Brits commenting in this nonsense have a wonderful neologism to refer to "trans women" (at least of the sort who go to the bother of doing their hair in a feminine way and wearing make-up): womanface performers.
It's great because it echos blackface, the old entertainment form which is universally recognized as having been racist, and viciously vilified as such in the same quarters that breathlessly support "trans rights", since it offered a parody of black culture performed by whites, the same way "trans women" offer a parody of actual femininity.