nutt which tells the story of her family coming to terms with her gender identity. Many articles about the Maines family were published, many focusing on how one identical twin can be transgender and one can becisgender.[1] Soon afterDonald Trump's second inauguration asPresident of the United States in 2025,Becoming Nicole was included in a list of books banned from schools operated by theDepartment of Defense for the education of students of U.S. military personnel.[13]
Maines used the name Susan Doe in the landmark caseDoe v. Regional School Unit 26, which is also referred to asDoe v. Clenchy. In 2007, when Maines was in 5th grade in elementary school at Asa Adams Elementary School in Orono, Maine, the grandfather of a male classmate complained about Maines using the girls' bathroom.[8][9][14] Following that incident, she was barred from using the female bathroom and forced to use the staff bathroom. With the help of the Maine Human Rights Commission, Maines and her family filed a complaint against the Orono school district, which is now called RSU 26, claiming the school was discriminating against her. The school district did not take any action to address the complaint, so the family filed a lawsuit against the district.[8][14] The case eventually made its way up to the state Supreme Court in Bangor,[15] and the Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders of Boston represented Maines and her family.[14] The oral arguments were mainly focused on the tension between a law passed in the 1920s that requires gender-segregated bathrooms and a 2005 provision in the Maine Human Rights Act that prohibits sexual orientation-based discrimination.[14]
In June 2014, the Maine Supreme Judicial Court ruled 5–1 that the school district violated the state's Human Rights Act, and prohibited the district from barring transgender students access to bathrooms consistent with their gender identity. Maines and her family were provided compensation of $75,000 following the discrimination lawsuit.[16][17][18] It was the first time in the nation that a court ruled it unlawful to force a transgender student to use the bathroom associated with the sex they were assigned at birth[14] and the first time Maine's Supreme Court interpreted amendments to the Maine Human Rights Act as prohibiting sexual orientation based discrimination.[14]
In 2015, Maines and her family were the subject ofBecoming Nicole: The Transformation of an American Family, a book byWashington Post writerAmy Ellis Nutt. It chronicles the family coming to terms with Maines' being transgender.[19] In June 2015, Maines appeared on theUSA Network showRoyal Pains as a transgender teen whose hormones might be endangering her health.[20] In 2016, Maines was one of 11 individuals featured in anHBO documentary titledThe Trans List. In the documentary, Maines and several other people relate their personal stories of being transgender.[21]
In July 2018, it was announced that Maines would appear as a series regular in the fourth season ofThe CW seriesSupergirl.[22] She appeared asNia Nal, a distant relative of Legion memberDream Girl, and played the first transgender superhero on television.[6] Her character is described as a "soulful woman with a fierce drive to protect others". The character is a reporter whom Kara takes under her wing.[23] She would remain on the series until its end in November 2021, and reprise the role in a final season episode ofThe Flash in 2023.
In 2019, Maines starred inBit, a horror movie about queer female vampires, winning the top acting prize at theOutfest Los Angeles LGBTQ Film Festival.[24]
Maines penned the comic book debut of her character fromSupergirl,Nia Nal/Dreamer, forDC Pride #1 in 2021. It was announced that she would also pen a solo series on Dreamer in 2022.[25] She co-wrote the script for Dreamer's debut in the comicSuperman: Son of Kal-El as well, which was released on July 12, 2022.[26]
In 2023, Maines was cast as Lisa in a recurring role in season two of theShowtime seriesYellowjackets.[27] Her character is an associate of adultLottie who is trying to recover from past traumas.
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
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2016 | The Trans List | Herself | Documentary |
2017 | Not Your Skin | ||
2019 | Bit | Laurel | |
2022 | Darby and the Dead | Piper | [28] |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
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2015 | Royal Pains | Anna | Episode: "The Prince of Nucleotides" |
2018–2021 | Supergirl | Nia Nal / Dreamer | Main cast (Seasons 4–6); 61 episodes |
2020 | Legends of Tomorrow | Episode: "Crisis on Infinite Earths: Part Five" | |
2022 | Good Trouble | Liza Davis | 4 episodes |
2023 | Yellowjackets | Lisa | Recurring role |
The Flash | Nia Nal / Dreamer | Episode: "Wildest Dreams"[29] | |
The Freedom to Exist with Elliot Page - A Soul of a Nation Presentation | Herself | Documentary series[30] |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
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2021 | Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Siege | Osa | Voice,Crystal Guard expansion[31] |
Year | Award | Awarding Organization | Source |
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2011 | Roger Baldwin | American Civil Liberties Union of Maine | [41][10] |
2012 | P.E. Pentlarge | EqualityMaine | |
2014 | Community Organizing | Hardy Girls Healthy Women | [42][43] |
Samantha Smith | Maine Women's Fund | [44][45] | |
Woman of the Year | Glamour Magazine | [46][47] | |
2015 | Spirit of Matthew Award | Matthew Shepard Foundation | [44] |
Young Women's Social Justice Award | Maryann Hartman Awards | [48][49] | |
2016 | Outstanding Individual Episode for a series without a regular LGBT character | 27th GLAAD Media Awards | [50] |
2018 | Visibility Award | Human Rights Campaign of Chicago | [51][52] |
2019 | Andy Cray Award for Health & Youth Advocacy | Trans Equality Now | [53][54] |
Grand Jury Prize for Best Performance | Outfest | [55][56] | |
Outstanding Supporting or Guest Actor Playing an LGBTQ+ Character in a Sci-Fi Series | Autostraddle's Second Annual Gay Emmys | [57] | |
2020 | Upstander Award | Human Rights Campaign | [58] |
2023 | GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Comic Book (Superman: Son of Kal-El) | GLAAD Media Awards | [59] |