
‘You become something unique': The A-list offspring coming out as trans
Even the keenest of celebrity watchers may not have heard of Aaron De Niro before late last month. If they have since, it will likely be by a different name, as Oscar-winner Robert De Niro's 29-year-old child says she now identifies as Airyn, a transgender woman.
'There's a difference between visible and being seen,' she told online LGBTQ+ online publication Them in April about her transition. 'I've been visible. [But] I don't think I've been seen yet.'
De Niro, who has seven children in total, said he supported her decision. 'I loved and supported Aaron as my son and now I love and support Airyn as my daughter,' the A-lister said, adding: 'I don't know what the big deal is…I love all my children.'
In Hollywood, at least, the news is unlikely to raise many eyebrows. Airyn is merely the latest in a long line of stars' children who have come out as trans or non-binary, including the offspring of Sting, Elon Musk, Cher, Jamie Lee Curtis, Sigourney Weaver and Cynthia Nixon among others.
The reasons for their decisions are, of course, deeply personal and complex. But some say the choices may also be linked to the particularly strange positions they inhabit as the progeny of the rich and famous.
'By becoming trans, you can break out of the predefined role you were born into and create a new space for yourself,' says Sascha Bailey, the son of legendary photographer David and his fourth wife, model Catherine. 'You become something unique and you are rewarded for it.'
Sascha, 30, has experienced as much himself. Having struggled with depression and an unhappy marriage, he was on the verge of transitioning three years ago, intending to restart life as a transgender woman.
But Sascha halted those plans when he fell in love again and embarked on a new relationship with a new female partner. He says the experience made him realise what he could lose – such as the chance to father a child himself – if he went ahead with taking female hormones as a prelude to eventual life-altering surgery.
Sascha has written a book charting his own journey – Try to Hit the Pool: Modern Man and the Behavioural Sink, set to be published next month. In it, he explores the difficulty of growing up in the spotlight.
'I think, whatever you do in life, people are watching. If you go into the same profession as your parents, you are called a nepo baby, no matter how good you are. But if you work in Starbucks, people will take photos of you and ask, 'Why are they working in Starbucks?'' he says.
'It is [also] impossible to fully trust people as you never know what their actual motive in befriending you is,' Sascha adds. 'People will assume all sorts of things – like you have unlimited resources, because people equate fame with money. It can feel like people want to take something from you because you have something that they don't have. You are vulnerable, and it can feel hard to make real friends, to form bonds.'
Charlotte Falconer, a former teacher and children's counsellor who runs counselling service LetMeListen says that coming out as trans can be a way of stepping out of the long shadow cast by a famous parent.
'The world of being a 'celebrity's child' will come with attention drawn away from them to their parents,' Falconer says. 'So, this type of gender expression may be coming from a place of need; a place that parents may not be aware of or able to meet. Creating a gender difference is often something that can't be ignored.'
Others, including Sascha, say the children of stars may be afforded the space and time to reflect on their identities in a way that others are simply unable to, owing to financial and other pressures.
'When you are the child of a celebrity, you don't have much to strive for, to move towards, and this can feel like an easy way out because you are making an impact on the world. It can also mean that you have the funds to change yourself,' says Sascha.
James Esses, a psychotherapist and the founder of campaigning group Just Therapy, says the children of celebrities have 'the luxury of time and money to indulge in a never-ending fixation on their self-identity', arguing the phenomenon is almost uniquely the preserve of the world's most privileged societies.
'There is a reason why swathes of children from war-torn regions or facing abject poverty are not coming out as 'trans',' he says. 'It's because they have more pressing issues to focus their time and attention on rather than their self-image and self-identity.
'And the children of celebrities, who have safety and security in abundance, they have the luxury of being able to engage in endless navel gazing.'
The trend is not unique to celebrity culture, however, with up to 10,000 children across the UK thought to identify as transgender.
Sarah* says her daughter came out as trans when she was 12 and quickly went from being the victim of bullies to being celebrated by her schoolmates.
'It reminded me of American high school movies where the nerdy girl gets a makeover and immediately becomes the prom queen and gets the boyfriend,' she says.
Similarly, Sarah speculates that the children of famous parents may be looking to change their own standing. 'I imagine it is really hard to be the child of a celebrity and to get any attention yourself, as the parent is the focus of so much of it,' she says.
Esses agrees. 'We know that 'coming out' as 'trans' is often met with celebration and positive reinforcement, and with celebrity culture, these things are on steroids,' he says.
After coming out as transgender herself, Airyn De Niro posted a message on social media thanking 'everyone who's been so sweet and supportive', adding: 'I'm not used to all these eyes on me.'
But the downside of positive reinforcement, some warn, is that it can make it difficult for those who have opted to transition to change their mind again and abandon doing so. That is as true for A-listers as it is for the rest of us.
'Many of the parents currently contacting us regret having affirmed their child as the opposite sex,' says a spokesperson for Bayswater, a support group for the parents of trans-identified adolescents and young people. 'What they tell us is that they thought changing a name and pronoun was harmless and never expected it to lead to requests for cross-sex hormones or surgery. Another theme we are increasingly seeing is desistance [when a child wants to revert], which is more complicated for a child whose parents have publicly taken a position on their child's identity.'
Sascha says that when he announced he had changed his mind, 'the fallout was massive,' and some of his friends abandoned him.
'It is important that people should be able to change their mind – if they want to – without people attacking them,' he says. 'At first, I wasn't sure about speaking out, but then I started to get messages from parents and people who were transitioning and detransitioning saying that my story had made them reconsider things.'
Ironically, his status as the child of a celebrity has given him something of a platform to try and make a difference. 'It is important for people to know there are options, whatever you want to do,' Sascha says.
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She will be back on the stand tomorrow and is expected to continue giving evidence for several days next week as well. We'll be back with a recap of today's hearing soon - in the meantime scroll through our posts to catch up on what was said in court. 21:09:47 Escort sex sessions lasted up to 30 hours with no sleep, Jane tells court Jane tells the court that she and Sean "Diddy" Combs had "hotel night" - sexual encounters with male escorts, also described as "freak offs" during Cassie's testimony - in Turks and Caicos, Miami, Los Angeles and New York. Combs's employees would arrange travel, she says, and he would pay. Hotel nights always followed the same pattern, the court hears - "hotel suites, red lights, music, lotions and alcohol, there would be bed sheets covering everything, blankets and towels, because of the excessive use of baby oil everywhere". Jane says she would "have drugs in my system" and wear "provocative" lingerie and "high stripper shoes". 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Combs liked her with straight hair and white coloured nails, she says, and later in the relationship he wanted her to get piercings. "Looking nice" took a lot of time and money and became like a "habit", she continues, as she strived to make him happy. The court hears that while Jane started to earn less money after she prioritised her relationship with Combs, the rapper would support her with money - payments of $5,000, $10,000 or $20,000, she says. She tells the court she wanted to make her own money and had considered content creating on adult website OnlyFans - posting photos but not showing sexual activity. Combs told her to give it time, the court hears. Asked why she felt she needed his approval, she replies: "I felt like he was my boyfriend." 20:38:38 Jane describes 'debauchery' or 'hotel nights' - and says she felt 'obligated' as Diddy paid rent After that first night in May 2021, Jane is asked what percentage of the time with Sean "Diddy" Combs she was having sex with another man. She replies: "90%." Asked if this is what she wanted, she says: "No." Jane tells the court she wanted "an old-fashioned relationship with me and him" - which is how it felt when they first met. After the first sexual encounter with an escort, Combs quickly suggested they do it again, Jane says, telling the court she was agreeable because she wanted him to be happy. "I went along with it because I loved him at this point," she says. However, Jane says she started to tell him - more than once, in writing and in person - that she did not want to have sex with other men. Over the next three years she says she told him this "many times", but it would be "uncomfortable" whenever the subject came up. Combs would dismiss it and move the conversation on, she says, or tell her she didn't have to. He would also tell her she could break up with him if she wanted to, she says. Combs paid her rent, but would threaten to stop doing so, she adds. Jane says she felt "obligated" to perform on some nights "because I knew he was paying my rent". Asked the words she and Combs used to describe the sexual encounters with male escorts, she says they would call them "debauchery" or "hotel nights". 20:27:01 First sexual encounter with male escort 'opened Pandora's box', Jane tells court After being told by Sean "Diddy" Combs that he could make the fantasy of role play with another man come true, Jane says she went to the bathroom. When she returned, she says he was in his robe and "looking serious" on his phone. He told her he could "make it happen tonight", the court hears. Jane says she was taken aback but agreed. A few hours later, she says assistants set up a room for them and she was introduced to an escort, Don. She tells the court she was nervous but Combs told her to relax and asked her to stand up. At his suggestion, she started dancing, she says, as the escort got closer and started to touch her. Combs was naked, she says, and masturbated as he watched them. Jane says she wanted to "speed things up" so asked for a condom. Combs told her he "didn't want that", she says, saying the guys were "safe" and regularly tested. Eventually, however, he did give Don a condom and they had sex, she says. Afterwards, Don left and the two of them had sex together, she says. "We were really happy." The day afterwards, Jane says she "felt excited" that she had done something "taboo", something she had never done before. However, she says she thought it was a one-off. Asked how the relationship changed after this, she tells the court "it opened a Pandora's box", and "set the tone" going forward. 20:11:06 'Diddy wanted role play with other men and liked me to have baby oil all over' Jane tells the court her relationship with Sean "Diddy" Combs was kept private. Between February 2021 and May 2021, she says he would fly her to see him in Miami every few weeks, and also gave her money. During this period, they took drugs including ecstasy, molly (MDMA), cocaine and ketamine, she says. Jane says Combs wanted her to wear "provocative lingerie outfits" when they had sex and liked her to have baby oil "all over my body". Sexual sessions could last for up to 24 hours and he liked to have red lights on in their hotel rooms, she adds. Asked how she felt about the long sex sessions at this point, Jane tells the court she "really loved" Combs and enjoyed the affection. "Sean was really passionate," she says, and very complimentary. In those first three months, she says she "loved him very much". Asked what happened in May 2021, she bows her head and becomes emotional. "We would watch a lot of pornography, we started having a lot more fantasy conversations." Combs started to talk about role play with other men, she says, and one night told her he could make the fantasy a reality. Jane says she told him "okay" - but did not think it would really happen and says she did not want to have sex with anyone other than Combs. 19:55:02 Diddy 'used L word' - but made it clear he was seeing other women, Jane tells court In February 2021, Sean "Diddy" Combs and Jane went on a trip to the Turks and Caicos Islands and the Bahamas, the court hears. Jane says he organised the break after she told him her birthday was coming up, and that he had several members of staff there too, including an assistant, a chef and a butler. She says they had a good connection and were "passionate" about each other - that she told him about her work and being a single mother. Asked about gifts during this trip, Jane tells the court Combs gave her a bracelet - and later offered to send her $10,000 because she wasn't working while they were there. She is also asked about drugs, and says they took ecstasy. Jane tells the court she developed deep feelings for Combs and that they "started using 'the L word'." He told her he "really liked" her, she says, but made it clear he was seeing "multiple" women. She says she was okay with this because she liked him. Asked if she had the option of a monogamous relationship, she replies: "I don't think so." The relationship lasted, on and off, until Combs was arrested in September 2024, the court hears. 19:41:04 Alleged victim Jane says she fell 'head over heels' after first date with Diddy Jane tells the court she was in a relationship with Sean "Diddy" Combs between 2021 and 2024. She called him Sean or Diddy, the court hears, sometimes Schnookums, or sometimes Ernie - she was Bert and he was Ernie, like the characters from Sesame Street. Jane says she met the hip-hop mogul during a trip to Miami in late 2020. At the time, he was involved with one of her friends, she tells the court, and he invited a group of them to his home. The witness says they spent time on a yacht and that she was "drawn" to Combs. They flirted and exchanged numbers, which is when he suggested the Bert and Ernie nicknames, she says. Asked if she saw drugs, she says she remembers seeing a pink, powdery substance on that first night. Combs told her he wanted to take her out the following day, jurors hear. She says the situation was "complicated" but they remained in touch and Combs pursued her. After the friend who had previously been seeing him got engaged to someone else, Jane says she decided to "potentially entertain" the idea. They agreed to meet up in Miami in January 2021, the court hears. Jane says they went to a hotel, had dinner on the balcony, and she ended up staying for five days. Afterwards, she says, she was "head over heels".