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Behind Chaz Bono’s wedding photos lies a decade-long fight for basic recognition

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When People.com and other outlets ran glowing coverage of Chaz Bono’s wedding to Shara Blue Mathes in March 2026—the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel, the “love of my life” quotes, the glamorous photos—the story was framed as a feel-good milestone. What the coverage rarely dwells on is how long it took for that milestone to be treated as legitimate. Chaz Bono, 57, came out as transgender in 2009 and documented his transition in the 2011 documentary “Becoming Chaz” and memoir “Transition: The Story of How I Became a Man.” For years before that, media and institutions had struggled to treat his identity and relationships as anything other than a curiosity or a controversy. The wedding photos are the endpoint; the decade-long fight for basic recognition is the story behind them.

Behind the glamorous wedding lies a long fight for legitimacy

Chaz Bono married Shara Blue Mathes at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel in March 2026. As reported by People.com, Bono described Mathes as the love of his life and said they would always be together regardless of challenges. The couple had been together since 2017. The wedding was covered as a celebrity event: exclusive details, fashion, and family presence, including Cher’s attendance. That framing is accurate as far as it goes, but it obscures the fact that Bono’s right to have his relationship and identity recognised in the mainstream was not a given. It was something he had to fight for, in public, over many years.

Bono was born Chastity Sun Bono in 1969, the only child of Sonny and Cher. He came out as lesbian in The Advocate in 1995 and began his female-to-male transition more than a decade later, going public in 2009. In 2011, the documentary “Becoming Chaz” premiered at Sundance and aired on the Oprah Winfrey Network, and he published his memoir. In an interview with NPR at the time, Bono explained that he chose to document his transition publicly because “if I’d just made the statement but been quiet about it, there would have been a lot of people talking for me and not doing a good job.” He wanted to control the narrative and put a face on an issue that many people did not understand. Reuters and the Los Angeles Times reported that Bono was surprised by how positive much of the coverage eventually became; he had feared mockery and rejection. The point is that legitimacy was not handed to him. He had to build it, piece by piece, through visibility and advocacy.

In 2012, Chaz Bono became the first transgender recipient of GLAAD’s Stephen F. Kolzak Award. GLAAD President Mike Thompson said that Bono had “opened the door for countless others, reshaping the way Americans think about transgender people.” The Human Rights Campaign had issued a statement in 2009 praising his courage and visibility and noting that his public transition would “foster much-needed dialogue about the lives of transgender Americans and the need for full equality.” Bono has since served as a spokesperson for the Human Rights Campaign’s National Coming Out Day and remained a visible advocate. That recognition did not happen overnight. It followed years of being misnamed, misgendered, and treated as a spectacle. The wedding coverage, in that sense, is the result of a long campaign for basic recognition—the right to have his relationship and his identity reported as normal and worthy of respect.

What This Actually Means

The glamorous images of Chaz Bono’s wedding are not false; they are incomplete. They show the celebration without always acknowledging the path that made it possible. For more than a decade, Bono had to push back against media and institutional reluctance to treat his transition and his relationships as legitimate. The wedding is a milestone, but the milestone exists because he and others insisted that trans lives and trans joy be taken seriously. Treating the wedding as simply a celebrity story, without that context, erases the fight that preceded it.

Who is Chaz Bono?

Chaz Bono is the only child of entertainers Sonny and Cher, born Chastity Sun Bono in 1969. He came out as lesbian in The Advocate in 1995 and began his female-to-male transition in 2009, going public and documenting the process in the documentary “Becoming Chaz” (2011) and the memoir “Transition: The Story of How I Became a Man.” He became the first transgender recipient of GLAAD’s Stephen F. Kolzak Award in 2012 and has worked with the Human Rights Campaign and other LGBTQ advocacy groups. He has appeared in film and television, including “American Horror Story,” and is a writer and speaker on transgender issues. He married Shara Blue Mathes in March 2026 at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel; the couple had been together since 2017.

  • Transition and visibility: Public transition from 2009; documentary and memoir in 2011; first transgender GLAAD Kolzak Award recipient (2012).
  • Advocacy: Human Rights Campaign spokesperson, GLAAD visibility, LGBTQ advocacy since the 1990s.
  • Wedding: Married Shara Blue Mathes, March 2026, Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel; described her as the love of his life in People.com.

Sources

People.com — Chaz Bono Marries Shara Blue Mathes in Glam Hollywood Wedding (Exclusive)

NPR — Through ‘Transition,’ Chastity Bono Becomes Chaz

Reuters — Chaz Bono transitions from Chastity to his real self

Advocate.com — Chaz Bono First Transgender Recipient of Prestigious GLAAD Award

Human Rights Campaign — Statement on Chaz Bono’s Announcement of Transitioning

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