Cyrus Grace Dunham is an American writer and activist. Dunham appeared in the independent film Tiny Furniture, which was written and directed by their older sister, filmmaker and actress Lena Dunham.
Dunham is involved in a collaborative relationship with transgender activistTourmaline; their work together includes public speaking, writing, and performance. Dunham has contributed articles to The New Yorker, and catalog essays for Transgender Hirstory in 99 Objects: Legends and Mythologies at the ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives, UNCOUNTED: Call & Response at Vienna Secession, and Nicole Eisenman's AL-UGH-ORIES at the New Museum, amongst others. In November 2015 Dunham interviewed transgender rights activistJanet Mock for Buzzfeed's Women Of The Hour podcast. In 2015, Dunham presented the talk "Why Am I Valuable?" during a panel at the Frieze Art Fair in New York. The talk begins: In 2016, Dunham's first collection of poetry and short essays titled The Fool was published. The publication is a free, online-only "web-book" published by Curse of Cherifa. Their memoir, titled A Year Without a Name, was published in October 2019, by Little, Brown and Company.
Film work
Dunham's first film appearance was in the 2006 short Dealing as June, a 13-year-old art dealer. Dealing was written and directed by Dunham's older sister, Lena. Dunham later starred in the 2010 feature film Tiny Furniture as Nadine, the younger sister of Aura, played by Lena, who also wrote and directed the film. Tiny Furniture, which also featured Lena and Cyrus's real-life mother Laurie Simmons, was shot at the family's actual home in New York'sTribeca neighborhood and the three characters portrayed by Cyrus, Lena, and their mother are based loosely on themselves. Dunham stars as Junior in the forthcoming film Happy Birthday, Marsha! about the gay activist Marsha P. Johnson and transgender activist Sylvia Rivera in the hours before the Stonewall riots. Dunham also appeared in artist A.K. Burns' multi-channel video installationA Smeary Spot.
Passages in Lena's memoir Not That Kind of Girl, which recount childhood interactions between then seven-year-old Lena and then one-year-old Cyrus Grace, attracted controversy when some commentators perceived them to be overly sexual. Experts described these passages as either too ambiguous to judge, or as describing behavior consistent with normal childhood development. Cyrus Grace publicly rejected claims by media commentators that the behavior was harmful.