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Transgender soul singer Jackie Shane will be focus of new Heritage Minute

Groundbreaking transgender soul singer Jackie Shane is the focus of a new Heritage Minute. Historica Canada released her story as the latest in its ongoing series of minute-long shorts celebrating influential figures and accomplishments in Canadian history.

Singer was considered a trans pioneer when few in community held visible positions

Ravyn Wngz as Jackie Shane, sitting by a dressing room mirror in front of a bouquet of roses, in a still frame from the Heritage Minute about Shane's life.
The late transgender soul singer Jackie Shane is the focus of a new Heritage Minute, as portrayed by Ravyn Wngz in this handout image. Historica Canada issued her story as the latest in its ongoing series of minute-long shorts celebrating influential figures and accomplishments in Canadian history. (Gillian Map/The Canadian Press)

Groundbreaking transgender soul singer Jackie Shane is the focus of a new Heritage Minute.

Historica Canada released her story as the latest in its ongoing series of minute-long shorts celebrating influential figures and accomplishments in Canadian history.

Shane, who was born in Nashville but thrived in the Canadian R&B music scene, was selected for her contributions to "the Toronto sound," a version of electric soul shaped in the early 1960s.

But she's also considered a trans pioneer at a time when few held visible positions in the local community. She performed on stage as an androgynous man, but in her private life had come out as trans to her mother when she was 13 years old.

WATCH | A new Heritage Minute celebrating Jackie Shane:

Shane played clubs in Montreal and Boston, but her home was at Toronto's Saphire Tavern until she suddenly quit music in 1971.

She died three years ago at age 78 shortly after the retrospective Any Other Way was nominated for best historical album at the Grammys.