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Actress, Transgender Activist Alexis Arquette Dies at 47

Actress and transgender activist Alexis Arquette arrives at Point Foundation's Voices On Point Gala in Los Angeles in 2014. She died on Sept. 11, 2016 at 47. (Credit: Joshua Blanchard/Getty Images for Point Foundation)

Alexis Arquette, an actress and transgender activist, died Sunday while surrounded by members of Hollywood’s famous Arquette family.

Actress and transgender activist Alexis Arquette arrives at Point Foundation’s Voices On Point Gala in Los Angeles in 2014. She died on Sept. 11, 2016 at 47. (Credit: Joshua Blanchard/Getty Images for Point Foundation)

Arquette was 47. Brother Richmond Arquette and brother-in-law Todd Morgan confirmed the death to CNN.

Arquette was best known for film roles, including one in “The Wedding Singer” and another in “Pulp Fiction.”

Born Robert, Arquette was the sibling of actors Rosanna, David and Patricia Arquette.

A 2007 film about her transition to becoming a woman, “Alexis Arquette: She’s My Brother,” was popular on the film festival circuit.

“Our brother Robert, who became our brother Alexis, who became our sister Alexis, who became our brother Alexis, passed this morning September 11, at 12:32 am,” Richmond Arquette wrote on his Facebook page on Sunday.

In February, actor David Arquette reportedly said during an appearance on “Kocktails with Khloe” that Alexis no longer identified as transgender.

“She was like, ‘Yeah, sometimes I’ll be a man, sometimes I’ll be a woman. I like to refer to myself as gender suspicious,'” David Arquette said.

Richmond Arquette wrote that Alexis was with brothers, sisters, a niece and “several other loved ones” at the end. David Bowie’s song “Starman” was playing.

Richmond Arquette described Alexis to CNN as “a force” who “died as he lived, on his own terms” and said he was happy to have been “with him as he began his journey onward.”

A cause of death was not specified.

Alexis Arquette began acting at an early age. Her first role was as a transvestite named Georgette in the 1989 film “Last Exit to Brooklyn.”

She would go on to appear in dozens of roles from low-budget movies to television roles.

Arquette was one of the earliest high-profile advocates for transgender rights and said she identified with being a woman at a young age.

In 2009 she told Dr. Drew Pinksy during an interview on “Larry King Live” that she was born into “a pretty liberal family.”

“I’ve worn makeup since I was 12,” Arquette said. “They weren’t in denial so much as their fear was that if I came out as transgender and live my life as a woman that might receive a lot of flak from people on the street.”

On Sunday Patricia Arquette tweeted “Breaking through the veil singing Starman” with a link to that Bowie song, and “My first best friend – Cosmic Dancer” with a link to the T. Rex song.

Actress Roseanne Barr tweeted, “Hail hail a vagenius has vacated this realm! RIP Alexis Arquette.” Barr included a photo of Arquette backstage at Barr’s talk show in 1999.

Singer Boy George also paid homage to Arquette, who famously portrayed a Boy George-inspired singer in the 1998 film “The Wedding Singer.”

“R.I.P. my sister Alexis Arquette,” Boy George tweeted. “Another bright light gone out far too soon. Love to the family and all that loved Alexis.”

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