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In 1964, Lorey Kaye, a twenty-year-old from New Haven, CT, moved to Manhattan to start a new life in the big city. Lorey was a fresh-faced, dark-haired hippie, who attracted attention as much for her headstrong, determined, street smart attitude as for her striking good looks. She was hired as a waitress in a new nightclub that had just opened in Times Square – called Steve Paul’s ‘The Scene'. The club was an immediate hit with gigs by the likes of BB King, Jimi Hendrix, and Sammy Davis Jr., regular visitors like Andy Warhol and Edie Sedgwick – and Lorey was at the heart of the action. Another group, The Lovin’ Spoonful, also played there regularly, and their lead singer, John Sebastian, took a shine to her. John and Lorey started seeing each other, and Lorey became his muse, inspiring him to compose a number of the group's hit singles about her, such as ‘She's A Lady' and ‘Rain on the Roof', even mentioning her by name in some of the lyrics. Lorey and John Sebastian (1967) They got hitched in 1966 – by then Lorey had started work as an insider gossip columnist at Hit Parade magazine – and now known as Lorey Sebastian, she became a popular staple in the 1960s Greenwich Village folk-rock music scene. Lorey and John's relationship was glamorous, high-profile, and short-lived. Lorey broke up with John in 1968 when they were in Ireland. The legend is that she fell in with a group of gypsies, and felt compelled to tune in, drop out, and join them instead. It was said that John never fully recovered from the breakup. Lorey (right), with John Sebastian and Mama Cass (1967) Fast forward to the mid 1970s. Lorey was back in New York, now in her mid 30s and looking for a purpose. She'd become a member of the television and film workers union, with the vague ambition of being a still photographer on movie sets. To make a little extra money, she also did work as a crew member on sex films. It was on a Gerry Damiano movie that she met Jamie Gillis. Jamie sidled up to her, pushing her in the back, and exclaiming, “What a place to bump into a girl like you!” It was corny but it worked, and Lorey invited him back to her place. The mutual attraction was instant and sexual – but, for Jamie, there was something more this time. For a confirmed promiscuous bachelor, Jamie confided to friends that, whisper it quietly, Lorey might actually be the one. He spent time with her, encouraged her photography ambitions, taking her to exhibitions and galleries, and was tickled that one of his favorite songs, The Lovin’ Spoonful's ‘Daydream,' had been written for her. Not to suggest that Jamie's relationship with New York magazine's Insatiable Critic, Gael Greene, was over. Far from it. Even if the novelty of Jamie and Gael's physical and emotional relationship had subsided, they were still intent on documenting their lives, in and out of bed, for a proposed joint-autobiographical book. They continued to go the city's restaurants, cultural events, and glamorous parties, while Jamie spent his in-between time wrestling with whether he wanted an acting career, playing poker, going to the occasional audition, and making semi-regular starring appearances in adult films. In short, Jamie wanted to pursue Lorey, but not give up the affair with Gael. This is Part 2 of the story of Jamie Gillis and Gael Greene in 1978. Jamie This podcast is 49 minutes long. Listen to Part 1 of The Porn Star and the Foodie: Jamie Gillis & Gael Greene in 1978 here. * The post The Porn Star and the Foodie: Jamie Gillis & Gael Greene in 1978 Part 2, Lorey Sebastian – Podcast 159 appeared first on The Rialto Report.
In ‘Taxi Driver’ (1976), Travis Bickle railed against social decay, moral corruption, and the depraved filth he perceived in the near-bankrupt New York City of the mid 1970s. An insomniac, alienated Vietnam War vet, his taxi trips revealed the city to him as a “sewer” filled with “scum” that needed to be “cleansed”. Around the same time, another taxi driver, a real one, Jamie Gillis, was also recording audio diaries in a similar way. Jamie worked in cabs on and off in the 70s while he acted in adult films and the occasional play. But his tapes were the opposite of Travis Bickle's: Jamie reveled in the city's seediness and the sexual possibilities it offered, and he documented his days with a detail that was as graphic as it was honest. And so, perhaps Jamie Gillis was what Travis Bickle feared: Jamie was the moral decay. He was the other Taxi Driver. Not to say that Jamie was untroubled. He was plagued by doubts, questions, and phobias – his “sickness”, he called it. He feared that the initial promise of the porn film business, that had made him a star of sorts after his leading turn in The Opening of Misty Beethoven (1976), was about to come crashing down – that adult films would never live up to his high expectations, that he was turning into a sexual jester, and that he would never fulfill his potential. So what is the story behind his recordings? In 1976, Jamie met Gael Greene, a well-known character in the city. She belonged to the blue bloods of Manhattan society, having been New York magazine’s high-profile restaurant critic for the previous decade. She was a smart, sleek, feline blonde, ten years older than Jamie, well known and well-regarded in polite and cultured circles. And she was obsessed by Jamie's sexually wanton lifestyle. They first met when she was promoting her erotic novel, ‘Blue Skies, No Candy': “He knew my work. I knew his,” she later wrote. Jamie stopped, picked up the book, read a few lines, and laughed. “You’re the food writer from New York magazine,” he said to her. “And your hero has my name.” Gael replied: “And you’re that actor. From those movies.” She described him at the time as young, surprisingly shy, with shiny black curls and perfect posture. Even better-looking in person, she noted. “You were wonderful in Misty Beethoven,” she told him. “That was fun to make,” Jamie replied,” because I liked the woman in that one.” “What do you do when you don’t like the woman?” Gael asked. Jamie looked her straight in the eyes, and said, “I can always get myself in the mood.” They started a relationship that was tempestuous and torrid. They were an odd couple, but well-suited too: Jamie's business was sex and his passion was food. And Gael's interest and passion were, well, sex and food. She claimed that “the two greatest discoveries of the 20th century were the Cuisinart and the clitoris,” and she was quick to reach for sexual metaphors whenever describing the ecstasy of tasting food in the upper crust restaurants of the city. “Sex and food have been completely intertwined since the beginning of time,” she said. They saw each other often, dealing with the pleasures, jealousy, and complications that resulted. Gael couldn't get enough of Jamie's sexual explorations, and Jamie slipped into her world – overnight becoming her guest at places that had never been available to him. But Gael, the insatiable critic as she was called, wanted more from their union. She believed Jamie could, and should, be a big-name actor, and so she connected him with A-list players in the industry – auditions with directors like Mike Nichols, strategy meetings with super agents like Sue Mengers. She took him to Europe to try new restaurants, and stay with friends like Julia Childs. And came the book: it was Gael's idea. She persuaded Jamie they should write their story by documenting their hedonistic life together. It would capture the era through the eyes of two disparate people with similar lusts and appetites. Jamie agreed: he figured that with Gael's literary track record and contacts, it could be a hit, raising his profile, and enabling him to fulfill his vague dream of becoming a full-time theater actor. Gael suggested Jamie keep an audio diary for one year. He would tape his innermost thoughts, feelings, desires, and the crude, unexpurgated details of his everyday life in all its seamy detail. In return, she would add her own experiences – and they would turn it all into a biographical tale of two lovers crisscrossing 1970s New York, slipping between the city's high society events and its grimy porn film scene. So Jamie started recording: but his tapes ended up being more than a diary. They document a spiral – a downward journey into a damaged soul as he dealt with questions that plagued him: ambition, sexuality, art, talent, lust, and love. The recordings that resulted – unfiltered after hours reflections, candid and honest, are presented here for the first time. Needless to say, turn off now if you are liable to be offended. This is Part 1 of the story of Jamie Gillis and Gael Greene in 1978. This podcast is 49 minutes long. * The post The Porn Star and the Foodie: Jamie Gillis & Gael Greene in 1978 Part 1, The Other Taxi Driver appeared first on The Rialto Report.
It all started over thirty years ago. I thought it would be interesting to track down people who'd been involved in the very first adult films because I was intrigued to learn what they remembered about the time – and find out how the experience had affected their lives afterwards. Bear in mind, this was over 30 years ago, before the era of social media, search tools, and online databases, so I had no idea how difficult this endeavor would be. But I also didn't know how unwelcome my inquiries would prove – even if I did manage to find anyone to talk to. After all, most of the early pioneers used different names to conceal their identities, and therefore protect their future lives. A few of them – people like Annie Sprinkle, Jamie Gillis, or Ron Jeremy for example – were still around, quasi-public figures who'd been interviewed many times about their history. But I was more interested in finding the bit-part players, lesser-known figures, people whose involvement had been short, before disappearing, presumably blending back into more conventional 9-5 existences. What did they think about their involvement in such a salacious, unprecedented activity years earlier? One of these was the actor, Jeffrey Hurst. He'd been a handsome, friendly-looking, more-than-competent actor back in early films, always entertaining and engaging, and not just because of his standard-issue, best-in-class, 1970s porno mustache. Who was he, and what was his story? Well, his name wasn't Jeffrey Hurst for a start: I met a director who'd known him and who reluctantly told me that his real name was Jeff Eagle. I misheard him – and so for the next five years, I searched high and low – and unsuccessfully – for an ex-sex film actor called ‘Jeff Feagle.’ Not my proudest moment, and a lot a wasted effort ensued. And then I met someone who was still in touch with Jeff, and who told me that Jeff was now a massage therapist living a quiet life in Tucson, Arizona. What's more, apparently Jeff loved talking about his semi-scandalous past. I contacted him, and quickly became friends with one of the sweetest people I've ever come across. And so, when I started The Rialto Report, my interview with Jeff was one of the first that I put out as a podcast. Jeff died last November. He is much missed. This is our conversation. This episode running time is 61 minutes. ______________________________________________________________________________________ Jeffrey Hurst photographs: The post Jeffrey Hurst (1947-2025), R.I.P. appeared first on The Rialto Report.
We made it! Episode 200: The Big Deuce!
JFD kicks off 2025 by running down our top 5 favorite movies of the previous year (as well as our most hated). Additionally, we continue our Happy Nude Year tradition of watching three dirty flicks to kick off this dirty-ass year. Up first, Gerard Damiano, the man behind some of the 70's biggest porno flicks, decided what the world was really looking for was a porno with a (mostly) puppet cast. Hence, we have the truly unique and very strange Let My Puppets Come from 1976. Then, we get a rare 70's porno directed by an actual female (Svetlana Mischoff), 800 Fantasy Lane from 1979 starring Jamie Gillis who poses as a potential real estate investor to infiltrate a company of sexy and seductive real estate agents. And finally, we visit a Japanese barber shop where there's more than haircuts on the menu in Pink Cut: Love Me Hard, Love Me Deep from 1983. All this plus we pay our respects to David Lynch (R.I.P), check in on the state of California, dinosaur chat, Wolf Man hate and so much more!LISTEN NOW:MP3 Direct DonloydAlso, if you like the show, please take a minute and subscribe and/or comment on us on iTunes, Stitcher, Blubrry or Podfeed.net. Check us out on Facebook and Twitter! We'd love to see some of your love on Patreon - it's super easy and fun to sign up for the extra bonus content. We'll keep this podcast going with your love and support.
Jeremy and Boss learn French from Muzzy and Jamie Gillis, have trouble counting maniacs, experience the 1970s version of Cribs, and trust the gooners as they discuss Shaun Costello's Slave of Pleasure.
This week we're entering the house of a psychotic woman: Joyce (Veronica Hart) in Chuck Vincent's Deranged. We get into a large chunk of Vincent's mainstream filmography, share favorite films from Jamie Gillis's adult entries, and happily accept that our questions about the. events in the film will never be answered.Watch Deranged here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hV1iMvl-nkw&list=WL&index=5Next movie for April Showers of Blood: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVVtAPh2M9Q&list=WL&index=6Preorder Dream Stalker from Terror Vision: https://www.terror-vision.com/store/dream-stalker-1991-blu-rayJoin our discord! https://discord.gg/F8WsTzE9qtFollow this podcast on Instagram and Facebook @unsunghorrors.Follow Lance on Instagram and Letterboxd @lschibiLance's shop: https://lanceschibi.bigcartel.com/Follow Erica on Letterboxd or Instagram @hexmassacreLogo by Cody Schibi
The latest Twitch of the Death Nerve episode celebrates one of America's greatest heroes —… The post Twitch of the Death Nerve Episode 48: Are You There God? It's Me, Jamie Gillis – ft. Shawn Porter appeared first on Cinepunx.
LIVE from Malt and Mold! Meg investigates the cold case of neighbor Marie-Josée Saint-Antoine. Jessica ponders the wisdom of Teen Beat featuring 30-year-old heart throbs and swoons over Kevin Kline.Please check out our website, follow us on Instagram, on Facebook, and...WRITE US A REVIEW HEREWe'd LOVE to hear from you! Let us know if you have any ideas for stories HEREThank you for listening!Love,Meg and Jessica
Jamie Gillis went on a life-changing visit to Europe in 1977, and kept audio diaries of his experiences. The post Jamie Gillis in Europe, 1977 – His Audio Diaries: “Life Is Easy When You Don't Know How” appeared first on The Rialto Report.
Claire and Catie are joined by Dan Boeckner (Wolf Parade, The Bottlemen) to discuss Dracula Sucks (1978), starring Jamie Gillis, Annette Haven, and a bunch of other porn superstars. Topics include sweaty doctors, the importance of centering the dick, Seka's run-in with John Leslie, and how to tell the difference between male ejaculate and pee.
This week John drops the linear path of the famed sicko porn actor who started as a poor youth aspiring to be an actor but not sell out, then became a porn actor who didn't sell out, went to the far reaches of kink without being unkind and surprisingly left behind an incredibly touching story. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This episode John shares scattered(!) debauched stories of porn legend Jamie Gillis who came up in porn through the peep show era in the early 70s and launched the reality and gonzo genres in the early 90s and was accused of murder and unabashedly defended depraved sex in his personal and public life! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Santos by Cartier (1981) + Pure Filth by Peter Sotos and Jamie Gillis (2012) + Paul Thomas Anderson's Boogie Nights (1997) + Jamie Gillis's On the Prowl (1989) and Back on the Prowl 4 (1998) + Roger Watkins's Corruption (1983) + Phillip Marshak's Blue Ice (1985) with Alex For the remainder of this episode and to hear the complete continuing story of The Perfume Nationalist please subscribe on Patreon. 06/20/22 S04.164
We conclude our look at adult films with the raunchiest we've covered so far, New Wave Hookers (1985), a film from the Dark Brothers mired in controversy. Starring Jack Baker and Jamie Gillis, it's the story of two men who share a dream of becoming pimps and hypnotizing women into doing their bidding via the power of new wave music. The film also features Ginger Lynn and originally featured Traci Lords before it broke that she was underage at the time of making it. Robin Bougie (Cinema Sewer) and Ashley West (The Rialto Report) join Mike to discuss the film and its backstory.
We conclude our look at adult films with the raunchiest we've covered so far, New Wave Hookers (1985), a film from the Dark Brothers mired in controversy. Starring Jack Baker and Jamie Gillis, it's the story of two men who share a dream of becoming pimps and hypnotizing women into doing their bidding via the power of new wave music. The film also features Ginger Lynn and originally featured Traci Lords before it broke that she was underage at the time of making it. Robin Bougie (Cinema Sewer) and Ashley West (The Rialto Report) join Mike to discuss the film and its backstory. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
During the course of his experiments at the Institute of Sexual Research, Dr. Charles Cherrypopper comes up with a rather interesting device... the Electro-Testicular Cock-Erector, which will cause every man in the nation to suffer an instant and unbelievable erection! The good doctor has a plan to put the device into action, and in the resulting confusion, take over the government! But, our heroine, Penelope Juiceslit, has other ideas, and sets out to stop the wicked doctor before it's too late. Get ready for lots of laughs, plenty of action, and of course, loads of sizzling sex in Slip Up! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/censoredmenotpodcast/support
Come listen along as we watch classic adult movies and talk about the obscurities of the way things were. In this episode we watch: Dracula sucks, a star studded flick featuring the likes of Jamie Gillis, Seka and John Holmes. This wacky out there take on the Bram Stoker classic tows a line of semi soft-core but still showing hardcore action. Weird I know, you'll just have to listen. Don't forget to follow us on Twitter @bowchickawowpod and Instagram @bowchickawowpodcast
Today Jamie and I discuss her soccer journey as a player, coach, mentor, and much more. @React_Sports_Podcast
Jeremy and Boss discuss a normal day in the life of Jamie Gillis, the many incarnations of The Teacher, and Humphrey Knipe's Too Naughty to Say No. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Back in the day when people went to Adult Movie Theaters in major cities and the marquees were lit with X-Rated movie titles, you may have seen this young man on the blue screen along side John Leslie, Jamie Gillis or Marilyn Chambers! On 6/28/2020 Richard Pacheco joined our Zoom Show and boy did we have a turn out of stars to check up on this guy. Eric Edwards, Eric Monti, Cathy Brown and Herschel Savage all came out to chat it up and have some fun with Richard. It was a great night and you may want to replay this one several times — enjoy! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jizztalking/support
Hey sorry for the late episode folks! I can't imagine anyone is organizing their week around this so you probably didn't notice, but here goes! Another solo episode, this time about a much better movie. Sorry you didn't get to watch this one, Reno! Amanda By Night is a quality noir flick, or at least it's pretty good compared to most of the stuff we watch! The story basically holds together, and includes nice performances by some show favorites like Jamie Gillis and Samantha Fox. Cast and crew: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0082004/fullcredits Full movie: https://www.pornhub.com/view_video.php?viewkey=1509425509
Jamie Gillis died ten years ago this week. We remember when he was arrested for murder - twice. The post When Jamie Gillis Was Accused Of Murder… Twice: The Price of Porn Notoriety – Podcast 95 appeared first on The Rialto Report.
When in Heaven. Bow. Grovel to Government. When in Hell. Bow. Grovel to Government. In Mind's Eye. Golden Idols Surprised. Lost. Fucked. Jamie Gillis' Cock The women to flock. Pedestal crumbles. See the crock. Shit stained masses mass. Strait gas poison. Wipe the crap for fuck's sake. In boots you do quake. Hitler was […]
The adult film actor Jamie Gillis would have turned 75 next month. The post Jamie Gillis in 1976: “No one knows what happens to old porn stars” – Podcast 78 appeared first on The Rialto Report.
Bill speaks to The Rialto Report’s Ashley West. West explains how his ongoing documentary project detailing the birth of the adult film industry in New York put him on the path to recording audio commentaries with figures like Radley Metzger, consulting on the HBO series THE DEUCE and co-founding The Rialto Report, a collection of podcasts, articles and photographs chronicling the history of the golden age of adult film. Other topics covered include: fanzines, the field recordings of Alan Lomax, the adult film work of Wes Craven, BOOGIE NIGHTS, the Golden Age Appreciation Fund, Video Nasties, Jamie Gillis, BARBARA BROADCAST and how an eBay bidding war can lead you to a PURPLE ROSE OF CAIRO moment. (Pretty much all NSFW) Links: Visit The Rialto Report: http://www.therialtoreport.com/ Learn about the annual Golden Age Appreciation Fund: http://tgaafund.blogspot.com/ Read Ashley West (writing as Benson Hurst) and Mark Kernes of AVN on the life and career of actor Jamie Gillis: https://distribpixblog.com/2010/02/25/the-life-of-jamie-gillis/ Hear the Rialto Report podcast: ‘More, More, More’: The Search for Andrea True, and the Creation of a Disco Sensation http://www.therialtoreport.com/2017/05/21/more-more-more/ Hear the Rialto Report podcast: ‘Deep Sleep’ (1972): Deep, Deep Trouble http://www.therialtoreport.com/2015/07/25/deep-sleep/ See C.J. Laing in BARBARA BROADCAST, featuring audio commentary by Ashley West and Radley Metzger: http://www.diabolikdvd.com/product/barbara-broadcast-radley-metzger-blu-ray-dvd-all-region/ See locations from Russ Meyer’s FASTER, PUSSYCAT! KILL! KILL! as they appear today: http://www.therialtoreport.com/2017/11/19/faster-pussycat-kill-kill/
Special Guest: Larry ReveneGuest Co-Hosts: Kevin Heffernan, Heather Drain In Larry Revene's Wanda Whips Wall Street (1981), Veronica Hart stars as Wanda Brandt, a serious business woman who plies her feminine wiles while taking over Tyler Industries, despite investigators Lou Perrini (Jamie Gillis) and Ed Drummond (Ron Jeremy) being hot on her trail...Professor Kevin Heffernan and Heather Drain join Mike in discussing the film as well as it's 1984 re-cut version, Stocks and Blondes.Be sure to read the interview with Wanda's screenwriter Rick Marx.Buy Wanda Whips Wall Street on DVDBuy Stocks and Blondes on DVDBuy Wham Bam $$ Ba Da Boom! : Mob wars, Battles and a View from the Trenches by Larry ReveneBuy Life in a Film Can by Larry ReveneRead Casey Scott's review of Stocks and BlondesRead Knot and Gender blog by Kevin HeffernanRead The Crawling Eye Cult Media Blog by Kevin HeffernanVisit the Mondo Heather website
Richard Pacheco talks to Jamie Gillis, Lisa DeLeeuw, John Seeman. The post 1987: Lisa DeLeeuw, Jamie Gillis, John Seeman – Podcast 61 (The Richard Pacheco Tapes) appeared first on The Rialto Report.
A notorious adult film which blends the true crime of Michael H. Kenyon and the movie Taxi Driver, Shaun Costello's Waterpower stars Jamie Gillis as Burt, the Enema Bandit, who terrorizes women with his Bardex bag and nozzle.Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A notorious adult film which blends the true crime of Michael H. Kenyon and the movie Taxi Driver, Shaun Costello's Waterpower stars Jamie Gillis as Burt, the Enema Bandit, who terrorizes women with his Bardex bag and nozzle.
A previously unheard interview with the late Jamie Gillis, the adult film actor who passed in 2010. The post Jamie Gillis: New York Beginnings – Podcast 25 appeared first on The Rialto Report.
In The Quimby's Bookstore Podcast episode #8, we have two interviews. The first one is with Adam Parfrey, publisher of Feral House and Process Books, which comprise some of the books Quimby's carries that have to do with miscreants, mayhem, outer limits, conspiracy theory and the occult like Apocalypse Culture vols 1 and 2, American Hardcore: A Tribal History, Cult Rapture: Revelations of the Apocalyptic Mind and more. Specifically in this interview, Parfrey talks about Ritual America: Secret Brotherhoods and Their Influence on American Society: A Visual Guide, which he wrote with Craig Heimbichner. It's a beautiful, scrapbooky-ish title with hundreds of images regarding secret societies like the Freemasons and Oddfellows. There's ads for things like Masonic supply companies, cartoons lampooning Masonic "ritual" and more. We talked with Parfrey about he difference between cults and religions, the fine line between frat and subculture, the forces of sex and death how people just want to belong to something, and the burning question: "Shriners: philanthoropists or sadistic clowns?".Here's the Freemason symbol (yeah, yeah, we know you know what it is -- it's just that we referenced it in the interview and said we would post it):The second interview in this episode is with Peter Sotos. Feral House published the book Pure Filth, which Sotos edited. It's an annotated collection of transcripts culled and transcribed by Sotos, from the underground pornography films of the late Jamie Gillis (who whom Sotos was friends with). Gillis was a primary performer in pornography’s “Golden Age,” and is known for inventing the “gonzo” genre of porn, played out in the film Boogie Nights by Burt Reynolds’ character, who was based on Gillis. The work of extreme novelist Peter Sotos focuses on criminal psychology, sexual abjection, and the myriad aspects of pornography. He's the author of 11 published novels, including Index, Selfish, Little: The Annotated Lesley Ann Downey. His writing has appeared in ANSWER Me!, Apocalypse Culture II, Funeral Party, and Ritual Sex. Recently his books Tool and Mine were reprinted simultaneously by Nine-banded Books.Links relevant to this episode:Purchasing Ritual America at Quimby'sPurchasing Pure Flith at Quimby'sFeral House, publisher websiteFeral House Books available from quimbys.com (...and we have more at our brick and mortar store)Nine-banded Books available from quimbys.comNine-banded Books, publisher websitePeter Sotos Books available from quimbys.comThe Lodge Goat: Goat Rides, Butts and Goat Hairs. Gathered from the Lodge Rooms of Every Fraternal OrderMusic Used in this episode:"Freimaurer Kantata" by Mozart (He was a Freemason, duh)"The Snow" by COILWanna listen on your phone? Goof around with this: http://quimbys.podbean.com/mobile/
We're talking about Radley Metzger's The Opening of Misty Beethoven, a re-telling of Pygmalion made at the height of porno chic. We're joined by Steven Morowitz of Distribpix and Veronica Hart, director of the musical version of Misty Beethoven.