Tributes Various tributes to Johnson have been produced, some while she was alive and some posthumously. A character named Boom Boom, based on Johnson, is featured in the Hot Peaches play 1982
Street Theater, a comedy based on the Stonewall Riots. In 1996, musician
Anohni produced a play titled
The Birth of Anne Frank/The Ascension of Marsha P. Johnson. Attendees included prominent drag performers and Stonewall veterans. In 2019,
Time created 89 new covers to celebrate women of the year starting from 1920. It chose Johnson for 1969. On June 30, 2020, Google celebrated Marsha P. Johnson with a Google Doodle. On August 24, 2020, the 75th anniversary of Johnson's birth, East River State Park was renamed the
Marsha P. Johnson State Park, becoming the first New York state park named after an openly LGBTQ person. In 2022, Governor
Kathy Hochul announced that a new ornamental gate would be constructed at the park in Johnson's honor.
Memorialization In May 2019, it was announced that Johnson and Sylvia Rivera would be honored with monuments at Greenwich Village, near the site of the Stonewall. This project was delayed for several years due to the
New York City Department of Parks and Recreation's lengthy approval process and the
COVID-19 pandemic. On August 24, 2021, without authorization, transgender activists installed their own sculpture,
A Love Letter to Marsha, in Christopher Park. The statue, which was created by artist Jesse Pallotta, was given a temporary permit to remain in the park until November and was displayed there until August 24, 2022. In June 2019, Johnson was one of the inaugural fifty American "pioneers, trailblazers, and heroes" inducted on the
National LGBTQ Wall of Honor, which is located at the
Stonewall National Monument. A large, painted mural depicting Johnson and Rivera went on display in
Dallas, Texas, in August 2019 to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall riots. According to journalist Larry Collins, it is the largest mural honoring the transgender community in the United States. In July 2020, a petition to replace a statue of
Christopher Columbus in Johnson's hometown, Elizabeth, received 75,000 signatures. In August, the
Union County, New Jersey Office of LGBTQ Affairs announced that a monument to Johnson would be erected near Elizabeth city hall. In March 2022 and following proposals to feminize the names of public spaces, a square on
Rue Burdeau in
Lyon was renamed in honor of Johnson.
In popular culture Anohni formed the music ensemble
Anohni and the Johnsons, which was named after Johnson, in 2000. A picture of Johnson is featured on the cover of the ensemble's 2023 album,
My Back Was a Bridge for You to Cross. A documentary about Johnson's life titled
Pay It No Mind, produced by Randy Wicker and directed by Michael Kasino, was released in 2012.
The Death and Life of Marsha P. Johnson controversy On October 7, 2017,
The Death and Life of Marsha P. Johnson, directed by
David France, was released on
Netflix. The documentary follows Victoria Cruz as she searches for information about Johnson's death and the death of
Islan Nettles, a Black transgender woman who was killed in 2013. The film attracted controversy when Tourmaline accused France of taking ideas and research from a grant application for her then-unreleased film
Happy Birthday, Marsha!, starring actress
Mya Taylor as Johnson.{{sfnm|1a1=Calafell|1y=2019|1pp=26-29}|2a1=Tourmaline|2y=2025|2p=255}} In an essay published in
Teen Vogue, Tourmaline argues that trans women "on the streets" who "fac[e] the kinds of violence Marsha faced" should be the ones to tell Johnson's story and benefit from its telling. In response, France released statements on Twitter and his website denying the accusations, discussing his friendship with Johnson, and calling for people to watch
Happy Birthday, Marsha!, which was released in 2018. Mariah Lopez later released a statement criticizing both Tourmaline and France, stating that Tourmaline had worked to silence Lopez's Strategic Trans Alliance for Radical Reform (STARR) because it competed with the
Sylvia Rivera Law Project, where Tourmaline worked. Meanwhile, she accuses France of "predatory, manipulative journalistic tactic[s]" and "jeopardizing her safety and well-being". She cites instances of France's staff stranding her, offering her hard drugs, and recording conversations about transgender murder investigations that STARR was undertaking against her wishes.
Historiography Johnson is often considered foundational to the
transgender rights movement and other
LGBTQ movements, with many considering her a heroine. Tourmaline states that, because of her role at Stonewall, she "paved the foundation for the modern trans and queer liberation movements". She credits Johnson with inspiring transgender activists and celebrities like
Miss Major Griffin-Gracy, Jeanine and
Quentin Bell,
Raquel Willis,
Aariana Rose Philip,
Laverne Cox, and
Janet Mock, as well as legal reforms and broader cultural change. She is sometimes called the "Saint of Christopher Street". Scholars have analyzed Johnson's life through the framework of
mad and
disability studies. According to disability studies scholar
Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, Tourmaline was one of the first writers to discuss Johnson's life using a
disability justice framework on her blog,
The Spirit Was. Piepzna-Samarasinha argues that Johnson's
complex post-traumatic stress disorder,
neurodiversity, sadness, and suicidality were both sources of struggle and gifts that allowed them to exhibit radical kindness and openness and to reject
respectability politics. Ashley and Sanchinel agree with this assessment and further argue that "trans communities are seeking to narrate Marsha P. Johnson in a context that transcends Stonewall's momentousness by accentuating the radicality of her loving, everyday self". Researcher J. Logan Smilges argues that Johnson's institutionalization and Thorazine treatment show the way that the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders medicalized both gender variance and mental illness, an intersection that Smilges calls "neurotrans". They then argue that Johnson's opposition to the medical and penal systems that defined her life was a form of neurotrans politics. A biography of Johnson by Tourmaline was published in 2025. It was selected as a book club pick by
Roxane Gay and received a positive review from
Kirkus, which described it as "a warm homage to a pioneering activist". == See also ==