Lucas Bouk is an American opera singer and actor from Rochester, New York. [1] He came out in 2018 as a trans man, and played his first role as an openly trans man in a jazz opera character written with him in mind. A play about his transitioning was staged in 2018, and revived in 2019. In June 2019, he became the first openly transgender opera singer in a featured role written for a transgender singer in Stonewall. [2]
Lucas Bouk grew up in Rochester, New York in a conservative environment, with "misunderstanding, misattunement, and pain" from his conflicted gender identity. [1] He married his high school sweetheart when they were both 21. [1]
Bouk studied at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music. [1] After graduate school Bouk and his husband had a child together. [1] The pregnancy and birth were extremely difficult for Bouk: "I felt drowned and suffocated by cisgendered parenting expectations. My son's existence wasn't the problem, it was all the social norms and expectations surrounding the idea of being a mother that plagued me with anxiety and anger." [1] Bouk initially thought his anger towards casual sexual harassment and the word "mother" was due to being a "staunch feminist"; later the family would stop celebrating gendered holidays. [1]
In 2014, Bouk made the decision to resign from his job and seek personal growth and professional advancement by relocating to Manhattan. [1] Concurrently, he began engaging in yoga and participating in dance classes as a means to enhance his physical well-being and promote self-acceptance. In September 2017, Bouk began to self-identify as a transgender man. [1] He came out to his husband, who was supportive. [1] Bouk wears a tuxedo for concert singing rather than a traditional gown. [1]
In October 2018, Bouk took part in Bumble's worldwide campaign about New Yorkers "discussing their lives and loves". [3]
Before coming out, Bouk sang a series of cabaret evenings featuring famous songs for female characters, by Stephen Sondheim, Kurt Weill, Jason Robert Brown, George Gershwin, Cole Porter, and Rodgers & Hammerstein, to "become comfortable inhabiting female characters onstage that I might be able to feel more confident in my body in my actual life". [4] Later he focused on female opera characters, “trapped by circumstance, society and gender”. [4]
In May 2018, as part of New York's 2018 Opera Fest, he came out publicly as a trans man in a new opera, Tabula Rasa, a jazz-inspired work presented by the Cantanti Project, [5] from gay composer Felix Jarrar and librettist Brittany Goodwin. [1] The role of dadaist Tristan Tzara was created for Bouk so he could "publicly express [his] new gender identity". [1] It was Bouk's first male role since coming out. [1] [6]
In November 2018, Bouk and director Bea Goodwin presented “Mr. Liz Cabaret: Living in the In Between“, a coming of age story and cabaret about Bouk’s coming out process, at Alchemical Studio Lab. [7] For the one-man show they used his journal entries, photos, paintings, and memories. [7] It includes painful episodes of being misgendered. [4] The show returned in February 2019 at New York City’s The Tank.
Following his one-man show, he did the transgender-themed “ As One” at Alamo City Opera. [8] “As One” is a newer opera which has already been performed around the world, telling the story with two characters, Hannah Before and Hannah After, who share insights into the transitioning experience. [9] Bouk portrayed Hannah After. [9]
He then did Giacomo Puccini’s “ Suor Angelica” and “ Gianni Schicchi,” at St. Petersburg Opera. [8] In May/June 2019 he reprised his role in “As One” at Merkin Concert Hall for American Opera Projects and New York City Opera. [10]
In June 2019, Bouk played a featured character in Stonewall, an opera about the 1969 Stonewall riots which had its world premiere in conjunction with Stonewall 50 – WorldPride NYC 2019. [11] Stonewall was commissioned by New York City Opera (NYCO), and features music by Iain Bell, a libretto by Mark Campbell, and direction by Leonard Foglia. [2] Stonewall is the first opera to feature a transgender character written for a transgender singer. [2] Bouk portrays Sarah, a trans woman celebrating the first anniversary of her transitioning. [12]