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With all the excitement surrounding the first(ish?) female Doctor, there's lots of cries of misogyny for taking this long to have a female Doctor. This has me curious now. I can't think of too many cases where a character changes sex. Shows I can think of are:

  • Doctor Who
  • Predestination (Heinlein's All You Zombies adapted to film)

What's the earliest release date of a movie or TV show where a major character changed from male to female or vice versa? For purposes of this, I'd like to exclude hemaphrodites, which just make things confusing.

I'm more interested in permanent changes, because my interest lies in the side effects of such changes, but if there's a particularly good reason to include a temporary change, I'd entertain it. I'd be looking for a transition which occurs during the time frame of the movie/show.

Rand al'Thor
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Cort Ammon
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    I do find it amusing that now that there is a female Doctor, people are complaining that it was not done soon enough. I don't care which side of this debate you fall on, that is pretty petty. Cool question btw. I am very interested to see the answers. – Magikarp Master Jul 19 '17 at 20:30
  • All you zombies was a short story written by Robert Heinlein that has one of the best time travel paradox structures ever constructed. – KorvinStarmast Jul 19 '17 at 20:39
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    Several important points here. 1. This probably doesn't need the [tag:doctor-who] tag. Although this might have been what inspired you to ask the question, it is not about Doctor Who. 2. You talk about changing gender, but do you mean sex, external sexual presentation, or gender? The Doctor probably is changing all three, but a transgender person who undergoes surgery is merely affirming their pre-existing gender, for example (and arguably thus changing only number two). – Adamant Jul 19 '17 at 20:48
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  • You talk about excluding "hermaphrodites" (presumably intersex individuals), but you also mention All You Zombies. Isn't the character in that intersex?
  • – Adamant Jul 19 '17 at 20:49
  • @Adamant 1. I was having trouble thinking of good tags. 2. I mean sex. I'm just terrible about being consistent with my usage of gender and sex 3. Blast, hemaprhodites do make things confusing. In my mind, the main character of All You Zombies transitioned sexes, as opposed to being both sexes at the same time, but when you challenge me on it, it makes me unsure if that is a meaningful distinction on my part. – Cort Ammon Jul 19 '17 at 20:59
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    The Gender Bender list at TV Tropes has a lot of listings, mostly some sort of personality implantation, but you might find an answer there. – eshier Jul 19 '17 at 21:24
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    @CortAmmon Just to clear up part of the All You Zombies confusion, the character was able to impregnate him/herself and give birth to him/herself. This means both male and female sex organs were functioning - something known as "true hermaphroditism", and has never been documented as having occurred in humans in real-life. – Izkata Jul 20 '17 at 00:39
  • I think we need more clarification on what exactly you are wanting. To me, it's a big difference between Character A's body was transformed versus Character B's personality was put into Character C's body (and possibly vice versa). – eshier Jul 20 '17 at 16:49
  • Here I was, ready to answer Mr. Garrison from South Park – tilley31 Dec 27 '17 at 21:00
  • An "older than TV" example: Tiresias from Greek mythology (https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Tiresias) was changed into a woman by Hera for 7 years. – Taladris Dec 13 '18 at 01:55