The arrival of “What It Feels Like for a Girl” on the television landscape serves as a potent reminder of a past that isn’t quite past. Adapted from Paris Lees’ stark memoir, the series immediately immerses us in the specific cultural microclimate of Hucknall, Nottinghamshire, at the turn of the millennium.
Our guide is Byron, a teenager whose internal world is on a collision course with the aggressively binary expectations of their surroundings. When Byron, confronted with a casual slur, asks with genuine puzzlement, “What’s a transexual?”, the moment encapsulates the profound lack of language and public consciousness surrounding transgender lives in the early 2000s.
This isn’t the polished, retrospectively aware coming-of-age narrative often served up; instead, the series signals its intent for a rawer, more discomfiting exploration of youth, all set against the almost painfully nostalgic backdrop of FCUK tees, Nokia dumbphones, and the nascent anxieties of a new century.
The Crucible of Hucknall: Forging Identity Against the Grain
Byron’s formative years are less a gentle nurturing and more a trial by fire, a landscape shaped by the very societal incomprehension that the series unflinchingly documents. At home, the atmosphere is thick with a particularly potent brand of early noughties masculinity, embodied by the father, Steve, whose reaction to Byron’s burgeoning effeminacy is not just disapproval but a visceral affront to his own precarious standing.
The mother, Lisa, offers a different, perhaps more insidious, form of neglect – a detached selfishness that leaves Byron emotionally adrift. Amidst this familial chill, only the grandmother, “Mommar,” provides a flicker of warmth, a sanctuary of acceptance. Outside, the world is no kinder. The early 2000s, for someone like Byron, were a period of open season, where terms like “bender” were casual ammunition in relentless campaigns of bullying.
It is within this crucible of familial dysfunction and societal hostility that Byron takes tentative, then bolder, steps into sex work, first in the grim anonymity of public toilets, later through the exploitative lens of an older boyfriend, Max. These are not choices born of liberation, but acts of survival and a desperate search for validation in a world offering precious little.
Finding the Fallen Divas: A Different Kind of Danger, A Different Kind of Love
The narrative pivots with Byron’s discovery of the “Fallen Divas,” a vibrant collective of trans and queer individuals who offer an alternative universe to the monochrome hostility of Hucknall. Figures like the wise Lady Die and the complicated Sasha provide a mirror and a lexicon previously unavailable.
This found family offers a profound sense of belonging, a space where Byron’s burgeoning identity can breathe, even flourish, amidst the nocturnal haze of their shared subculture, a world fueled by parties, drugs, and the intense, often messy, exploration of new relationships. Yet, the series astutely sidesteps any simplistic portrayal of this community as a perfect haven.
Byron, sharpened by adversity, is no pliant victim; armed with a fierce intellect and a cutting wit, they are often arrogant, sometimes deliberately cruel, particularly in their rivalry with Sasha. The series doesn’t shy away from the continued precarity, as seen when Byron and an associate, Liam, embark on a poorly conceived robbery.
These risky behaviors, even the way sexual encounters evolve as Byron starts to outwardly express a female identity, are tied to a complicated quest for affirmation – the potent, dangerous thrill of being truly seen as a girl, even if that recognition comes in fraught circumstances.
This portrayal shows a welcome maturity in storytelling, acknowledging that marginalized communities are not monolithic and that survival within them still requires navigating complex internal and external dangers.
The Scars of Becoming: Resilience in a Morally Gray World
The later stages of Byron’s journey chart a path toward a more defined self, marked by the adoption of female attire, a new name, and the tentative steps towards a future, including university aspirations. However, this is no sanitized arc of triumph.
A period of incarceration, depicted with stark honesty, serves as a crucial, character-deepening experience, highlighting both Byron’s vulnerability and an unyielding core of resilience. The narrative is punctuated by significant personal losses, moments that strip away artifice and catalyze painful growth.
“What It Feels Like for a Girl” consistently resists the saccharine, its portrayal of Byron’s transition remaining firmly rooted in a chaotic and morally ambiguous reality. The series powerfully conveys the sheer effort of self-actualization when undertaken in an environment designed to erase you, sketching a compelling psychological portrait of a young person navigating not just a personal transition, but a world slowly, painfully, beginning to acknowledge their existence.
What It Feels Like for a Girl is an eight-part BBC Three drama series that premiered on June 3, 2025, and is available for streaming on BBC iPlayer.
Full Credits
Directors: Brian Welsh (Lead Director), Marie Kristiansen, Ng Choon Ping
Writers: Paris Lees, Georgia Christou, Paul Williams, Sarah Simmonds, Mika Onyx Johnson
Producers and Executive Producers: Liza Marshall, Ron O’Berst, Nawfal Faizullah, Paris Lees, Chris Sweeney
Cast: Ellis Howard, Laura Haddock, Hannah Walters, Michael Socha, Calam Lynch, Laquarn Lewis, Hannah Jones, Adam Ali, Alex Thomas-Smith, Jake Dunn, Dickie Beau, Emma Shipp, Sekou Diaby, Laura Checkley, Oliver Huntingdon, Lorn Macdonald, Rhys Connah, Fay Ripley, Selina Mosinski
The Review
What It Feels Like for a Girl Season 1
"What It Feels Like for a Girl" is a vital, unflinching, and deeply affecting series. It offers a raw look at a turbulent youth navigating identity and survival in an unforgiving era, anchored by a fiercely complex protagonist. While its honesty can be brutal, its portrayal of resilience and the search for self makes for essential, if challenging, viewing.
PROS
- Unflinchingly honest and raw depiction of a difficult coming-of-age.
- Complex, memorable central character who defies easy categorization.
- Evocative portrayal of early 2000s societal attitudes and LGBTQ+ subculture.
- Highlights the importance of found family and resilience.
CONS
- The raw and explicit content may be disturbing for some viewers.
- Byron’s morally ambiguous actions might challenge audience sympathy.
- The pacing and intensity might feel overwhelming at times.