Making his initial name as a prominent scenester during the heady days of the early-'70s New York punk club scene,
Wayne County later gained additional renown as perhaps rock's most prominent transsexual performer, billing herself as
Jayne County following her return to the U.S. from Berlin in 1980. Born
Wayne Rogers in Dallas, GA (near Atlanta) in approximately 1947,
Wayne County assumed his stage name for a production of the Jackie Curtis play
Femme Fatale.
County acted in several
Andy Warhol-associated theater pieces and from there became the regular DJ at the legendary club Max's Kansas City. Starting in 1972,
County performed (in drag) at the club as well, eventually writing and recording a celebratory theme song titled "Max's Kansas City" in 1976 with a backing group called
the Back Street Boys. However,
County found it difficult to find American labels interested in his trashy, campy,
New York Dolls-influenced brand of rock & roll, so he relocated to London just as that city's punk movement was beginning to gather momentum. He found a home on the Safari label with a new band, the Electric Chairs, and issued his debut album -- also called
The Electric Chairs -- in 1978. Further albums included
Storm the Gates of Heaven and
Things Your Mother Never Told You, both from 1979; afterwards,
County retired to Berlin and emerged as
Jayne County, returning to North America in 1980. A 1981 live album,
Rock 'n' Roll Resurrection, was the first billed to
Jayne County, and found her fronting a mostly new version of the Electric Chairs.
County was quiet for a while as a recording artist, returning only in 1986 with a self-produced album called
Private Oyster (a similar, unauthorized version was later issued under the title
Amerikan Cleopatra). Periodic releases followed in the '90s, some featuring new songs, some featuring reworked versions of past material. In 1996,
County published her autobiography, Man Enough to Be a Woman; in 1999, she issued a newly recorded version of her song "Fuck Off," retitled "Fuck Off 2000."
–
Steve Huey, Rovi