Justin Vivian Bond is named a recipient of a 2024 MacArthur Fellowship.

PROFILE

 

Mx Justin Vivian Bond has appeared on stage (Broadway and Off-Broadway, London’s West End), screen (Shortbus, Can You Ever Forgive Me?, Sunset Stories), television (High Maintenance, Difficult People, The Get Down), nightclub stages (most notably a decades-long residency at Joe’s Pub at The Public Theater in NYC), and in concert halls worldwide (Carnegie Hall, The Sydney Opera House).

Their visual art and installations have been seen in museums and galleries in the US (Participant, Inc, The New Museum) and abroad (Vitrine, London). Vivian’s artwork is also included in the permanent collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum. Their memoir Tango: My Childhood Backwards and in High Heels (Feminist Press) won the Lambda Literary Award for Transgender Nonfiction. They are the recipient of an Obie, a Bessie, and a Tony nomination, an Ethyl Eichelberger Award, The Peter Reed Foundation Grant, The Foundation for Contemporary Art Grant for Artists, and The Art Matters Grant. In 2024, Justin Vivian Bond was named a recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship. In 2025, Bard College will award them an Honorary Doctorate of the Arts.

They have self-released several full-length recordings: most notably Dendrophile and Silver Wells. In 2022, they released Only an Octave Apart (Decca Records), a critically acclaimed collaboration with Anthony Roth Costanzo, produced by Thomas Bartlett with arrangements by Nico Muhly. As one half of the legendary punk cabaret duo Kiki & Herb, they toured the world and released two CDs: Do You Hear What We Hear? and Kiki and Herb Will Die For You at Carnegie Hall.

Mx Bond has been at the forefront of Trans visibility and activism since the early 1990s. They won an Audie Award for Best Non-Fiction narration for the audiobook Candy Darling: Dreamer, Icon, Superstar, the National Book Critics Circle Award-winning biography by C. Carr. They have a Master’s Degree in Performance Design from Central Saint Martins College in London and have taught performance composition and Live Art Installation at NYU and Bard College. Currently, Viv divides their time between residences in New York City’s East Village and the Hudson Valley. In December 2019, they made their debut at The Vienna Staatsoper in the world premiere of Olga Neuwirth’s Orlando as Orlando’s child.

In 2025 Vivian is scheduled to appear in Complications in Sue, a new opera commissioned by Opera Philadelphia conceived by Viv with a libretto by the Tony Award-winning writer Michael R. Jackson.

UPCOMING SHOW: JOE’S PUB

MAY 6 - MAY 11, 2025
at Joe’s Pub at The Public Theater

Following on the sensible heels of last fall’s Radclyffe Hall inspired sold-out-sapphic/song-cycle, Oh, Well, Justin Vivian Bond and and band continue into spring with Well, Well another outing highlighting songs by our great lesbian, trans singer, and gender non-conforming songwriters.

Featuring songs from St. Vincent, Sophie, Janis Ian, Billie Eilish, and Benjamin Smoke Viv has a flick through multiple decades of dyke drama and transeuphoria.

Once again Viv is here to prove THERE’S NO CABARET WITHOUT THE T!

With:
Matt Ray, M.D and piano
Bernice “Boom Boom” Brooks, drums
Nathann Carrera, guitar
Claudia Chopek, violin
Mike Jackson, bass

Photo Credit: Greg Gorman for LA Eyeworks

 

It makes the art better: A one-on-one with Mx Justin Vivian Bond, 2022.


While we at A.C.T. (American Conservatory Theater) are excited to hear the denizens of San Francisco sing their tales of the city again, we also acknowledge that the casting of a cisgender woman as a transgender character in our original production of Tales of the City, The Musical is an outdated practice that was harmful then, and is harmful now. A.C.T. takes representation on our stages seriously, and we want to use our platform to talk about how casting practices have evolved for the better since 2011.

We are making available for all this filmed conversation with Mx Justin Vivian Bond, who made history as the first actor who identifies as transgender to play a trans character on Broadway, and A.C.T. Artistic Director Pam MacKinnon, discussing highlights of Vivian’s career as well as the importance of trans representation and diversity in the industry.

Additionally, a portion of ticket sales for Tales of the City will be donated to The Transgender District and the Transgender-Variant & Intersex Justice Project (TGIJP). To learn more about these organizations, please visit transgenderdistrictsf.com and tgijp.org.


Spring 2021: “This look is from the Show-on-the-Wall, which happened during the pandemic,” says Jonathan Anderson. “I like that it’s incredibly bottom heavy. It could be a dress. It could be a ballgown. It could be a winter coat. I like how simplistic it was as a concept.”

 
 

Photograph by Gioncarlo Valentine for the New Yorker. September 24, 2021.

 

The cabaret star Justin Vivian Bond, left, and the operatic counter tenor Anthony Roth Costanzo performed from “Only an Octave Apart” with the New York Philharmonic at the Rose Theater. Chris Lee, The New York Times.

 

New York Times Critic’s Pick Review:
Philip Glass and the Bangles, Mashed at the Symphony

Anthony Roth Costanzo and Justin Vivian Bond brought their gleeful opera-cabaret show “Only an Octave Apart” to the New York Philharmonic.

It was sublime.

By turns hilarious and tender — those dual Didos are very much not played for laughs — the show was a small miracle of careful craft and improvisatory looseness, of arch personae and moving sincerity. Costanzo was a superb, well, straight man to Bond’s battiness, and their voices — one slender and pure, the other husky and vibrato-heavy — improbably blended. The return to live performance after a year and a half of lockdowns only increased the poignancy and delight of their obvious mutual love and respect. It was a confection that nourished.”

— Zachary Woolfe | The New York Times | January 28, 2022


 

Photo: Nina Westervelt for Vogue Magazine. September 20, 2021.

Anthony Roth Costanzo and Justin Vivian Bond: Tiny Desk (Home) Concert.

Witch Eyes, by Viv, to protect you from evil chodes, (2020).
Click here to learn more.

Olga Neuwirth’s new adaptation of Virginia Woolf’s gender-crossing novel is
the first work by a woman at the Vienna State Opera. (2019)

Anna Clementi, left, with Justin Vivian Bond, and Constance Hauman. Credit: Michael Pöhn/Wiener Staatsoper

Justin Vivian Bond, left, with Anna Clementi and Constance Hauman.Credit: Michael Pöhn/Wiener Staatsoper

The invention of Orlando’s child, the character played by Mx. Bond (who prefers that gender-neutral honorific), is a nod to the rising visibility of trans and gender nonconforming people, including in the opera world, as one consequence of the doors opened by Orlando.

— Ben Miller, The New York Times

BBC: Vienna opera house stages first opera by woman

THE GUARDIAN: After 150 years, Vienna opera house stages first opera by a woman

NYTIMES: A Female Composer Makes History With ‘Orlando’ in Vienna

Tilda and Vivian, Central Park, NYC.

 

À La Table De Christian Louboutin Avec Olivia Palmero Et Kanika Kapoor
02/07/2018

Christian Louboutin est un chausseur qui aime les femmes, et les femmes aiment Christian Louboutin. En témoigne la longue liste de noms (français et internationaux) ayant répondu présent à son invitation à venir découvrir cette semaine sa nouvelle collection de souliers de la collection printemps-été 2019. Dans les salons historiques et grandioses de l’Eléphant Paname, Natalia Vodianova, Olivia Palermo, la chanteuse indienne Kanika Kapoor et Elisa Sednaoui viennent découvrir la collection de chaussures richement décorées, le tout dans une scénographie tout en miroirs et effets visuels. Après le cocktail, tous se retrouvent dans l’un des grands halls de l’hôtel particulier de la rue Volney pour un dîner intimiste à la lueur de la bougie. Là, Kristin Scott Thomas, Kevin Mischel et Derek Blasberg se laissent envoûter par la prestation piano-voix sensuelle de l’artiste New-Yorkaise Justin Vivian Bond. Un pur moment de luxe, glamour et volupté.

Photos: Jean Picon


 

Justin Vivian Bond, "My Model | My Self: I’ll Stand by You, 2017. New Museum, New York. Wallpaper made in collaboration with George Venson of [Voutsa], pink dress by Frank Masandrea (1947–1988). Photo by Scott Rudd.

 

 
 

“It’s very important to me that this dress is worn on World AIDS Day,” Bond continued. “So many queer people throughout history have created the beautiful gowns that straight women wear, or the beautiful homes that very privileged white straight people live in. We create their luxuries and their beauty and their world that so many people aspire to, and yet we’re still somehow marginalized.”

— W MAGAZINE | Oct. 31, 2017


 
 

Justin Vivian Bond: “Almost Cut My Hair” at Joe’s Pub at the Public Theater, December 14, 2016.

 

LOVE IS CRAZY
Théâtre National de Chaillot
26 février 2014

Ni Mr ni Mme, le suffixe « Mx » conviendrait en revanche pour Justin Vivian Bond, qui a refusé de choisir son camp d’une façon aussi tranchée. « Personnellement, je n’ai jamais envisagé de me ranger d’un côté ou de l’autre. Pour moi prétendre être une femme serait aussi faux que la comédie que l’on me demande de jouer depuis longtemps, celle d’être un homme. J’aimerais avoir le luxe de la liberté de m’exprimer avec le plus d’honnêteté possible et de faire respecter ma vérité. […] Pour moi il n’existe pas de sexe opposé. Il n’y a que l’identité et le désir ». 

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Tim Murphy:
You have a new CD out in March called “Justin Vivian Bond: Dendrophile.” Explain.

Vivian:
A dendrophile’s a person who gets an erotic charge out of nature. I am one! This is a record for the tree-hugger community. I do Bambi Lake’s “The Golden Age of Hustlers” on it, and also a duet of the Carpenters’ “Superstar” with Beth Orton. As for Vivian, that’s my self-given middle name. Justin is a very male-identified name, and I wanted something that would balance it. I had an uncle named Vivian Francis. He was a wonderful person, but he changed his name to Victor. He didn’t like being Vivian. But it’s fine with me.

— New York Times, December 7, 2010


 

“Golden Age of Hustlers” from the album “Dendrophile”. Performer: Justin Vivian Bond Song by: Bambi Lake Co-Directors: Silas Howard & Erin Greenwell Producer: Ethan Weinstock Cinematographer: PJ raval Editor: Janis Vogel "The Golden Age of Hustlers" captures the 1970's gay hustler scenes of pre-HIV/AIDS era on Polk St in San Francisco from an insider's experience. 2014.

Justin Vivian Bond, with Nath-Ann Carrera on guitar, performs the song "The New Economy" from the album “Dendrophile” from a Lower East Side rooftop, 2011.

I'm thrilled to be debuting the first video for Dendrophile. Its called American Wedding and the lyrics are by Essex Hemphill. It's the first song on the recording and I consider it to be an invocation.“American Wedding from the album “Dendrophile”. 2011.

KABARET WARZAWSKI (2013)
Stage Direction Krzysztof Warlikowski

Inspired by I Am a Camera by John van Druten, Les Bienveillantes by Jonathan Littell, Shortbus by John Cameron Mitchell and Tango by Justin Vivian Bond

Adaptation by Krzysztof Warlikowski, Piotr Gruszczyński, Szczepan Orłowski 

European Tour Archive:

3–6 July 2013, Gdynia, Poland, Festiwal Open’er
19–25 July 2013, Avignon, France, Festival d’Avignon
16–17 October 2013, Wrocław, Poland, Międzynarodowy Festiwal Teatralny Dialog
14–15 December 2013, Kraków, Poland, Międzynarodowy Festiwal Teatralny Boska Komedia
7–14 February 2014, Paris, France, Théâtre National de Chaillot
6–7 March 2014, Luxembourg City, Luxembourg, Les Théâtres de la Ville de Luxembourg
13–15 March 2014, Liège, Belgium, Le Théâtre de la Place
3–4 April 2014, Clermont-Ferrand, France, La Comédie de Clermont-Ferrand
24–26 June 2014, Munich, Germany, Munich Opera Festival
10–11 October 2016, Vilnius, Lithuania, Festiwal Sirenos

 
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Bond's theatrical streak reshapes itself on this collection: the songs form a parallel narrative to Joan Didion's novel Play It As It Lays, tapping into its themes of isolation and grim self-reliance through songs by tough storytellers like Mark Eitzel, Leonard Cohen and Joni Mitchell. Thomas "Doveman" Bartlett's piano arrangements support Bond's intense soliloquys.

— Ann Powers | NPR Music | June 15, 2012


Justin Vivian Bond ("Kiki & Herb: Alive on Broadway") prepared to perform "Silver Wells" at 54 Below, in celebration of the album of the same name. Here, Bond performed "Stars" and spoke to Playbill about some of the other songs in the concert, 2014.

“Patriot’s Heart” from the album “Silver Wells” at Le Poisson Rouge, NYC, 2012.

TANGO: MY CHILDHOOD, BACKWARDS AND IN HIGH HEELS

Bond recalls in vivid detail how it looked and felt to first discover Mom's lipstick (Iced Watermelon by Revlon). Growing up haunted by their awareness of being “different,” Bond began to foster intimate friendships with girls, and to feel increasingly at risk with boys. But when the bully next door wanted to meet in secret, Bond couldn't resist. Their trysts went on for years, making Bond acutely aware of how sexual power and vulnerability can intertwine. With inimitable style, Bond raises issues about LBGTQ adolescence, parenting trans/queer children, and bullying, all while being utterly entertaining.


"Tango is a raw nerve touching an electric soul, a beautiful book, written with honesty, pain, and joy from one of our great modern day shamans." 
—Sandra Bernhard

“Justin Bond has written a very important book for all of us to read.
Thank you, Justin, for your courage in writing the truth of what you went through as a transgender child in this society. Thank you, also, for your sense of humor. It made the book fun to read as well.” 
—Yoko Ono

"Tango should be in the hands of every child who can read, and of every adult who cares about that child." 
—Michael Warner, professor of English at Yale University

“Bond’s fabulosity is matched by a trenchant wit, and [V’s] over-the-top stories are smartly edged with politics, sexual or otherwise.” 
New York Times

"Reading Tango is like listening to your favorite eccentric cousin or auntie tell you hair-dressing tales of innocence lost and found, friendships forged of adversity, and bullies bewildered by their own perversity. Justin Vivian spins a one-of-a-kind story that you won't be able to put down." 
—Kate Bornstein, author of Gender Outlaw

"When I say Justin Vivian is a true original, what I mean is, Justin doesn't resemble anyone else on the face of the planet. When I say Justin Vivian Bond is touched by genius, I mean exactly that." 
—Michael Cunningham, author of The Hours

"Justin Vivian Bond is a lighting rod, a solid steel structure hin heels that attracts burning chaos and disciplines it into orderly submission. Am I allowed to say that Justin is a God?" 
—Rufus Wainwright



Justin Bond, at Joe’s Pub, is a gender-bending, truth-telling illusionist.Illustration by ROBERT RISKO

 

John Cameron Mitchell's Shortbus explores the lives of several emotionally challenged characters as they navigate the comic and tragic intersections between love and sex in and around a modern-day underground salon. A sex therapist who has never had an orgasm, a dominatrix who is unable to connect, a gay couple who are deciding whether to open up their relationship, and the people who weave in and out of their lives, all converge on a weekly gathering called Shortbus: a mad nexus of art, music, politics and polysexual carnality. Set in a post-9/11, Bush-exhausted New York City, Shortbus tells its story with sexual frankness, suggesting new ways to reconcile questions of the mind, pleasures of the flesh and imperatives of the heart.

 
 

Shortbus (2006), Extended Trailer.

Shortbus (2006) - In the End performed by Justin Vivian Bond.

KIKI & HERB

Photo: Justin Vivian Bond and Kenny Mellman, 2016 for the New Yorker.

 

“Total Eclipse of the Heart” with Kiki and Herb. Video directed by Victoria Leacock, 2006.

 
 

3 never before released live tracks.
Recorded in various boîtes across the world in the 2000s. Same as it ever was.

All profits go to Black Visions Collective, a Queer and Trans centering organization whose mission is to organize powerful, connected Black communities and dismantle systems of violence…through building strategic campaigns, investing in Black leadership, and engaging in cultural and narrative organizing.

We have covered the cost of the mechanical licenses for the original songwriters and are donating that.

CLICK HERE TO BUY & SUPPORT →

credits
released June 5, 2020
Justin Vivian Bond and Kenny Mellman are Kiki and Herb

Photo by Liz Liguori


Kiki & Herb: Alive on Broadway, playbill from 2006.

Kenny Mellman, left, as Herb, and Justin Bond as Kiki DuRane, in "Kiki & Herb Alive on Broadway."Credit...Sara Krulwich/The New York Times

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Kiki and Herb, in 2003. Photo by Ruven Afanador for The New Yorker.

 
 
 
 
 

Running Up That Hill also available on Spotify and Apple Music.
Frosty the Snowman also available on Spotify.

 
 

May 1999 Mx Justin Vivian Bond and Kenny Mellman at Flamingo East.

 
 

Kiki and Herb, 1993. Flier by Daniel Nicoletta.